Bare Knuckle Pickups Forum
At The Back => Time Out => Topic started by: JDC on February 07, 2010, 01:03:07 PM
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Got thinking the other day, I really don't have much of a clue what warmth actually is, I've got ideas about it. But since no one thought it was a good idea to make a website to define and reference with sound clips, all these words that guitarists and music folk use are a bit of a mess.
So how do you define warmth?
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probably the opposite of when an amp sounds sterile :lol:
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I always like to think of in terms of records: Vinyl sounds warm as opposed to Digital recordings (CD/MP3 &c.) being more sterile?
But then again I never got the hand of Thermodynamics in Physics :-D
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For me it is a slight attenuation / 'rounding' of the highest frequencies, including those that constitute the fundamentals and harmonics across the entire tonal range. This task to be achieved , without overtly sacrificing detail. The manifestation being that no note sounds too percussive - or strident. To use another ambiguous term - 'sweetness'.
( Edited to remove 'padding' ). :)
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For me the difference between a 100 hiwatt not cranked (hi fi ish) and a bassman at 3/4..sorry to use these terms but what other guitarist had..and has first very clean ice pick and bassman warm
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I agree abit with fourth feline. I think warmth is to do with attenuation of high frequencies.
Its not necessarily bass either, I would say its more of a mid to low mid kind of detail.
Its important to remember that there is no loss of clarity as well.
Or a summer holiday ;)
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I agree abit with fourth feline. I think warmth is to do with attenuation of high frequencies.
Its not necessarily bass either, I would say its more of a mid to low mid kind of detail.
Its important to remember that there is no loss of clarity as well.
Or a summer holiday ;)
That about sums it up.
However I can't think of warmth in terms of guitar tone without thinking of this.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=18FgnFVm5k0
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You need to read this article:
http://www.soundonsound.com/sos/feb10/articles/analoguewarmth.htm