Acoustic Amps?

The history and music of the Fab Four
Post Reply
DavidW
New member
Posts: 74
Joined: Sun Aug 10, 2008 1:58 am

Acoustic Amps?

Post by DavidW »

What amps did The Beatles use when they were performing with their acoustics?
JakeK
RRF Consultant
Posts: 5757
Joined: Sun Nov 25, 2007 9:08 pm

Re: Acoustic Amps?

Post by JakeK »

They miked up their acoustics, I think.
User avatar
kiramdear
RRF Moderator
Posts: 9045
Joined: Fri Jun 27, 2008 2:51 am
Contact:

Re: Acoustic Amps?

Post by kiramdear »

Image
Here's John with his J-160 plugged into his Vox. This is how I've seen him and George typically do it. Never saw them mike an instrument live or have any other amps on stage. George and John used their Gibson J-160s which have pickups at the end of the fretboard. Huge berserk audiences, ****** stadium quality PAs, audio technology in the stone age; simplicity and consistency were the keywords for Beatles' stage setup.
All I wanna do is rock!
DavidW
New member
Posts: 74
Joined: Sun Aug 10, 2008 1:58 am

Re: Acoustic Amps?

Post by DavidW »

Thanks for that Kira thats what I figured but I was under the impression that an acoustic plugged into an electric amp would give a non acoustic sound. Guess not!
User avatar
kiramdear
RRF Moderator
Posts: 9045
Joined: Fri Jun 27, 2008 2:51 am
Contact:

Re: Acoustic Amps?

Post by kiramdear »

Nah, pickups works fine on acoustics. Different kinds of strings will give you different tones but an acoustic is an acoustic. Not much difference between a J-160 and an ES-335 if you look at the physics.
All I wanna do is rock!
wolfgang
Member
Posts: 414
Joined: Sat Feb 14, 2004 4:48 am

Re: Acoustic Amps?

Post by wolfgang »

they used their J-160s frequently as electric guitars, played over their Vox amps (i.e. Twist and shout). John used it on I feel fine, but here we had an unusual sound for the J-160 (because of the feedback intro of the song). Maybe it was direct injected (electrically) and played back via the monitor boxes, I don't know.
But they used the J-160 as their famous acoustic guitars, too. Then the guitars were miked directly (i.e. John on Can't buy me love or A hard day's night).
Wolfgang
User avatar
kiramdear
RRF Moderator
Posts: 9045
Joined: Fri Jun 27, 2008 2:51 am
Contact:

Re: Acoustic Amps?

Post by kiramdear »

Oh yeah, in the studio they would mike the acoustics. But not live.
All I wanna do is rock!
User avatar
lennon211
Intermediate Member
Posts: 1228
Joined: Tue Feb 20, 2007 5:13 am

Re: Acoustic Amps?

Post by lennon211 »

wolfgang wrote:they used their J-160s frequently as electric guitars, played over their Vox amps (i.e. Twist and shout). John used it on I feel fine, but here we had an unusual sound for the J-160 (because of the feedback intro of the song). Maybe it was direct injected (electrically) and played back via the monitor boxes, I don't know.
But they used the J-160 as their famous acoustic guitars, too. Then the guitars were miked directly (i.e. John on Can't buy me love or A hard day's night).
Wolfgang
I may be in the minority here, but the lead on Twist and Shout sounds a great deal more like the Duo-Jet than a J-160E. It has the great Gretsch snap to it that you get from those DynaSonic pickups.
User avatar
lennon211
Intermediate Member
Posts: 1228
Joined: Tue Feb 20, 2007 5:13 am

Re: Acoustic Amps?

Post by lennon211 »

DavidW wrote:Thanks for that Kira thats what I figured but I was under the impression that an acoustic plugged into an electric amp would give a non acoustic sound. Guess not!
Nope, it's just like using the neck pickup on a Casino, in the case of the J-160E
User avatar
soundmasterg
RRF Consultant
Posts: 1923
Joined: Tue Oct 01, 2002 1:06 pm

Re: Acoustic Amps?

Post by soundmasterg »

In the studio, especially later, they would often mic the guitar acoustically, and amplify it, and combine the signals on the recording.

The feedback sound on "I Feel Fine" was a result of Paul striking a particular note on his bass, which made the top on John's J160E vibrate and induce feedback, but the rest of the song is just the J160E through the amp as any other guitar would have been. It was hard to reproduce live because of the distance between instruments and the different volume levels, but they were able to reproduce it live in some instances accurately when using the J160E, such as the BBC sessions. John also sometimes used the RIC 325 on that song live. I know I've heard it on some live recordings but I can't point to any specific ones at the moment.

greg
wolfgang
Member
Posts: 414
Joined: Sat Feb 14, 2004 4:48 am

Re: Acoustic Amps?

Post by wolfgang »

Matthew,
I meant the rhytm guitar part played by Lennon. And they played the solo in unison.
Greg, the electrical sound of the J-160 in Ifeel fine is special because there is a relatively (for P90s) low cut off frequency of 1 kHz (above 1kHz -12dB per octave decrease) with no resonance peak, not from the pick up, not from the speakers.
For 20 years THIS was THE electrical sound of the J-160 to me, I thought this was the only song the J-160 was used "electrically".
I was wrong. I learned from this forum, that the J-160s were (probably) more often used in the studio electrically than the 325/Hamburg and the DuoJet together.
Wolfgang
Post Reply

Return to “Beatles' Forum”