Now that's what I thought until some people starting telling me the opposite. I guess we're all going to have our opinions, but I have to say that my chin hit my chest and I just starting shaking my head when someone posted this,
"In fact the ideal solution is for the OP to strengthen his fingerpicking technique to get a bigger sound, then mic it the same take for both strumming and fingerstyle sections."
Yeah, let's do that... let's sacrifice artistic expression and creative musical nuance to make the engineer's job a little easier. I guess it would be "ideal" from the engineer's perspective, but I doubt many good guitar players would see that as "ideal." I certainly wouldn't. My head is still shaking from side to side.
well...i can for sure see that as in my world the musician is always right...and to me as a recording dude, asking someone to change something pre microphone is insulting until i develop a rapport with them and they understand what I am saying without them taking offense and playing the 'artist card.'
You're asking a question and you basically want a Guitar Center answer of "DUDE…this compressor rocks…it will take care of you. Your problems will be solved and your tracks will sound like a warmer creamier Jimmy Page." it's not that easy.
look at how you are approaching the problem you have described:
1) You aren't telling the board how you are using the compressor you have now to try to fix your dilemna. As such, you don't explain the results you are getting and why they are not working. How can we say what will help you as far as a compressor goes? you haven't even tried helping yourself.
2) You skip answering the functional and fundamental questions and immediately ask about spending more money on a piece of gear thinking that it will solve your problems. It most likely won't.
3) Your technique is what is being recorded…it is certainly a part of the equation, until they develop a sample to sample
acoustic guitar replacer for pro tools like they did with drums, which will probably not sound very good anyway. The musicians who I work with who get the best results either listen to the speakers and correct themselves OR they ask my advice and follow my suggestions on playing…as I've encountered the problem before and can tell them what can work and what doesn’t…not that I'm not open to learn new tricks…but I have plenty of chops to throw at your problem. You want it to sound it's best? Adapt to the microphone like the world's best musicians do.
Recording requires certain level of maturity in as far as you have to be able to somewhat accept your results as a mirror of your playing technique. Use this mirror to learn and grow as a player. It really has nothing to do with making the engineering job easier on the fat guy with the ponytail behind the board…it has to do with getting what you want. You want a compressor to thicken up or de-noise your
acoustic guitar sound if it's played quietly? If you find something - let me know. I could tell you that you can buy a nice compressor for 3.5 K and you'll be set. You won't. How do I know? I have 12K worth of them.
All that said - if I had a know it all guitarist to deal with in real life - and I have had plenty which I serves with a smile thank you very much- the Compellor does sound like a good idea to try. I believe the idea in that box is to have 3 different compressors chained together…same as the super nice mode in the RNC which i used. The RNC will cost you 175. the noises in your playing will certainly be brought up with the rest of the low level stuff. If you want to get rid of those noises in your playing I highly recommend a deesser ala the dbx 263…which can be had for 50 dollars. stick that after the compressor to get rid of your finger noise as much as you’d like...provided you know how to use it. Then stick a limiter after everything else to control your peaks. One of the best limiters I've found for this stuff is the RNC as you can fine tune the attack and release …another 175. If the Compellor appeals to you - check out the Dominator…it is the brickwall limiter in the aphex world. If you want to spend more money on your problem you might get better results due to the signal path…but functionally, this stuff is as good as anything else out there outside of the box...provided of course you know how to use it.
Laters,
Mike