J
jmcelroy
New member
Hi all,
I'm recording my acoustic guitar (Guild GAD-30r) in my (fairly low-budget) home studio. One thing I noticed in the process is that the guitar has a significant resonance centered around A. I'm haven't figured out which octave, but it's relatively high. If if I play a chord and stop suddenly the resonance is quite pronounced and lingers for a substantial amount of time. This resonance comes from within the guitar itself, and is not an artifact of the room in which it is played.
While I appreciate that the guitar resonates so well, the fact that it is centered at an obvious pitch becomes quite annoying when I record. Does anyone have any useful tips for minimizing the effect of this resonance? In order to scope the term "useful" I would offer "get a different guitar" as one that's probably not so useful to me.
Thanks for reading!
--John
I'm recording my acoustic guitar (Guild GAD-30r) in my (fairly low-budget) home studio. One thing I noticed in the process is that the guitar has a significant resonance centered around A. I'm haven't figured out which octave, but it's relatively high. If if I play a chord and stop suddenly the resonance is quite pronounced and lingers for a substantial amount of time. This resonance comes from within the guitar itself, and is not an artifact of the room in which it is played.
While I appreciate that the guitar resonates so well, the fact that it is centered at an obvious pitch becomes quite annoying when I record. Does anyone have any useful tips for minimizing the effect of this resonance? In order to scope the term "useful" I would offer "get a different guitar" as one that's probably not so useful to me.
Thanks for reading!
--John
) and so I didn't realize where it was actually coming from.


Thread finished. Damn my speed reading.
But the first thing you do with those elusive rattles is hit the note and grab everything you can reach with your other hand til you nail it. I have chased rattles all over guitars for hours before.