Amp effects on harp mics

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MatchBookNotes

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I don't know which forum this should go in but here goes.

I'm thinking of getting a harp mic to use with an amp for harps and vocals so are those mics effects pedal friendly?

has anyone else done such a thing?
 
I don't know why not. I have a Green Bullet I plug into a hotrodded Pignose G40V using a Danelectro reverb stomp box.

Other than reverb, I never use effects on harp: you can do so much with embouchure and breathing effects that effects per se are pretty superfluous.
 
I don't know which forum this should go in but here goes.

I'm thinking of getting a harp mic to use with an amp for harps and vocals so are those mics effects pedal friendly?

has anyone else done such a thing?

Some would, I guess, but you'll have to be careful, since Hi-Z harp mics into guitar amps typically skate along the bleeding edge of howling feedback, and compression, EQ, boost, or distortion can easily push you over the edge. A little reverb or delay might work for you, though. Wear earplugs when you are experimenting. ;^)
 
what is Hi-z?

So it should be treated like a semi-hollow I guess, what about putting something to filter out some vocal volume but still keep some articulation?

didn't dan akroyd use a harp mic for some of the blues brothers songs?
 
My Bullet mic has a volume knob,you may want to get one like that.
You can plug whatever you want box wise,if it sounds good,it's right.
I'm thinking of getting a harp mic to use with an amp for harps and vocals
I'm not too sure you'll be happy with vocals through a bullet,unless you're doing lo-fi-distorted stuff.A harp mic is really just a crappy mic that works like a wicked filter.
 
what is Hi-z?

High impedance, which is normally unbalanced, i.e., you can plug it into a 1/4" input jack on a guitar amp. Most mics have Low-Z (low impedance) balanced output, which is usually over an XLR connector, but harp specialty mics are usually Hi-Z.

Many are built on the old Astatic model, which I believe is a carbon grain design. They produce a lot of midrange and distortion, especially with proximity effect, so harp players love them. They completely suck for any sort of vocals.
 
I'm not looking for any sort of 'good' vocals, would other types of mics work if i got the male-female 1/4" adapter? is that was Robert plant did with his delay box?
 
I'm not looking for any sort of 'good' vocals, would other types of mics work if i got the male-female 1/4" adapter? is that was Robert plant did with his delay box?

I'm not sure what you are asking. Do you mean that you want to run a "normal" mic through guitar effects? You can't do that with just an adapter; you'll need a transformer to change balanced low-Z to unbalanced hi-Z.
 
didn't dan akroyd use a harp mic for some of the blues brothers songs?

My God, please don't confuse Akroyd with world-class harp players...

I don't yet own a "real" harp mic. On the prowl for one, but the sound/price combo I want/need has not come along, yet. So, for now I use a SM57 or similar, into either my Fender Deluxe Reverb or my Airline-made Monkey-Wards 5-watt amp (both have tremolo, which I use with the harps.) I have gone thru my Ibenez Tube-Screamer TS7 and even a Dunlop Wah pedal. I kinda think of the Wah as cheating- a good harp player can get the same effect with technique, but there are times when having that pedal just puts me in the ZONE!

EDIT: I have made the vocal mics work with those amps by either 1) using a XLR to TS cable, and going thru a stompbox EQ, or 2) using a XLR to XLR cable, plugged into my Digitech JamMan's mic input, or 3) using a XLR to TS cable, and going thru a Digitech RP-7.

When my Dad died, my Mom GAVE AWAY all his CB radio equipment- I was majorly lusting for his Turner +2 mic...
 
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