Thoughts on getting a country sound with an electric mandolin
I have a 4-string Schwab electric mandolin with a single Bartolini pickup and I'm playing through a fender tube amp. The sound is more jazz than country and I want to use it in a country context. I'm wondering if I should change to a single coil pickup, or a different pickup in general. Any thoughts from the other emando players out there?
Re: Thoughts on getting a country sound with an electric mandolin
Hi Michael,
Chet Atkins's tone was very clean, Jerry Reed often played a nylon string guitar (as does Willie Nelson). You can play country music with your set up.
But I bet what you're looking for is a bit more Pete Anderson (Dwight Yoakum): twang and a bit of bite. Is that right?
If so, I would suggest a bit of overdrive. Not lots, just set it so that when you hit a chord hard it distorts, but not until you hit it hard.
Tweak the EQ on the amp to emphasise the treble a bit too.
Head down to the local guitar shop with your Schwab, ask for a few pedals, plug in to something, and sit down. Explore things. You'll get there!
Daniel
Re: Thoughts on getting a country sound with an electric mandolin
Is the Bartolini a single coil or humbucker? What are your settings on the tube amp? It seems to me that you may already have the basics for a good country sound but may need to tweak them a bit. More information needed.
Len B.
Clearwater, FL
Re: Thoughts on getting a country sound with an electric mandolin
A good compressor (like a Keeley) would help out a lot.
Keeley also makes a powerful clean boost pedal – that would help with overdriving your amp's preamp tubes, and might sound more natural (and pleasing to your ears) than an overdrive/distortion pedal.
Re: Thoughts on getting a country sound with an electric mandolin
If the Bartolini is a humbucker, it may be a 4 wire pickup. If so, you could try it as a single coil. It looks like the wiring codes are the same as a Duncan so if you disconnect the red from white and replace the black with the red where they join the pot, you`ll have a single coil.....easy to swap back if it doesn`t sound as good!
Re: Thoughts on getting a country sound with an electric mandolin
I find that sound easy to get on the solid octave mandola. Tap the middle humbucker into a Fender Tweed model on the Line 6, and make sure I damp the strings. It's harder on the single humbucker mandolin but the technique is roughly the same, apart from a lack of a tap in my case. The hard bit for me is the country blues phrasing. For me it just works better on the mandola. I have been trying a bit of slapback delay recently but I'm finding playing the effect hard.
Re: Thoughts on getting a country sound with an electric mandolin
Hi AMM,
I have a Schwab 5-string, and I know exactly what you’re describing. There are a lot of really good suggestions here, but—for me—a pre-amp pedal with a powerful tone stack or an EQ pedal is the ticket. With flexible tone shaping, smooth and mellow to bitey-gritty to twangy is all possible.
Re: Thoughts on getting a country sound with an electric mandolin
My Pentasysyem P5 Pentaula has a Nashville country sound, dry.. talk me into selling it? wave big bills..
It has a second channel with 5 RMC bridge pickups... a Strat rather than a Tele look..
Re: Thoughts on getting a country sound with an electric mandolin
Ricky Skaggs at 2:21 and 4:03 on the first video playing mandocaster.
Ricky is influenced by guitarist Albert Lee. I'd check what Lee uses
for pickups, effects and amps. That's the sound. For example:
Flashback Delay pedal, reverb, Fender amps [but he also uses other electronics]
Lee talks tech & plays on the 2nd video
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FAei8UOEfNE
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZDyD_HIelz4