Fun Stuff > BAND
Music software, home recording and other niknaks.
Rubby:
That's just skill man. Eventually you'll learn how to keep this from happening. I dont really know how to explain it.
Kai:
Use whatever finger you're playing the E string with (I'm assuming your index finger) to just litely mute it. YEAH
Mr. Oysterhead:
--- Quote from: Kai ---Or you could buy a fancy little contraption (I can't think of what it's called) but it basically is a converter plug thing, you plug your guitar chord in and then you can plug it into the microphone jack. Works great for me.
--- End quote ---
I use that alot as well because sometimes there's some unexplainable, unremovable buzz coming from the amp/pa.
nescience:
Then ditch the fluorescent lightbulbs!
Rubby:
--- Quote from: Mr. Oysterhead ---
--- Quote from: Kai ---Or you could buy a fancy little contraption (I can't think of what it's called) but it basically is a converter plug thing, you plug your guitar chord in and then you can plug it into the microphone jack. Works great for me.
--- End quote ---
I use that alot as well because sometimes there's some unexplainable, unremovable buzz coming from the amp/pa.
--- End quote ---
Perhaps something is not grounded. If you have a live signal loop going on somewhere in your connections, it will create a buzz. You can read online about how to stop this but don’t kill yourself (you actually can kill yourself trying to ground signals).
p.s. The plug thing is called a 1/4" to 1/8' adapter, or in "cool-guy slang" a big to little.
edit pt. 2: Come to think of it, a more likely problem than a lack of ground would be that the adapter is fucked. The patch chord is kinda heavy and sometimes it can pull the adapter slightly out of the plug in your sound card if the fit isn't snug enough. If that's the case, just push it in a little bit.
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