Pick-up
Recording Pickups for Guitar & Bass
In a recording context, pickups don't just shape tone — they determine how much work you'll do later in the mix. A well-chosen pickup captures a cleaner, more defined signal at the source, which means less corrective EQ, less noise floor to manage, and a track that sits more naturally alongside other elements. The current selection covers core studio-relevant territory: the Seymour Duncan Jazz Model's wide-range, articulate humbucker voicing that translates beautifully to tape or DAW, the Blackouts' active electronics that deliver a quiet, consistent signal ideal for high-gain tracking sessions, and the Shadow Rockabilly Pro's stereo preamp system for capturing upright bass with dimension and clarity.
Active versus passive is a meaningful production choice. Active pickups like the Blackouts output a low-impedance signal with minimal noise — useful when tracking in a home studio where grounding isn't always ideal. Passive designs like the Jazz Model respond dynamically to playing touch, which can add expressive nuance to recorded performances but requires slightly more care in the gain-staging chain. For acoustic and upright instruments, a well-designed preamp pickup system handles the critical impedance matching that keeps the natural character of the instrument intact through the interface.
Studio Gears carries these options across a range that covers both practical upgrade budgets and professional replacement builds. Think of the pickup position — neck, bridge, or a calibrated matched set — as a tonal decision you're making at the recording stage rather than in post. Neck positions favor warmth and sustain that fills out a mix; bridge positions deliver the clarity and attack that help a part cut through a dense arrangement.