Skip to main content
Music Radar MusicRadar The No.1 website for musicians
  • Guitars
  • Amps
  • Pedals
  • Drums
  • Synths
  • Software
  • Pianos
  • Controllers
  • Recording
  • Buyer’s guides
  • Live
  • DJ
  • Advice
  • Acoustic
  • Bass
  • About Us
  • More
    • Reviews
Magazines
  • Computer Music
  • Electronic Musician
  • Future Music
  • Keyboard Magazine
  • Guitarist
  • Guitar Techniques
  • Total Guitar
  • Bass Player
More
  • How to make an AI cover song
  • 30 beautiful acoustic guitar chords
  • 86000+ free music samples

When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission. Here’s how it works.

  1. Tuition

8 tips for gigging with a nylon-string guitar

By Dave Burrluck
( Guitarist )
last updated 25 April 2020

Essential advice for playing live

Talk to the engineer
(Image credit: Michael Kai/Corbis)

Talk to the engineer

So you have your nylon-string guitar and you want to go gigging? Here’s some advice and tips that will help you on your way. Starting with...

Talk to the engineer

If your nylon-string guitar already has a pickup/preamp system installed, then you can just plug into the PA and trust the sound engineer to amplify your sound and provide some monitoring.

It’s worth having a chat with the engineer, however - as politely as you possibly can! - as more often than not in our experience, they’ll EQ any acoustic as if it were a steel-string: scoop the mids, enhance the highs and balance the bass. The nylon-string really needs a fuller lower midrange and less high-end crispness.

Also, If you’re using any kind of percussive right-hand technique, again let the engineer know what you’re going to do and discuss compression: be careful not to over-compress as the wide dynamic range is all part of the nylon-string’s appeal.

Page 1 of 8
Page 1 of 8
Piezo or contact?

Piezo or contact?

The ubiquitous piezo under-saddle pickup, as fitted to most mid-priced nylon electros, are far more forgiving on nylon-strings than steel and less prone to the dreaded piezo quack. It’s also the best pickup in terms of feedback rejection.

If you’re playing in lower level environments, however, there are numerous contact pickups/ soundboard transducers that can be relatively easy to fit yourself and should give you a more natural sound.

LR Baggs Lyric Classical, B-Band's AST soundboard transducer (pictured) and K&K’s Pure Classic are good places to start.

Page 2 of 8
Page 2 of 8
Tuning is everything

Tuning is everything

Bear in mind that nylon-string guitars tend to take a lot longer to ‘settle’ than a regular steel-string acoustic guitar would.

Make sure that you have a reliable tuner either built-in to your guitar’s preamp, on the floor, or clipped to the headstock. With new-ish strings you’ll need to check your tuning after every number.

Page 3 of 8
Page 3 of 8
Consider a preamp

Consider a preamp

Onboard guitar systems are often rudimentary, especially on lower-end guitars, so an outboard preamp can be a good idea.

There aren’t any mainstream outboard preamps specifically for nylon string, but the LR Baggs Venue DI is a very well spec’d preamp that works for nylon as well as steel with its dual midrange EQ, XLR out, effects loop a highly visible tuner/mute that’s footswitchable along with a footswitchable solo boost.

It also has a notch filter and phase switch to combat feedback and it runs off both a mains adapter or a battery - ideal for those open-mic slots where quick set-up times are essential. Radial’s Tonebone PZ-Pre and RMI’s Acoustiswitch IQ DI are also great preamp pedals.

Page 4 of 8
Page 4 of 8
Try an acoustic amp

Try an acoustic amp

AER’s Compact Classic Pro is one of the few nylon-string-specific acoustic amplifiers, although most acoustic amps - with the above EQ thoughts in mind - should work perfectly well.

The beauty of an acoustic amp is that you can use it to shape your sound, perhaps with effects, and just take, if necessary, an output to the PA which can be left relatively flat. Your amp acts as a vital on-stage monitor too.

Page 5 of 8
Page 5 of 8
More than an amp?

More than an amp?

For solo and small ensemble players, the new generation of ‘personal’ vertical PAs can be highly effective for guitar and/or voice.

From Bose’s L1 Compact, Fishman’s SA220 SoloAmp, HK Audio’s Lucas Nano 300 and the new Fender Expo System, to Line 6’s StageSource, the line between acoustic amplification and PA is getting very blurred.

Page 6 of 8
Page 6 of 8
Get yourself effected

Get yourself effected

Acoustic guitar players are poorly served by effects. Okay, nylon-strings with overdrives and flanger might be a bit much, but compression, EQ, reverb and a soupçon of delay can be a godsend.

TC Electronic’s G-Natural is a powerful multi- effects aimed at acoustic players, which has all of the above and more in a very pro- spec, rugged package.

Zoom’s A3 (pictured) preamp and effects for acoustic guitar is highly spec’d and more affordable, too. Of course, single compact effects can be as viable for your nylon string as they are for steel or electric players; likewise loopers.

Page 7 of 8
Page 7 of 8
Offer a bung

Offer a bung

Your best friend with which to go into battle on a loud stage is the humble soundhole bung.

As the first line of feedback-rejection, especially with a more lightly built nylon string, never leave home without one!

Page 8 of 8
Page 8 of 8
Dave Burrluck
Dave Burrluck
Social Links Navigation

Dave Burrluck is one of the world’s most experienced guitar journalists, who started writing back in the '80s for International Musician and Recording World, co-founded The Guitar Magazine and has been the Gear Reviews Editor of Guitarist magazine for the past two decades. Along the way, Dave has been the sole author of The PRS Guitar Book and The Player's Guide to Guitar Maintenance as well as contributing to numerous other books on the electric guitar. Dave is an active gigging and recording musician and still finds time to make, repair and mod guitars, not least for Guitarist’s The Mod Squad.

More about guitars
EHX flanger

Electro-Harmonix Andy Summers Walking On The Moon Analog Flanger / Filter Matrix pedal

UAFX Ox Stomp

Universal Audio UAFX Ox Stomp Dynamic Speaker Emulator pedal review

Latest
Tom Petty Full Moon Fever

The making of Tom Petty's Full Moon Fever: "George Harrison went to the store and bought a ginger root, boiled it and had me stick my head in the pot to get the ginger steam to open up my sinuses. Then I ran in and did the take"

See more latest ►
Most Popular
Computer Music 328 December 2023: free downloads

By Computer Music25 October 2023

Learn how to slide and boogie like Keith Richards on The Rolling Stones' Let It Bleed album

By Steve Allsworth19 October 2023

How to design a glassy and ethereal pad sound

By Dave Gale13 October 2023

John Mayer's guitar playing: 5 things you can learn

By Richard Barrett3 October 2023

Learn 4 key guitar chords from classic grunge songs

By Leigh Fuge30 September 2023

Computer Music 327 November 2023: free downloads

By Computer Music27 September 2023

Learn 5 classic blues guitar licks from Albert, Freddie and BB King, Stevie Ray Vaughan and Eric Clapton

By Leigh Fuge25 September 2023

10 famous rock guitar solos and what you can learn from them

By Leigh Fuge21 September 2023

How to design a punchy, radio-ready synth bass sound

By Dave Gale18 September 2023

How to liven up your mix with legendary Fairchild compression

By Andy Jones12 September 2023

How to add level rides to a mix

By Jon Musgrave11 September 2023

  1. Michiru Aoyama
    1
    Japanese ambient musician Michiru Aoyama has woken at 5am to record a new album every day since 2021 – he's now earning $3,000 a month from his music on Spotify and Bandcamp
  2. 2
    “The union passed a motion to ban the use of synths, drum machines and any electronic devices”: the day the 'Loony' Musician's Union tried to kill the synthesizer (which also happened to be Bob Moog’s birthday)
  3. 3
    Ableton’s Push 3 Upgrade Kit is here, and It looks like it’s incredibly easy to turn your MIDI controller version into a standalone instrument
  4. 4
    The story of Fairytale Of New York: “I sat down, opened the sherry, got the peanuts out and pretended it was Christmas…"
  5. 5
    John Lennon's 10 greatest songs with the Beatles and beyond, ranked by you
  1. Arturia KeyLab Essential Mk3
    1
    Arturia’s KeyLab Essential mk3 MIDI keyboards live up to their name, giving you all the control you need
  2. 2
    Japanese ambient musician Michiru Aoyama has woken at 5am to record a new album every day since 2021 – he's now earning $3,000 a month from his music on Spotify and Bandcamp
  3. 3
    The story of Fairytale Of New York: “I sat down, opened the sherry, got the peanuts out and pretended it was Christmas…"
  4. 4
    7 of the best new hardware synths in 2023
  5. 5
    “The union passed a motion to ban the use of synths, drum machines and any electronic devices”: the day the 'Loony' Musician's Union tried to kill the synthesizer (which also happened to be Bob Moog’s birthday)

MusicRadar is part of Future plc, an international media group and leading digital publisher. Visit our corporate site.

  • About Us
  • Contact Future's experts
  • Terms and conditions
  • Privacy policy
  • Cookies policy
  • Accessibility Statement
  • Careers

© Future Publishing Limited Quay House, The Ambury, Bath BA1 1UA. All rights reserved. England and Wales company registration number 2008885.