Presence (amplification)

In an amplifier, a presence control controls "presence". A presence control boosts the upper mid-range frequencies. Thus by increasing the presence with the presence control, the sounds of voices and such instruments seem more "present".[1]

On television production studio's sound desk, there can be several presence controls, for several different, switchable, frequencies.[2] There is a limit to the flexibility of such controls, and they are sometimes insufficient. If the degree of mis-match between microphones is great, simply increasing presence is not enough, and instead a sound engineer will use a graphic equalizer, sometimes several, each connected to an individual sound channel.[3]

Presence controls can also be found on electric guitar amplifiers. The first presence control on a Fender amplifier, for example, appeared in 1954 on the Twin. In 1955 it appeared on the Pro-Amp, the 3/10 Bandmaster, and the 4/10 Super.[4] The original Fender presence control acted upon the amplifier's negative-feedback loop. As the level of "presence" was increased, so more and more of the higher frequencies in the negative-feedback loop were dumped to ground, leaving the low and mid-range frequencies. Increasing the presence resulted in there being less and less negative feedback on high frequencies. The effect varied according to amplitude.[5]

Later Fender amplifiers used a different presence control. The presence control on the 1975 Super Twin did not modify the negative feedback loop, but was a real equalization control, controlling the 3.9kHz frequency range. It had the ability to both amplify and reduce ("boost" and "cut" in amplification terminology), unlike the earlier presence control. It was active equalization.[5]

In a 3-way loudspeaker system, with tweeter, woofer, and mid-range speaker, a presence control is simply a volume control for the mid-range speaker.[6]

References

  1. ^ Lee Jackson (2008). Ultimate Bench Warrior. Music Dispatch. pp. 75. ISBN 1575604450. 
  2. ^ Alan Bermingham, Ed Boyce, Ken Angold-Stephens, and Michael Talbot-Smith (1994). The Video Studio. Focal Press. pp. 126. ISBN 0240513924. 
  3. ^ Alec Nisbett (2003). The sound studio. Focal Press. pp. 199. ISBN 0240519116. 
  4. ^ Donald Brosnac (1987). The Amp Book. Bold Strumer Ltd.. pp. 34–35. ISBN 0933224052. 
  5. ^ a b John Teagle and John Sprung (1995). Fender Amps. Hal Leonard Corporation. pp. 127,223. ISBN 0793537339. 
  6. ^ Rudolf F. Graf (1999). "presence control". Modern Dictionary of Electronics. Newnes. pp. 586. ISBN 0750698667.