Boy, the good endorphins must have been running last night. Kudos from the Double J and Ed Zep, to quote, 'Ha!' Thank You !
As you can see, once you're away from those tiny gigs where everyone's riding their own amp and just a PA for vocals, it's out of your hands.
My old music store manager had a standing question when someone would ask about buying a PA: Are you just gonna sing thru it, or are you going to include bass and drums (and everything else)? As it's the difference between a Beetle convertible and an 18-wheeler.
Jimmy's been VERY fortunate: The Flim records and the live James Taylor set were done by George Massenburg, one of the very best engineers in the world, on a par with Rupert Neve. And touring with JT, they have their own long-time engineers and top-shelf touring contractors.
But even at that, it's up to who's on the other end of that XLR from the direct box or mic. And then, the room: Standing Wave and the Acoustics is not a new band, but a dark force like gravity, always trying to pull you down. And it will.
You know what you should sound like. The best you can do is present the best tone you can build, shoot it down the line, and hope for the best. You've been around plenty, you know what works, what it should sound like, but the unfortunate part of being a professional is many times, ya just got to grin and bear it.
The funny yet really aggravating thing is: There's not a person reading this who has not gotten lots of compliments on a given night when you just wanted to hide, it sounded so bad !!
On the other hand . . . . get a Precision with Seymour Quarter Pounders, stainless round wounds, and a heavy pick (I prefer Fender 355 Heavy triangles), run it thru a cranked SVT, and just fram the hell out of it ! !
Joey