Can you make a semi-hollow sound like a solid body guitar? Will using a equalizer on your amp or pedal help?
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Making semi-hollow electric guitar sound like a solid body guitar
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Actually I've heard of people trying this the other way- trying to make a solidbody sound more hollow. But I'd be curious if anyone comes up with an answer outside of guitar modeling with a hex pickup (which works well).Administrator of the SDUGF
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Tape over the holes to kill feedback
turn up the gainEHD
Just here surfing Guitar Pron
RG2EX1 w/ SD hot-rodded pickups / RG4EXFM1 w/ Carvin S22j/b + FVN middle
SR500 / Martin 000CE-1/Epiphone Hummingbird
Epiphone Florentine with OEM Probuckers
Ehdwuld branded Blue semi hollow custom with JB/Jazz
Reptile Green Gibson Custom Studio / Aqua Dean Shire semi hollow with piezo
Carvin Belair / Laney GC80A Acoustic Amp (a gift from Guitar Player Mag)
GNX3000 (yea I'm a modeler)
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Well a 335 or Gretsch wont sound like a strat
Strat-ish
But not blindfold worthy
335 can get some LP like tones
Gretsch filtertron style pickups are more p90 single coilyEHD
Just here surfing Guitar Pron
RG2EX1 w/ SD hot-rodded pickups / RG4EXFM1 w/ Carvin S22j/b + FVN middle
SR500 / Martin 000CE-1/Epiphone Hummingbird
Epiphone Florentine with OEM Probuckers
Ehdwuld branded Blue semi hollow custom with JB/Jazz
Reptile Green Gibson Custom Studio / Aqua Dean Shire semi hollow with piezo
Carvin Belair / Laney GC80A Acoustic Amp (a gift from Guitar Player Mag)
GNX3000 (yea I'm a modeler)
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Short answer, I don't think so.
My 335, and my corsair to a lesser degree, has a more open and less direct tone than any solid body I've played. Scooping some mids (slightly) with an EQ is the only way I could think to even try
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The two sound differences I most notice with semi-hollows is that there's something different in the attack of a note (it's a little faster/harder/more spiky), and something different with the way it feeds back.
For the attack of the note, it may be possible to use an expander to achieve a similar effect. I've never found anything that makes them feed back the same way at higher volumes though.Join me in the fight against muscular atrophy!
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I think if you were blindfolded, sitting in front of my amp, you'd be hard-pressed to hear differences between my Gibson ES-335s and my LP Elegant. The Elegant is a chambered model; both feature '57 Classics.
And the same is true for my Antiquity-equipped 335, and my 1960 Classic Premium Plus, also with Ants. The Classic is a 1997 model, and is weight-relieved.
Feel-wise, the 335s seem to have a softer attack, but it's real subtle.
I use them interchangeably. But I have other Les Pauls with different pickups, and they do sound different.
So what differences do YOU hear, and what are you trying to accomplish?
BillWhen you've had budget guitars for a number of years, you may find that your old instrument is holding you back. A quality guitar can inspire you to write great songs, improve your understanding of the Gdim chord while in the Lydian Mode, cure the heartbreak of cystic acne--and help you find true love in the process.
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Back when I was gigging five nights a week in a low volume R&B band in Detroit, my ES-355 was my main guitar.
Once in a while I'd bring my Les Paul instead and it always sounded thin and plinky at the low volume, no overdrive, sound levels we played at.
My ES-355 always sounded better. Fuller. More resonant.
With overdrive and distortion solid bodies and semi hollow bodies might sound sort of similar.
Sort of.
“Practice cures most tone issues” - John Suhr
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Sem-hollows have a softer attack, warmer feel to them than most solid bodies I played. I wish I could've kept the Hamer EchoTone I had. What a wonderful guitar that was. Even with the Duncan Designed Distortion pickups that came in it, it was still warm and smooth. I loved playing it.
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I've always preferred semi/full acoustic electrics, to solid-bodies;
I could live with a strat though, since it has all the cavities beneath the pickguard, and also the tremolo system...
My Wildkat is hollow, with the exception of a "tone block" right under the bridge. So it's kinda a "crossover"-
the bridge pickup got plenty of attack, while the neck pickup got that acoustic sound and "bloom".
-ErlIf somethings important- send a PM. I might be offline for long periods. Rock on!!!
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