Originally posted by Demanic
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A new concept is blowing my mind. (Resonance: unplugged vs plugged tone)
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Originally posted by Demanic View PostAnd what's interesting, is that I think that I could actually play it.
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Originally posted by Mincer View Post
My 2 chances playing a Stick were not so good. Nothing translates from guitar at all.“For me, when everything goes wrong – that’s when adventure starts.” Yvonne Chouinard
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I've learned that I want the guitar itself to be as structure-ly sound as possible for best tone. I learned this from years of modding Squiers and then transitioning to Warmoths. I've noticed that the woods etc can kind of yield unpredictable results. You might get the opposite of what you expect and it might not be 'good' for you or it might just be different. However I established that I definitely need the guitar and all the components to be structurely sound to yield good plugged in tone. The thing not need sound like art unplugged, but I can get a general sense of what's going on with it unplugged. With the Squiers all kinds of crap was going wrong that would make it sound crappy to me. Hollow nut, then I'd change the nut and not necessarily do a good job, body and neck are all thin, bad bridge and saddles conduct like ****, bad tuners, change them and have it not come out perfect etc. All that crap would add up to make it sound kind of ding-y compared to my nice warmoths where everything resonates correctly and that translates into a nice amped tone.
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Originally posted by Mincer View Post
My 2 chances playing a Stick were not so good. Nothing translates from guitar at all.
Because the Stick's approach and reach typically necessitates a lower angle of attack with your fingers - its like started over playing on some ways for the first few days.“For me, when everything goes wrong – that’s when adventure starts.” Yvonne Chouinard
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Originally posted by Clint 55 View PostI've learned that I want the guitar itself to be as structure-ly sound as possible for best tone. I learned this from years of modding Squiers and then transitioning to Warmoths. I've noticed that the woods etc can kind of yield unpredictable results. You might get the opposite of what you expect and it might not be 'good' for you or it might just be different. However I established that I definitely need the guitar and all the components to be structurely sound to yield good plugged in tone. The thing not need sound like art unplugged, but I can get a general sense of what's going on with it unplugged. With the Squiers all kinds of crap was going wrong that would make it sound crappy to me. Hollow nut, then I'd change the nut and not necessarily do a good job, body and neck are all thin, bad bridge and saddles conduct like ****, bad tuners, change them and have it not come out perfect etc. All that crap would add up to make it sound kind of ding-y compared to my nice warmoths where everything resonates correctly and that translates into a nice amped tone.
My new belief is that there is an "inverse" relationship between what you hear unplugged and what you hear plugged in.
If a bolt on guitar with a thin neck and floating trem is resonating like crazy in room, its a pretty safe bet that the guitar will sound really warm when plugged in.
If a guitar sounds dark and "tight" acoustically, when you plug it in, there will be more treble/presense in the plugged signal.
If in-room resonance is caused by energy transferring from the strings into the body, that means there is less energy in the strings.
Lots of people are into the "light as possible" Les Paul thing. What you are getting is a mahogony neck glued onto a less dense piece of mahogony. It is more resonant in room, but this means less energy in the strings. A heavy/dense les paul should be less resonant in room, but keep more energy in the strings.
So I do think there is a relationship between what you hear in room and the plugged tone. A resonant guitar will be warmer/rounder when plugged in, allow you to turn up the gain, perhaps there is more fundamental tone when the presence is filtered away.
My current thinking is to avoid guitars with dead spots or inconsistency in resonance. As far as more or less resonant, I believe it can be worked around with pickup and EQ changes. I am interested in neck through construction for neck stability. I haven't heard a neck through that resonates like a typical basswood bolt on. (although they could be out there!)
Some guitarists want a lightweight guitar, either because they are gigging or they identify with the warmer tone. Some guitarists might want a denser sounding guitar, for more sustain, or in the case of neck through, maybe more stable neck.
On the internet, in general conversation, I think lightweight, acoustically resonant guitars have won the battle of public opinion.
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Originally posted by Top-L View Post
This is the tricky thing.
My new belief is that there is an "inverse" relationship between what you hear unplugged and what you hear plugged in.
If a bolt on guitar with a thin neck and floating trem is resonating like crazy in room, its a pretty safe bet that the guitar will sound really warm when plugged in.
If a guitar sounds dark and "tight" acoustically, when you plug it in, there will be more treble/presense in the plugged signal.
If in-room resonance is caused by energy transferring from the strings into the body, that means there is less energy in the strings.
Lots of people are into the "light as possible" Les Paul thing. What you are getting is a mahogony neck glued onto a less dense piece of mahogony. It is more resonant in room, but this means less energy in the strings. A heavy/dense les paul should be less resonant in room, but keep more energy in the strings.
So I do think there is a relationship between what you hear in room and the plugged tone. A resonant guitar will be warmer/rounder when plugged in, allow you to turn up the gain, perhaps there is more fundamental tone when the presence is filtered away.
My current thinking is to avoid guitars with dead spots or inconsistency in resonance. As far as more or less resonant, I believe it can be worked around with pickup and EQ changes. I am interested in neck through construction for neck stability. I haven't heard a neck through that resonates like a typical basswood bolt on. (although they could be out there!)
Some guitarists want a lightweight guitar, either because they are gigging or they identify with the warmer tone. Some guitarists might want a denser sounding guitar, for more sustain, or in the case of neck through, maybe more stable neck.
On the internet, in general conversation, I think lightweight, acoustically resonant guitars have won the battle of public opinion.
However, the guitar design argument should be centered around "Energy" i.e. "Information" available and imparted to the magnetic field of the transducer or given off as sound and heat from the guitar. -NOT TONE ITSELF. It is a mistake to assume a qualitative aspect to your ears is dependent on more information to the circuit... Rather more information allows you to have more options to get the tone you want. The Gibson 335 is incredibly inefficient and wasteful for electric guitar applications -but it sounds great because the information that does make it represents characteristic audio bands which are perceived as pleasant when the pickup's influence then pronounces or suppresses certain portions and adds it's character to the signal in a successful combination.
This problem is best looked at first like a physicist would -as information theory -the way someone writing a compression algorithm for video would look at the problem.
“For me, when everything goes wrong – that’s when adventure starts.” Yvonne Chouinard
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