L
Lewguitar
Guest
I've been playing alot of lap steel lately and have a '36 Rickenbacher with the 1 1/2" horseshoe pickup and a '46 with the 1 1/4" horseshoe pickup.
The '36 has more bass and a hotter, louder, filler tone...the '46 has more treble and less bass and a cleaner tone...although the two pickups are similar in tone and appear similar to the pickup used on the modern Rickenbacker Bass.
The 5E3 tweed Deluxes I play these old lap steels through have only a TONE control that cuts the treble when you turn it down.
But I've found that I can thicken up the tone and add bass to the tone by lowering the tone on the amp and turning the volume up. I can almost make my '46 Ricky sound as fat and deep as my '36.
So basically, to fatten up the tone and get a fuller deeper tone, I can just turn the treble on the amp down and then turn the overall volume up...the opposite is also true: to go for a brighter and cleaner tone, turn the treble up and the volume down.
This is kind of simplistic and no news to many here...but I thought I'd pass it along anyway.
Lew
The '36 has more bass and a hotter, louder, filler tone...the '46 has more treble and less bass and a cleaner tone...although the two pickups are similar in tone and appear similar to the pickup used on the modern Rickenbacker Bass.
The 5E3 tweed Deluxes I play these old lap steels through have only a TONE control that cuts the treble when you turn it down.
But I've found that I can thicken up the tone and add bass to the tone by lowering the tone on the amp and turning the volume up. I can almost make my '46 Ricky sound as fat and deep as my '36.
So basically, to fatten up the tone and get a fuller deeper tone, I can just turn the treble on the amp down and then turn the overall volume up...the opposite is also true: to go for a brighter and cleaner tone, turn the treble up and the volume down.
This is kind of simplistic and no news to many here...but I thought I'd pass it along anyway.
Lew