Another easily impressed Gen Z guitarist...

Seems like something you'd play at a strip club. Not something I'd want to rock personally....never been crazy about gold hardware or tops (w/ a few exceptions...this isn't one though)

Also....I don't get why SS frets are such a huge draw? ....didn't miss them on my guitar's before and don't now either..they feel & play/sound exactly like any other frets I've tried. And I don't care for fixed bridges much as well ...Evertune or not....so pass.
 
Seems like something you'd play at a strip club. Not something I'd want to rock personally....never been crazy about gold hardware or tops (w/ a few exceptions...this isn't one though)

Also....I don't get why SS frets are such a huge draw? ....didn't miss them on my guitar's before and don't now either..they feel & play/sound exactly like any other frets I've tried. And I don't care for fixed bridges much as well ...Evertune or not....so pass.

SS frets last longer but also cost more to fix. They make sense on a neck thru axe if you want maximum possible time between refrets, but not on a bolt on neck you can just swap. Plus some people, me included, don't like their more metallic tone.

The kids these days are crazy about Evertunes and Fishman Fluence pups. I always thought my neighboring string going out of tune on Floyd Rose bends was kind of a cool, quarter tone effect.
 
I hate that Agufish guy.

He goes out of his way to say his channel is about Metal and chuggs, and then he raves about how Mark Tremonti, Black Stone Cherry, and Blink 182 are some of his biggest influences. Dude swears Lamb of God is the heaviest thing that has ever happened to music.

I mean, it's not bad to be surface-level into Metal or whatever, but dude is claiming on his videos "this is so Metal, that is so metal". Like... what the fuck does he know. Dude has the most normie taste in everything gear-related. Silverburst comes in fashion, he loves it. Evertune comes in fasion, he loves it. Stainless steel comes in fashion, he loves it.

It's not bad to like new stuff either, but it seems like whatever is the new trend, he's always all about it like it's the best thing to have ever happened to guitar. I like Fishman Fluence and whatnot, but it's hard to take his reviews serioiusly when he's either so easily impressed, or he just raves about everything he gets paid to review.
 
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I hate that Agufish guy.

He goes out of his way to say his channel is about Metal and chuggs, and then he raves about how Mark Tremonti, Black Stone Cherry, and Blink 182 are some of his biggest influences. Dude swears Lamb of God is the heaviest thing that has ever happened to music.

I mean, it's not bad to be surface-level into Metal or whatever, but dude is claiming on his videos "this is so Metal, that is so metal". Like... what the **** does he know. Dude has the most normie taste in everything gear-related. Silverburst comes in fashion, he loves it. Evertune comes in fasion, he loves it. Stainless steel comes in fashion, he loves it.

It's not bad to like new stuff either, but it seems like whatever is the new trend, he's always all about it like it's the best thing to have ever happened to guitar. I like Fishman Fluence and whatnot, but it's hard to take his reviews serioiusly when he's either so easily impressed, or he just raves about everything he gets paid to review.

This is a group of people who feel driven to stream themselves playing games and feel compelled to watch other people play games for more than a review purpose.

My guess is they are fascinated by their own belly button.
 
This Agufish dude is at the peak of youtube idiocy within the guitar community. First of all, his constipated 'tone': he always talks as if he needs to go the bathroom really badly. Then, his sheer lack of knowledge. He spews basic stuff and talks about it as if it is in-depth knowledge.

Trogly's guitar 'show' is another one of those nincompoops who just blahs out stupid stuff. Like 'Oh UPS Ruined This Guitar' (why does every word need a capital letter?), and it's just a stress crack in the finish near the headstock, starting that the nut because that's where the stresses have become too great. Simple fix. 'But The Resale Value!' (insert GenZ-whining). Or, 'What About The UV-Lamp Test!".

Since when is it such a crime that a finish has been buffed again? Also, the UV Test on nitro only shows spots of finish that haven't been touched, so if you have a guitar that's like, 5 years old (fairly new), and you rebuff it to blend in the repaired hairline crack (with a drop of thinner to melt the finish back to itself) you wouldn't see a thing because ALL of the finish has been polished.

But no, it's not the hype we're going for.
 
This Agufish dude is at the peak of youtube idiocy within the guitar community. First of all, his constipated 'tone': he always talks as if he needs to go the bathroom really badly. Then, his sheer lack of knowledge. He spews basic stuff and talks about it as if it is in-depth knowledge.

Trogly's guitar 'show' is another one of those nincompoops who just blahs out stupid stuff. Like 'Oh UPS Ruined This Guitar' (why does every word need a capital letter?), and it's just a stress crack in the finish near the headstock, starting that the nut because that's where the stresses have become too great. Simple fix. 'But The Resale Value!' (insert GenZ-whining). Or, 'What About The UV-Lamp Test!".

Since when is it such a crime that a finish has been buffed again? Also, the UV Test on nitro only shows spots of finish that haven't been touched, so if you have a guitar that's like, 5 years old (fairly new), and you rebuff it to blend in the repaired hairline crack (with a drop of thinner to melt the finish back to itself) you wouldn't see a thing because ALL of the finish has been polished.

But no, it's not the hype we're going for.

Once YouTube thumbnails started to look like reaction panels from a comic book ten years ago in order to generate false outage and overly emotional clickbait it became difficult to take any of the underlying content seriously.

I feel like anyone born in and after 2000 has a largely impressionistic knowledge about everything that isn't a smartphone app.
 
Once YouTube thumbnails started to look like reaction panels from a comic book ten years ago in order to generate false outage and overly emotional clickbait it became difficult to take any of the underlying content seriously.

I feel like anyone born in and after 2000 has a largely impressionistic knowledge about everything that isn't a smartphone app.

The Japanese guitar channels, especially the builders, are amazing. No blah, just professional work. Highly recommend watching those.
 
orpheo, could you recommend a Japanese luthier channel for me? Most here know I'm bored with current American retail product. Not enough glossy black pointies or knobs and switches on them for me.
 
Btw, this dude absolutely trashes Evertune bridges. And this was ten years ago before guitar influencers started pushing them and Fishman.

The bridges seem as complex to set up as a Kahler but offer none of the benefits. They also seem to have a comparable footprint to a Kahler on the guitar.

I'm also not sure how they're going to adjust for intonation issues as you go up the neck simply by raising the saddle, which not only affects the action but also requires a set amount of tension that makes the guitar strings more difficult to bend accurately to pitch. And you have to route the guitar out and have springs in the back--the very thing they were trying to get away from with Floyds in the first place.

https://youtu.be/OGEacUkv9S0

Meanwhile the time you spend tuning your TOM or Floyd is a fraction of what you'd spend setting up an Evertune. Even if I had an Evertune, I'd always check tuning first. It's just good practice to do that regardless of the bridge you have.

All of this grew out of 40+ years of people still saying, "How can I avoid a Floyd?"

And my advice is still the same:

1) Buy a quality bridge.
2) Know how to set it up.
3) Level it while you set it up.

Evertunes solve problems I don't have with my Floyd Roses, and introduce more problems Floyds don't give me.

Meanwhile, hearing Randy Rhoads play rhythm with all his Floyd Rose enabled embellishments will always sound more interesting to me than some kid banging away power chords on a drop tuned 7 string.

If you want your guitar to sound like a keyboard pitch wheel, a fixed bridge guitar is literally less of a guitar, and thus I demote them to tracking rhythms and experimenting with alternate tunings quickly.

It would be interesting to see what gear people would use without the influence of marketing on their psychology.

Edit: also, I'm not sure how the bridge is supposed to compensate for intonation changes when strings themselves age and deteriorate.

Plus, the pitch imperfections and tonal changes in playing in certain parts of the neck vs. others is what gives music its tone and color.

Why would I want a bridge that makes my guitar sound perfectly in pitch no matter where I am on the neck and what I do with my fingers?

True Temperament frets would seem to be a much better solution for intonation issues. They just don't look that easy to install or repair.

I feel like this bridge is meant for people who play very heavy handed and don't have a lot of control over their technique. It's the same philosophy I have with people using string mutes like hair scrunchies when tapping--instead of relying on something as a crutch just practice more so you don't make extraneous noise.
 
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I can see the benefits of an Evertune bridge in a professional recording scenario. I think it's common practice when recording in a professional environment to check tuner before each take. It would save A LOT of time knowing you can skip this step.

Even the most stable guitar I've owned (my old RG570 with the Edge Trem before it broke and I had to swap it for a Schaller Floyd) did need some very slight touch ups here and there every three or so takes. It's kind of unavoidable when you beat on the strings in a hot room.

I agree that iffy pitch here and there on guitar is just a natural part of the instrument because of imperfect intonation, but not being in tune if you can help it is just kinda unprofessional and slightly negligent, IMO. Keep in mind, I only really think that's the case that's if I'm doing any serious recording that I wanna show off. Of course, that's JMO, so please don't take this as an agression. I'm a tune freak. I'm the kind of jackass that used to step on his tuner pedal in between every song when playing live just to make sure. Hell, I even own four different tuner pedals, LOL.

That being said, for me who don't have any immediate plans of recording with Fredrik Nordstrom, I'm fine with my roller Tune-O, Graphtech nut, nut sauce, and locking tuners, thank you. Especially since if I understand correctly how the Evertune works, is just like maintaining 6 individual little Floyds in your guitar. And yeah, no. There's a reason why I stay away from Floyds.
 
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I can see the benefits of an Evertune bridge in a professional recording scenario. I think it's common practice when recording in a professional environment to check tuner before each take. It would save A LOT of time knowing you can skip this step.

Even the most stable guitar I've owned (my old RG570 with the Edge Trem before it broke and I had to swap it for a Schaller Floyd) did need some very slight touch ups here and there every three or so takes. It's kind of unavoidable when you beat on the strings in a hot room.

I agree that iffy pitch here and there on guitar is just a natural part of the instrument because of imperfect intonation, but not being in tune if you can help it is just negligent and unprofessional, IMO. At least when doing any serious recording, that is.

That being said, for me who don't have any immediate plans of recording with Fredrik Nordstrom, I'm fine with my roller Tune-O, Graphtech nut, nut sauce, and locking tuners, thank you. Especially since if I understand correctly how the Evertune works, is just like maintaining 6 individual Floyds in your guitar. :)

You maintain the Evertune like a Floyd, but it doesn't do the glorious things a Floyd does. :) And as far as I can tell it won't accommodate piezo saddles or other electronics that a Graphtech Floyd or Ernie Ball bridge will. They say an Evertune floating trem is in development. I'm curious but doubtful.

Checking tuning takes a couple of minutes. It's just something that has to be done, like changing oil, but they are trying to find a way to get out of a relatively simple and quick process.

I always keep my tuner plugin open while I'm doing takes. The biggest pain is when you have to unclamp a Floyd, tune it up to pitch (because that tends to do better than tuning down to pitch), adjust the fine tuners completely out, and reclamp.

Slayer going nuts on Floyds and Kahlers live didn't need a retune (although their usually being in Eb helps hide the pitch dropping). The pitch will hold within a few cents if the setup is sound.

Only downside to Floyds is the expense of having a guitar for each tuning.

Next thing you know these kids will think you need a special wrist mounted Apple watch app to help them do on pitch bends when they don't realize learning to hear a half step, whole step, step and a half, and even two step bend is just a basic guitar life skill.

More of that music on a grid everything has to be perfect mentality.

Plus, for a few dollars you can saw off a piece of wood and block off your Floyd for rhythm takes or invest in any of a number of relatively inexpensive devices that will lock it in place.

Only knock I have against TOM bridges is if you aren't familiar with them you might think the tailpiece is solidly connected to the posts and not held in place by string tension. Almost banged a dent into my Hamer Scarab when I first changed strings on it and didn't realize the tailpiece came off because I had no experience with a TOM.
 
Maybe Evertune just reminds me of the Gibson robo-tuner thing--it's an overengineered solution to something that really isn't a problem that solved by simply not being lazy.
 
I don't feel the need of such a complicated stuff, I'm an simple player a bit tired of sonic experiments, I'm too old for that, but I don't blame the fact a guitar sounds more like a keyboard than a stringed instruments, the guitar is just a tool, if the Evertune helps those who want to experiment and create, good for them, it's possible they have time and patience to get through the problems if they happen, I'm not the kind of guy who complains changing the lamp bulb saying how much the older was good.
That said, there's a problem with the reviews, they are almost ALL paid, ALL equals, everyday there is something which overwhelms the things unreachable the day before, so it's quite impossible to understand how much a thing is good, it's always a river of 'awesome' 'fantastic' 'gorgeous', come on, it's impossible, and you notice it the very moment you try some of the stuff for real. Influencers, content creators, don't serve our little world well at the moment
 
Maybe Evertune just reminds me of the Gibson robo-tuner thing--it's an overengineered solution to something that really isn't a problem that solved by simply not being lazy.
It's not about being lazy. It's that in a studio, time wasted on checking tuning gets expensive.

Like I said, though, I'm not disagreeing with you. It's ridiculous how this Agufish guy got lights to record himself rocking out in his bedroom for his vids. It's the same with his passion for Evertune.

I guess he does use it "professionaly", though.
 
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Plus, for a few dollars you can saw off a piece of wood and block off your Floyd for rhythm takes or invest in any of a number of relatively inexpensive devices that will lock it in place.

Only knock I have against TOM bridges is if you aren't familiar with them you might think the tailpiece is solidly connected to the posts and not held in place by string tension. Almost banged a dent into my Hamer Scarab when I first changed strings on it and didn't realize the tailpiece came off because I had no experience with a TOM.
I actually found the tuning my Edge more stable when it was 100% floating, I suspect because it was working on a similar principle as the Evertune where the springs balance the tension of the strings, just on a roughter, less specialized kinda way.

And luckily, they also make locking Tune-O's, talipeces, and/or studs, which actually help tuning stability a bit too, even if by the tiniest amount. :)
 
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