I was a long time mahogony snob- it absolutely sounds more resonant unplugged and has a wider frequency spread, although I usually have the bass turned way down on my amp.
Recently got a cheap basswood guitar (used to own RGs many years ago) and the tone is fatter and has a mid-push that my mahogony axes dont. It records great and I am able to bring the bass up on my amp.
I think the big difference is that notes on the lower strings /higher frets sound more complete (rounder), so it opens up that part of the neck - the notes are more intelligible there and less scooped. It absolutely has less bass, but its not getting in the way either. Anyone else enjoy basswood?
I used to think that Ibanez was using Satch and Vai endorsements of basswood guitars to help sell their cheaper models, but there may be something to using basswood for shredders.
Recently got a cheap basswood guitar (used to own RGs many years ago) and the tone is fatter and has a mid-push that my mahogony axes dont. It records great and I am able to bring the bass up on my amp.
I think the big difference is that notes on the lower strings /higher frets sound more complete (rounder), so it opens up that part of the neck - the notes are more intelligible there and less scooped. It absolutely has less bass, but its not getting in the way either. Anyone else enjoy basswood?
I used to think that Ibanez was using Satch and Vai endorsements of basswood guitars to help sell their cheaper models, but there may be something to using basswood for shredders.

