Obsessive Compulsive
New member
Re: Basswood - Underrated?
In the studio the wood is even less important with all these outboard processors and over-the-top tweaking, reamping, EQ-ing, etc, etc.
Human ear is very unreliable. There are numbers of tests done on the impact of wood on tone but still...people choose to rebuke it cause they love tinkering with gear. It is even more fund than playing the guitar itself.
The fact that basswood is soft is only relevant to wood working. I have a Charvel CX291 from 1993 and the wood is as tough as the rock of Gibraltar. No warping, bending, loose studs, whatever.
I would agree that it matters very little live, yes, but when you are recording in a hi-fi studio, you will find that the wood matters. Whether it's the type or the grain or whatever specific part of it is another matter, though.
In the studio the wood is even less important with all these outboard processors and over-the-top tweaking, reamping, EQ-ing, etc, etc.
Human ear is very unreliable. There are numbers of tests done on the impact of wood on tone but still...people choose to rebuke it cause they love tinkering with gear. It is even more fund than playing the guitar itself.
The fact that basswood is soft is only relevant to wood working. I have a Charvel CX291 from 1993 and the wood is as tough as the rock of Gibraltar. No warping, bending, loose studs, whatever.