Ashurbanipal
Well-known member
Re: Brian May's Tone
I find it fascinating how something tangible, such as a piece of metal or wood, when put to a specific use makes something that is so affective on an abstract level of understanding or emotion. Flicking a pickup out of phase has a drastic effect on sound and the way the guitar interacts the amplifier etc. We can explain these things to an extent in physics or mathematical equations, but the way it affects us intellectually is something else, though it drives us to understand why. Yet technicalities cannot explain the pleasure I feel in listening to the roar of the RS's neck pickup on "Brighton Rock" from Sheer Heart Attack.
The RS mythos is perhaps one of the most remarkable in rock guitar history, and its singularity has led me to follow the stories and information, which compliments rather nicely with my propensity towards the guitar in general
. The RS represents a particular musical vision - a guitar that would musically feedback a note indefinitely under high volume, have a wide travel trem that stayed in tune, and single coil/humbucking options. And this was envisioned by a 16 year old (with the help of his father) at a time when British beat groups and surf music were the thing in the mainstream.
This is one of the things that makes it a compelling instrument for me, though I am by no means an expert; there are others who have more intimate knowledge of the technicalities.
In a nutshell, I read a fair bit and store it away in the old brain-box
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I find it fascinating how something tangible, such as a piece of metal or wood, when put to a specific use makes something that is so affective on an abstract level of understanding or emotion. Flicking a pickup out of phase has a drastic effect on sound and the way the guitar interacts the amplifier etc. We can explain these things to an extent in physics or mathematical equations, but the way it affects us intellectually is something else, though it drives us to understand why. Yet technicalities cannot explain the pleasure I feel in listening to the roar of the RS's neck pickup on "Brighton Rock" from Sheer Heart Attack.
The RS mythos is perhaps one of the most remarkable in rock guitar history, and its singularity has led me to follow the stories and information, which compliments rather nicely with my propensity towards the guitar in general
This is one of the things that makes it a compelling instrument for me, though I am by no means an expert; there are others who have more intimate knowledge of the technicalities.
In a nutshell, I read a fair bit and store it away in the old brain-box