jonnymangia
New member
I just laced up some GHS Boomer .10's on my SG (replacing Ernie Ball Slinky's) and my guitar sounds WAY too bright now. Could different strings make that much of a change in tone?
J
J
jonnymangia said:I just laced up some GHS Boomer .10's on my SG (replacing Ernie Ball Slinky's) and my guitar sounds WAY too bright now. Could different strings make that much of a change in tone?
J
absolutelyjonnymangia said:Could different strings make that much of a change in tone?
JeffB said:+1 to Zerb and Curlys posts.
Boomers are BRIGHT strings.
Biggest "wow" factor I've heard in strings is when I started using DR Blues. Holy Craparoni. I was real pleased with the Gibson VRs and BW's, but man the DR Blues...just took up the tone another notch (and theya re tough and LAST!)
Picks too. I have prolly about 20 different types of picks laying around...some in sev diff gauges...BIG diff in tone with picks. I find myself gravitating back to old standard celluloid picks..Fender..Gibson, etc, most of the time. Dunlop Nylons are very nice too for me. They don't last long, but have the best tone to my ears.
Dunlop Nylons are very nice too for me. They don't last long, but have the best tone to my ears.
Zerberus said:yes... different brands have different alloys, and different guages have different tension.....
If you´re surprised at strings making a big difference, just wait until you discover different guages and material of pick![]()
St_Genesius said:Changing gauges, composition, design or manufacturer can all have very big effects, but it can also sometimes be startling just how different the exact same string will sound when it's BRAND FSCKING NEW versus the old grimey one that has been on your guitar for longer than you want to admit. Some people get addicted to that BRAND FSCKING NEW sound and change their strings constantly; others get used to the sound of a dead string and hate the way new ones sound.