blueslegend8
New member
i've been listening to a little bit of Andy Mckee lately and he's known to play with a fanned fret guitar. The concept revolves around intonation as well as ergonomics. anybody have any experience with this concept?
The thing with all these attempts at improving the flaws in a guitar's intonation (fanned frets, earvana, buzz freten, true temperament frets, etc...) is that they're only worthwhile if you're playing with orchestras or synths.
Your bassist and rhythm guitarist have the same problems as you, so if you correct your problems you'll just be playing out of tune with them. The guitar does have tuning problems, but it plays in tune with other guitarists.
Someone correct me if i'm wrong, because i don't really know what i'm talking about anyway.
CORRECT!!!
If you, as a player get into some sort of intonation correction...be it fanned frets, bent frets, odd ball nuts, etc you will be closer to intune (still not perfect) and if you play in a settign any ANY other fretted instrument unless they have the same intonation correction system it will be painfully obvious how out of tune BOTH of you are and there is no way to fix it.
Also, I hate the way they feel...I've played a few fanned fret guitars. It's just not for me.
All that said, if you are playing w/o a piano player or something similar it can be very useful and helpful...
Nope, Total Bull**** as none of the otherwise sound "intonation correction" comments are applicable here.
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