SirJackdeFuzz
New member
A guitar made from a piece of Basswood . . . what type of tone will it inherit, if you compare it to say, something like Mahogany ?
Just curious.
Thanks
Just curious.
Thanks
To me, basswood has a little more bass, and a signature peak in the mids.
Thanks for the great info SnakeAces.
Here's something on tone woods from the SD blog:
http://www.seymourduncan.com/blog/the-tone-garage/different-woods-different-tones/
Lots of great info already given and I really enjoyed reading the article posted by Petie.
My two main guitars are Walnut and Basswood. Prior to my Walnut Strat I used a Mahogany Strat. All of my guitar builds are solid 1 piece guitars except for the Mahogany which was a solid 2 piece build (and African Mahogany.) From my experience, Basswood definitely has a neutral tone while Mahogany has a darker tone with incredible sustain. My Walnut guitar sounds very similar to Mahogany only with more focused sustain and a bit more compressed than Mahogany.
The only pickup I could not stand in Basswood so far has been a JB, but every other pickup I've tried in Basswood sounded incredible. I agree with the article that Petie posted, "[Basswood] doesn’t have the growl of mahogany, it doesn’t have the tightness or bite of maple, it doesn’t have the sweetness of alder or the chunky quality of ash. Instead, it has all of that, although to a lesser degree. It has some bite, some growl, some sweetness, but not much. That makes it a perfect template for your own sound. It doesn’t add anything to your tone but it doesn’t take away anything."
Through my pickups (Screamin Demon, Dimebucker, Liquifire, Gibson 496R&500T), amp (modded Fender Hot Rod Deluxe,) and pedals (2 Rats, Vox Satchurator, modded Boss DS-1, Joyo US Dream which is an awesome pedal for the price, and a MXR Analog Chorus,) the Basswood sounds better with cleans and crunch while the Walnut & Mahogany sound better with high gain. Granted, I have not switched the pickups around to see how they all react, I do have a Screamin Demon in the bridge of the Basswood and the neck of the Walnut, but I don't think that would be a completely fair test of the differences in wood tones. Overall, I think Basswood is a super great wood,
Lots of great info already given and I really enjoyed reading the article posted by Petie.
My two main guitars are Walnut and Basswood. Prior to my Walnut Strat I used a Mahogany Strat. All of my guitar builds are solid 1 piece guitars except for the Mahogany which was a solid 2 piece build (and African Mahogany.) From my experience, Basswood definitely has a neutral tone while Mahogany has a darker tone with incredible sustain. My Walnut guitar sounds very similar to Mahogany only with more focused sustain and a bit more compressed than Mahogany.
The only pickup I could not stand in Basswood so far has been a JB, but every other pickup I've tried in Basswood sounded incredible. I agree with the article that Petie posted, "[Basswood] doesn’t have the growl of mahogany, it doesn’t have the tightness or bite of maple, it doesn’t have the sweetness of alder or the chunky quality of ash. Instead, it has all of that, although to a lesser degree. It has some bite, some growl, some sweetness, but not much. That makes it a perfect template for your own sound. It doesn’t add anything to your tone but it doesn’t take away anything."
Through my pickups (Screamin Demon, Dimebucker, Liquifire, Gibson 496R&500T), amp (modded Fender Hot Rod Deluxe,) and pedals (2 Rats, Vox Satchurator, modded Boss DS-1, Joyo US Dream which is an awesome pedal for the price, and a MXR Analog Chorus,) the Basswood sounds better with cleans and crunch while the Walnut & Mahogany sound better with high gain. Granted, I have not switched the pickups around to see how they all react, I do have a Screamin Demon in the bridge of the Basswood and the neck of the Walnut, but I don't think that would be a completely fair test of the differences in wood tones. Overall, I think Basswood is a super great wood,
That's how it's been to me as well. I've never stuck a JB into a good basswood guitar (only one very bad guitar), though, but the character is still nice.
GREAT info - thank you very much for your hard earned experience.
So . . . if i read every one's assessment of the acoustic properties of Basswood, is a safe when i make the following conclusion ?
Basswood (unlike Mahogany) will not 'colour' your pickup's tone, and will thus allow the pickup to sound more like it's self ?
Or am i wrong in thinking in this direction ?
To me, the JB in Basswood was just over the top and couldn't be tamed. I've loved it in every other guitar I've put it in, but just couldn't dial it in with my Basswood guitars. I've always paired the JB with two Hotrails, which this combo sounds best in an Alder with Maple Cap. I tried it in a Basswood Charvel and loved the Hotrails in it but again, couldn't dial in the JB.
Although I am not usually a fan of medium to higher output pickups in general... I have tried a JB in a 25.5" scale neck (maple) with an alder solid body Strat (loved it), a 24.75" scale neck (wenge with ziricote fretboard) with solid alder Strat body (still liked it a lot), 24.75" scale neck (wenge with ziricote fretboard) with chambered black korina LP with a Wilkinson trem (was pretty good but didn't like it as much with this combo), 24.75" scale neck (Indian rosewood) with a solid mahogany string through LP body (likable but not top choice) and finally with a 25.5" scale (bocote) neck on a solid swamp ash body (this is the JB's sweet spot for me).
I have not tried one in a basswood body, so I cannot speak to that experience. That being said, I tend to prefer the JB in a 25.5" scale balanced instrument where the neck leans slightly warm while the body leans slightly bright. In a close second though was the maple neck 25.5" scale on a balanced body but that "balanced body" was alder... not basswood.
I have a JB in a basswood Ibanez
And it sounds fine to me
Pure hairmetal
But it is particular in where it wants to sit under the strings
Too high or low and it sounds awful
*(Sent from my durned phone!)*
To me, the JB in Basswood was just over the top and couldn't be tamed. I've loved it in every other guitar I've put it in, but just couldn't dial it in with my Basswood guitars. I've always paired the JB with two Hotrails, which this combo sounds best in an Alder with Maple Cap. I tried it in a Basswood Charvel and loved the Hotrails in it but again, couldn't dial in the JB.