Re: Guitar tone question
Right, which is why all the woods commonly found on "25.5 Fenders are ALWAYS bright, woods used for 24.75" Gibson's are ALWAYS dark and middy, and Basswood and Popular used for 25" Ibanez's are tonally balanced.
I have stated numerous times on this forum that I deeply believe that the only wood that makes a substantial lick of difference on a guitar is that which the neck/body joint consists of.
Most ibanezes are 25.5 but yes.
The biggest factors in my experience to effect the performance are as follows
Tonewise largest to smallest
Pickups/electronics (includes pickup height from the the string and specific model of said pickup), construction quality (especially on bolt on as this massively effects sustain in my experience), strings (gauge, tension, material and brand), playing technique, pick and agreed with wood being last
That being said I believe wood making a difference is true just maybe not as much as many people think.
Tonal response and feelwise totally different ballgame:
Strings make the biggest difference followed by wood then followed by pick
Grover Jackson according to a few sources which I can’t verify but nevertheless used to reinforce the neck joint of his bolt neck instruments as this more definite connection allowed for better sustain and tonal transfer.
I’m not claiming I’m an expert nor have a played guitar that long but as a physics/engineering nerd they’re so many little elements that forge a guitars sound.
This can include
Bridge material, bridge mass, bridge type, how well the bridge is attached, tuner material, neck material, wood, fret material, construction method, quality of said construction, string gauge, string length/scale length, string height/action, string material, pick material, pick thickness, pick bevels/shape, overall technique, pickup type/construction, pickup height, the thickness of the body, if its chambered or not, the rest of the electronics
Probably missed a few but that’s before even plugging it into all your pedals that will potentially colour your tone and then your amp and then the speaker.
And if you’re recording you’ve also got to mics in terms of distance, angle and model to consider.
Wood is just one factor is this whole cluster of factors that affect you’re final tone.
If it makes a difference to the individual playing it that’s all that really matters.
I’ve spoke to luthiers some big and some small and all of them have said that wood affects the tone in some way.
That being I don’t believe it’s the biggest factor in what a guitar will sound like but it’s a big factor in what it will feel like to the player in my experience.