How Does Semi-Hollow Body Affect Tone?

Re: How Does Semi-Hollow Body Affect Tone?

Semi-hollow guitars have a mellower tone compared to a solid body. Feedback can be an issue with them.
 
Re: How Does Semi-Hollow Body Affect Tone?

Just curious. I have read theyre more prone to microphonic feedback. that's all I know

not prone to microphonic feedback...that is an issue to do with pickup coils vibrating.
Semis are more likely to vibrate from acoustic feedback than a solidbody tho, but that needs to be pretty damn loud before it happens. Semi-hollow devotees actually enjoy the acoustic response because on a good night you can get some beautiful controllable feedback fed infinite sustain on notes. That, and many other attributes make semis very attractive to many players.
 
Re: How Does Semi-Hollow Body Affect Tone?

I wouldn't say mellow but there's something different. More of a 'clonk' sound than 'thrumm' or 'plink' for clean single notes if that makes any sense. I've found that the feedback they get is pretty easy to control by changing your position or the angle of the guitar.
 
Re: How Does Semi-Hollow Body Affect Tone?

I can see the solid body having more attack.

Anyone mount a solid body pickup to a full acoustic?
 
Re: How Does Semi-Hollow Body Affect Tone?

I wouldn't say mellow but there's something different. More of a 'clonk' sound than 'thrumm' or 'plink' for clean single notes if that makes any sense.

Man, thats actually excellent description! I was looking for a way to describe it, and thats as good as anything I've ever heard.
This is totally unrelated, but if you wanna try and get some "clonk' with a Strat, get an Invader! Sure, I'm nuts, but I have a semi hollow Gibby, and a Strat with a Invader, and the Invader loaded Strat gets some of that semi Hollow "clonk" if you will, with the volume knob down playing somewhat clean with volume.
 
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Re: How Does Semi-Hollow Body Affect Tone?

I can see the solid body having more attack.

Anyone mount a solid body pickup to a full acoustic?

What do you mean by "solid body pickup"? Like a magnetic pickup? I'm sure that someone has done that. But semi hollows also use magnetic pickups, which once again leads to the question of what do you mean by "solid body pickup"?
 
Re: How Does Semi-Hollow Body Affect Tone?

Well, jazz boxes are very close to full acoustic, especially the tone you get.
 
Re: How Does Semi-Hollow Body Affect Tone?

I can see the solid body having more attack.

Anyone mount a solid body pickup to a full acoustic?
Electric hollow bodies were around long before solidbodies or semi-hollows were invented.
Before the Telecaster hit the market, pretty much every electric guitar was a full hollow.
This one is an example of modern (well....late 50s) pickups in an old acoustic guitar design:
DSC_0336_zpsfe0d5aa8.jpg
 
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Re: How Does Semi-Hollow Body Affect Tone?

I love the sound of my '08 Gibson Les Paul Studio. It's fully chambered and it sure has a unique sound. I guess it can be classified as a semi-hollow body even if it don't look like it. It's a very woody, resonant sound that I find appealing. Compared to my '06 Epiphone LP Standard which weighs under 10 lbs. & it's acoustically louder. Both guitars sound good in their own way, but the chambering gives my LP Studio an airy tone which sounds heavenly. I've played other semi-hollow bodies like an ES-335, etc. but I never owned one.:( I think they sound fantastic and I love the natural feedback you get from them. Semi-hollow bodies are very expressive instruments and I think it's an asset to own one. People only think that they are for jazz mostly, but I think the stereotype for these guitars is changing for the better. You can play all styles of music with a semi-hollow body and they can deliver a tone that you sometimes can't get with a regular solid body guitar.;)
 
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Re: How Does Semi-Hollow Body Affect Tone?

To me it mellows out the tone, softens the attack. There's still ways to get a hard attack by making EQ changes but I like the natural tone of a semi-hollow. My only one is a early 2000's Hamer EchoTone with Duncan Designed pickups. An amazing player that I picked up for an insane price. I find it to be a very diverse instrument, from clean jazzy type sounds to blues to all out rock. Just depends on how you work it. Sure, that can be said for quite a few different guitars as the player has to make it work, but a semi-hollow, IMO, does it in a much better manner than others would. I've always liked 335 type guitars. Just wish I had one years ago. Glad I have one now.
 
Re: How Does Semi-Hollow Body Affect Tone?

Hmm, I am in the process of building a semi-hollow strat (well, my luthier is building and I'm just handing over $'s) and it sounded a little louder and more full than my Fender Strat USA with Fat 50's. I've always thought of semi-hollows as having a richer more full sound. But the wood selection and choice of pickup will play a lot into the sound...just my thoughts.
 
Re: How Does Semi-Hollow Body Affect Tone?

not prone to microphonic feedback...that is an issue to do with pickup coils vibrating.
Semis are more likely to vibrate from acoustic feedback than a solidbody tho, but that needs to be pretty damn loud before it happens. Semi-hollow devotees actually enjoy the acoustic response because on a good night you can get some beautiful controllable feedback fed infinite sustain on notes. That, and many other attributes make semis very attractive to many players.

This is why I like them, among other reasons. You can turn around to face a bit closer to the amp, and the note you're on will take on a life of it's own.

The main reason I like semi hollow guitars, though, is that they simply do naturally what I have to make other guitar designs do to some extent or the other.
 
Re: How Does Semi-Hollow Body Affect Tone?

What do you mean by "solid body pickup"? Like a magnetic pickup? I'm sure that someone has done that. But semi hollows also use magnetic pickups, which once again leads to the question of what do you mean by "solid body pickup"?

I mean not a piezo pickup or whatever they use for semi acoustics. I mean like a strat single coil or Gibson humbucker.

I know you can get full acoustics with pickups but theyre very expensive and impossible to find left-handed. Always wanted one.

I was just curious, cuz I saw an old video of bluesman Big Joe Williams. He had an acoustic with a pickup duct-taped in the hole.
 
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Re: How Does Semi-Hollow Body Affect Tone?

I like the natural tone of a semi-hollow. My only one is a early 2000's Hamer EchoTone with Duncan Designed pickups... I find it to be a very diverse instrument, from clean jazzy type sounds to blues to all out rock. Just depends on how you work it... I've always liked 335 type guitars. Just wish I had one years ago. Glad I have one now.

+1. Echotones are nice, especially the early ones. They had Standards in red, brown sunburst, and Aztec gold (flame top), along with a Custom in red with block inlays, gold hardware, and a trapeze tailpiece. An Echotone was my first 335 also. That got me hooked. 335's just always seem to sound nice.
 
Re: How Does Semi-Hollow Body Affect Tone?

I mean not a piezo pickup or whatever they use for semi acoustics. I mean like a strat single coil or Gibson humbucker.

I know you can get full acoustics with pickups but theyre very expensive and impossible to find left-handed. Always wanted one.

I was just curious, cuz I saw an old video of bluesman Big Joe Williams. He had an acoustic with a pickup duct-taped in the hole.
Shoehorning magnetic pickups into acoustics of all shapes and sizes is very common and has been happening for as long as pickups were invented. Have a look at NIrvana's "unplugged" set for a good example of a flat top with a pickup - he even uses some fuzz on a couple songs.

i screwed a single coil pickup into the soundhole of an old flat top acoustic a while back. It sounded really cool and ballsy thru a marshall. I no longer have that guitar tho.

I cut a hole in this resonator with an angle grinder and installed a PAF too. This is a nice sounding axe when its amplified.
DSC_0120.jpg

The only thing ive noticed about acoustic instruments and regular electric pickups is that the bronze strings are not as loud or as clear when amplified as nickel or steel electric guitar strings - probably something to do with the magnetic qualities of the string.
 
Re: How Does Semi-Hollow Body Affect Tone?

yeah I saw that Nirvana unplugged show. Looked like he had a p90 at the bridge pos
 
Re: How Does Semi-Hollow Body Affect Tone?

Shoehorning magnetic pickups into acoustics of all shapes and sizes is very common and has been happening for as long as pickups were invented. Have a look at NIrvana's "unplugged" set for a good example of a flat top with a pickup - he even uses some fuzz on a couple songs.

i screwed a single coil pickup into the soundhole of an old flat top acoustic a while back. It sounded really cool and ballsy thru a marshall. I no longer have that guitar tho.

I cut a hole in this resonator with an angle grinder and installed a PAF too. This is a nice sounding axe when its amplified.
DSC_0120.jpg

The only thing ive noticed about acoustic instruments and regular electric pickups is that the bronze strings are not as loud or as clear when amplified as nickel or steel electric guitar strings - probably something to do with the magnetic qualities of the string.
The Mark Knopfler - Dire Straits - Brothers In Arms guitar? Great stuff!
 
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