Re: Interesting article about mass, resonance and tone (written by James Tyler)
Whatever the string is anchored to must also be lightweight so the vibrations of the string can pass through it to the wood and from the wood back into the string.
Yes and no. Depends on construction. You may want lightweight (fixed bridge), or you may want heavy (tremolo blocks: they should try to resist eating up the strings energy).
Then you play an A. You have instantaneously changed the pitch by fretting it or choosing a different string, but the wood is still vibrating at E (things in motion). The wood must now stop vibrating at E and change to A. The inertia of the guitar is that it is vibrating at E, and this must stop and become A....
No. Vibrating objects can vibrate more than one frequency. Even with a single string, if what he says is true, there'd be no harmonic richness in the tone, for harmonics are frequencies other than what you just played (i.e. other than the fundamental). The top of an acoustic is different anyways: it's designed to move and vibrate a lot so that the air inside is vibrated. A solid-body electric guitar itself vibrates, but does not need to vibrate any air around it to make sound: that's what the pickups are for.
The more the vibration stays in the string, the more tendencies for fret buzz.
I don't like that explanation. Fret buzz is caused by the string slapping the fretboard. I'd ask the author to check his string height: my Strat don't fret buzz.
As for bridge discussion, sure, more inertia in the bridge due to weight and/or mass can cause the tone to be more "metallic" or "bright". However, not all objects, due to their composition, resonate the same. This comes from me interviewing an aircraft engineer. Resonance does not directly follow weight or mass: it also depends a lot on the object's composition.
It’s the midranges that make a solo cut through a track and sit well in the mix of a recording. It’s the midrange that makes your guitar heard in a live situation and not get lost in the mix.
I don't like that explanation either. Guitars share midrange with vocals. When you want to solo, you need more volume, not necessarily more mids (although more volume may sound like more mids, it's not, if you're referring to a clean boost: it's more everything). If they author is referring to playing at 50% volume then rolling volume up for solos, again his ears may be causing a misconception, since pickups are more pronounced on their resonant frequency, not necessarily in mids. Vintage humbuckers like the Jazz for example will be brighter when the volume is increased, because that's where their resonant frequency is. Cutting through the mix depends on what instruments you play with as well. You may be heard over the keyboards, for example, but if you both are occupying a lot of the same frequencies, it will make the band sound muddy in those areas. It all depends. Most recording-type websites I've read deal with the "make sure everyone's not occupying the same frequencies" ordeal.
When you look at the most popular guitar woods, you find alder for a strat and mahogany for a Paul. These are woods that produce a great midrange. An all-maple Les Paul (L5S) or maple-bodied strat generally won’t sound as good or play as well.
Incorrect. They will sound different, not "not as good". See George Lynch. Woods are ironically a good example of why the author is a little off base with his explanation. All woods have frequencies they like and dislike due to composition: an example of resonance not always aligning with the mids. A solid rock maple guitar will be bright, but will still have mids (especially when you put alnico ii pickups on it). Basswood and swamp ash will still have mids. Mahogany compresses the mids, etc.
Now, we can build a beautiful fancy maple-bodied super strat with an ebony fingerboard and stainless steel frets and a Floyd Rose with a big brass block, and hang Schaller tuners on it, and we can plug it into a million-dollar rack....“Too bad it’s all going to get lost in the mix."
Yeah that's some bull too. In fact, I think such a guitar would be less likely to get lost in the mix due to how bright it is. I've listened to recordings with strats and teles and I can tell you brightness does not get lost in the mix. Maybe it can if it's competing with a Hammond B3, I guess, since those are also bright, but again it depends. If no other instruments are bright but your guitar is bright, you're going to be heard.