Inflames626
New member
So for metal guys like me 7+ strings are all the rage now, especially with these YouTube guitarists who are famous for doing nothing but being influencers. Like. Subscribe. Ring the bell. But I can't name a single original song they've written.
Off the soapbox. I see Strandberg and Mayones being marketed very heavily now in social media, with Strandberg having a cult of PRS-like ferocity. This is similar to how Halo, Strictly 7, Agile, and Legator were popular for a while back in the 00s and then dropped off.
So do you guys think Strandberg is the new Steinberger? That is an extremely 1) trendy and innovative design that 2) has a very devoted, niche audience and is 3) associated with a certain period of time? In Steinberger's case this would be late 80s/early 90s.
I see Strandbergs as rather faddish and I wonder if they will be desirable 20 years from now. My guess is no.
This faddishness goes along closely with the popularity of 7+ strings "djent" playing as well.
Guitar is not completely like piano. Yes, on guitar you can tap, but on a piano, you can play any interval, especially as a chord. On an extended range guitar, you have greater range but are still limited by what your hand can physically do.
Unless a player is very comfortable with the fretboard and has great technique, I think 7+ strings are a waste. The human hand isn't designed for so many strings, so you can't utilize all the complex chord shapes that arise from having more strings. Additionally, they step all over the bass player. Having a low F# drone note over something you play over it isn't worth the time and expense of them, IMO.
I'd rather just arrange parts for multiple guitars playing in different parts of the neck.
"But Meshuggah is so great!" they say while they study Holdsworth and their drummer works on his polyrhythms. Sorry, off the soapbox again.
More seriously, I would probably like an 8 string if it had a high A string, but every guitar I have seen save a newer Dean Rusty Cooley signature is set up for a low F#, not a high A.
For a high A that I could bend, my guess is I'd need an 8 gauge string with a 24.75" scale length or less for the string to survive the tension without breaking.
Meanwhile the low B might benefit from being lengthened to 30". A guitar with 24" on the high A string and 30" on the low might have some crazy slanted frets.
Still, tune that to drop A and with a high A string you'd probably get some cool sounds.
Anyway, if you guys know of a shorter scale 8 string on the high strings, I'd be interested.
Thanks.
Off the soapbox. I see Strandberg and Mayones being marketed very heavily now in social media, with Strandberg having a cult of PRS-like ferocity. This is similar to how Halo, Strictly 7, Agile, and Legator were popular for a while back in the 00s and then dropped off.
So do you guys think Strandberg is the new Steinberger? That is an extremely 1) trendy and innovative design that 2) has a very devoted, niche audience and is 3) associated with a certain period of time? In Steinberger's case this would be late 80s/early 90s.
I see Strandbergs as rather faddish and I wonder if they will be desirable 20 years from now. My guess is no.
This faddishness goes along closely with the popularity of 7+ strings "djent" playing as well.
Guitar is not completely like piano. Yes, on guitar you can tap, but on a piano, you can play any interval, especially as a chord. On an extended range guitar, you have greater range but are still limited by what your hand can physically do.
Unless a player is very comfortable with the fretboard and has great technique, I think 7+ strings are a waste. The human hand isn't designed for so many strings, so you can't utilize all the complex chord shapes that arise from having more strings. Additionally, they step all over the bass player. Having a low F# drone note over something you play over it isn't worth the time and expense of them, IMO.
I'd rather just arrange parts for multiple guitars playing in different parts of the neck.
"But Meshuggah is so great!" they say while they study Holdsworth and their drummer works on his polyrhythms. Sorry, off the soapbox again.
More seriously, I would probably like an 8 string if it had a high A string, but every guitar I have seen save a newer Dean Rusty Cooley signature is set up for a low F#, not a high A.
For a high A that I could bend, my guess is I'd need an 8 gauge string with a 24.75" scale length or less for the string to survive the tension without breaking.
Meanwhile the low B might benefit from being lengthened to 30". A guitar with 24" on the high A string and 30" on the low might have some crazy slanted frets.
Still, tune that to drop A and with a high A string you'd probably get some cool sounds.
Anyway, if you guys know of a shorter scale 8 string on the high strings, I'd be interested.
Thanks.