treyhaislip
Well-known member
Re: Is there anything more useless in guitar life...
Yeah i know whats more useless a capo.
Yeah i know whats more useless a capo.
Just FYI - Not saying 24 fretters are useless. I play a Jackson regularly.
I'm just saying nobody plays notes in the 23rd fret. I'll do the 24th in some rare occasion and the 22nd a lot more often. But the poor 23rd rarely gets any love by its own.
Most so-called guitar players are just plain irritating anywhere above the 15th-17th fret anyway. You might think it's awesome diddling about up there, but it's usually just horrible for the average listener.
But one thing I've learnt from this place is that very few 'players' give a poop about the poor listener anyway.
No one plays in C# ?of course 23rd fret is useful. E minor anyone?
I actually use it a lot. I play in E/C#m a lot, and I do half bends on the 23rd fret often.
I tend to like 24-fret guitars just because they tend to have better upper fret access as opposed to standard 21 or 22 fret guitars. You might not use frets 23 or 24 too often, but the frets before them a lot easier to get to.
^^^ to be vintage-correct. Leo just couldn't be wrong.
What if the music doesn't call for a bend?
I rarely use fret 6. You can have it too.
Bb is one of my favourite keys, followed by Eb and F (all of which have a Bb in the key signature. If you look at where my strings are worn the most, you can pretty much trace the Bb Major scale on around the 6th fret from it.
I also don't think that 24 fret guitars sound strictly worse, I really like the sound and feel of the neck pickup in my friends PRS Custom 24. It's just that the pickup falls under a different harmonic so it has a different feel from what we've been used to in the past century. It's 'worse' in the same way that non-wood guitars, digital processing, or pickups not based on the standard humbucker/single coil designs are 'worse'. Our ears aren't used to it after years and years of building up expectations that something will sound a certain way. We still use the same basic design principles, same basic pedal circuits, and similar amp designs to what we did 50 years ago, guitar players tend to be notoriously glacial in adapting new sounds. (Not that it's a bad thing of course, don't feel guilty for using what you think sounds good, don't think you have to innovate for innovations sake tonally.)
Yeah, but bad is bad..haha. Actually, no one could really accuse me of hanging on the past- but using the neck pickup for about 80% of my playing life, I am pretty locked in to the sound. Moving it just slightly changes it, and I can't get that vowel-y bloom that I can when it is in the 'right' place. I never kept a 24 fret guitar.