Lil tonewood discussion thread

Re: Lil tonewood discussion thread

I really like your opening post. I too love the tone of ash + maple (as a general rule). I also like mahogany + maple (or just about any other exotic hardwood that I have used for a cap on the body and/or fretboard).

Yes, we are, just about all of us concerned about every little detail in tone and playability of our guitars, it's true. But when we all come down to reality and analise what's most important to that tone, we have to admit that some things just make a BIGGER difference. That's not to say that every tiny detail doesn't still matter.

Wood IS one of those details that DOES matter...just not very much when COMPARED to some other things.

After re-reading all of the posts in this thread I really don't see any of us "freaking out" about the wood. Just expressing opinions while coming to terms with reality. However, if anyone IS freaking out about wood, it would be YOU ranting about poplar over and over. But still, even that's OK...not really freaking out.

Yes
 
Re: Lil tonewood discussion thread

I've never tried poplar. But from what I have always assumed about its tone and from what you guys have said about it, I have no desire to try it in any of my builds.

Fender used a lot of poplar in their MIM line in the late 90s and early 2000s. I don't think those guitars sounded particularly bad, nor did they sound all that great. The only poplar guitars I've really liked were neck-thru Jacksons from the late 80s and early 90s that had poplar body wings. They just seemed to have a more focused and precise sound than the later versions with alder wings.
 
Re: Lil tonewood discussion thread

If poplar often had a spectacular flame and maple was an crappy looking greenish streaked wood, we would be having a conversation about the percieved tonal improvement that a poplar cap emparts on Les Pauls - and deriding the horrible bright sound of maple. Ugly woods have an insurmountable obstacle to overcome when it comes to discussion of tone. :P
 
Re: Lil tonewood discussion thread

I don't see the point of this discussion. I've seen Paulownia guitars that played and sounded wonderful. I've seen $5K Gibsons with thick Mahogany backs and flamboyant Maple tops sound like rubbish. I've seen Poplar Parker Flys that were out of this world with sustain and character and Fenders that sounded like duds. I have a Mahogany body that sounds brighter and tighter than another just like it. My point is that these generalizations about wood types are unfounded and do not consider the bigger picture of what constitutes a "good" sounding instrument.
 
Re: Lil tonewood discussion thread

Wouldn't joking indicate that I can tolerate other opinions?
 
Re: Lil tonewood discussion thread

I have a Basswood RG2 with a JB/JAZZ set with triple shot rings and a rosewood board
I have a mahogany semihollow Ehdwuld with the same pickups and rings and a rosewood board
I have a swamp ash Gibson LP with the same pickups and rings and rosewood board
All but the Ehdwuld have maple necks the Ehdwuld has a mahogany neck
The LP style have the shorter scale, the RG2 has the Fender scale
The play and feel different
But to my ear sound alike

The swamp ash LP has the pickups just a bit closer to the strings
It overdrives natural with my tube amp with the volume wide open and cleans up as I roll down

The other two aren't set up that way,
Or they would do that too
 
Re: Lil tonewood discussion thread

There's just a number of factors that affect the way the material used would resonate. If there is too much moisture in the wood, if too soft of glue is used, soft poly finishes. It comes down to individual cases in my experience.

Paulownia has been consistently a great tonewood in my experience. I once read that gibson has an experimental les paul using a paulownia body with maple cap. That idea I can get behind.

Be it as it may that electric guitars can be electronically manipulated to sound the way you like, but you can't deny the materials used, method of construction and conditions of said material makes a difference.
 
Re: Lil tonewood discussion thread

Some people say poplar is great. It might be, or it might be my particular piece is all mids. It isn't a problem with the right pickups, though. I had to get pickups with no mids at all.
 
Re: Lil tonewood discussion thread

^ I had that same experience. I couldn't believe what I was hearing.
 
Re: Lil tonewood discussion thread

It's tempting, but try to resist suggesting "Mahogany sounds like...", "Poplar sounds like...", "Maple sounds like...", etc. If reality was that simple, every Les Paul would feel/sound the same, every PRS would feel/sound the same, every Ibanez RG would sound/feel the same, etc. But they don't.

You're welcome to have a personal preference and I think most players ultimately gravitate toward certain wood combinations over time. However, that doesn't mean that such a preference is wholly founded in reality and that's where a discussion about "tone woods" is bound to fall apart.

For example, how many times has changing a bridge or a nut or getting a proper setup "brought the guitar to life" on these forums? Similarly, how often do we see new pickups, a different amp, etc change the game for players who are about to give up on a guitar completely? How often do we hear "I played a bunch of (insert brand/model here) and they were all duds, but this one absolutely blew me away!"? Wood type *can* make a difference in feel and resonance and maybe even some characteristics that translate tonally once electrified, but my overarching point is that there's a LOT of variation within any particular species. Enough so that most of the generalizations spouted on guitar forums don't really gel with the truth of the matter.

If you've found a combo that seems to work for you...great! I'm not here to tell you what you do and don't like in a guitar. I just don't want the thousands of newbies reading this forum to mindlessly subscribe to the "tone wood" rhetoric before they've gained their own experience. And, to experienced players, just because you had a certain experience with a particular type of wood (the Poplar mentioned here is a great example, since it is less common), doesn't mean you really know all of the flavors it comes in :)
 
Re: Lil tonewood discussion thread

I have an extremely bright single cutaway solid body mahogany guitar with a mahogany/rosewood neck. I've also played a dark sounding maple guitar with a maple neck. By the laws of tonewood, maple is therefore dark and mahogany is bright. Unless you're arguing that the individual piece of wood matters more than the type of wood it is.

But in that case, then who cares what the laws of tonewood say? They might be true on average, but you don't play an instrument on average . . . find an instrument you like the look and sound of.

:P
 
Re: Lil tonewood discussion thread

I don't know if there are 'laws of tonewood'. But I know for a fact that certain pieces of wood sound different than others- anyone who has swapped pickups for a few years can hear it. I've heard woods break these laws, like darker maple and brighter mahogany. Or like my mid-heavy poplar that some swear is bright or at least balanced. Trees were living, and each is unique.
 
Re: Lil tonewood discussion thread

Tonewoods. Paulowina. Poplar. Maple. Morningwood.

This is all pure rubbish.

Everyone who's anyone knows that tone is 100% of how many times you post online in a week.

So, if I post thrice in a week, then:

tone = 3

:13:
 
Re: Lil tonewood discussion thread

Tonewoods. Paulowina. Poplar. Maple. Morningwood.

This is all pure rubbish.

Everyone who's anyone knows that tone is 100% of how many times you post online in a week.

So, if I post thrice in a week, then:

tone = 3

:13:

Haha -awesome...... but wrong.

Tone score is equal to how many total times you've changed out an original part on any of your guitars divided by total guitars owned.

I own 30 guitars (I think) any have changed out an OEM component on each guitar probably 10 times -so 300 changes divided by 30 =10.

Tone Score 10

I'm going to change out nut and tuners this weekend on a Gretsch in order to improve my overall tone to a 10.06 . (302/10)
 
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