The Source of Guitar Tone
Re: The Source of Guitar Tone
Cool Video! Thanks for posting this! I love videos like this! It's, of course, really difficult to confound variables when it comes to "tone", and there are actually more variables than he's controlling for, but it's a cool effort nonetheless and I enjoyed watching this!
I'd be lying if I said I didn't watch videos like this without at least a grain of skepticism:
One thing of note: without understanding what harmonic content is present in the audio spectrum (with a spectral analyzer), it's difficult to understand some of the not-so-obvious differences like how an instrument will sound in the context of a band. At some point, we've all dialed in that Line 6 amp sound we loved so much when practicing alone only to find that it didn't cut through or sit well once the drums and bass players kicked in. Those are the characteristic guitar-to-guitar differences that might matter most to us as guitarists—if you hear a Fly Deluxe or a Fly Classic through a clean amp, it might not be so obvious how differently they'll respond when they're cranked up, compressed, gated, and distorted, for example.
For what it's worth—and not to hijack this thread—this is the rig we developed and use in our lab for comparing individual guitar components to eachother:
...and we're refining robotic plucking mechanisms to ensure that the performance is the same each time, but even having a modular rig like this only let's you compare "component-to-component in this rig" and not "guitar-to-guitar in the hands of a human player". It's very difficult to make any real claims about how a player arrives at a particular "tone"—it's definitely not the "strings and pickups are the only things that matter" stance that some videos like this embrace.
All good food for thought, @Patzag—look at the rant you've sent me on!
I'd be lying if I said I didn't watch videos like this without at least a grain of skepticism:
That, unfortunately, weakens many of the objective claims he can make.all of those (performance variables) are controlled as tightly as I can
One thing of note: without understanding what harmonic content is present in the audio spectrum (with a spectral analyzer), it's difficult to understand some of the not-so-obvious differences like how an instrument will sound in the context of a band. At some point, we've all dialed in that Line 6 amp sound we loved so much when practicing alone only to find that it didn't cut through or sit well once the drums and bass players kicked in. Those are the characteristic guitar-to-guitar differences that might matter most to us as guitarists—if you hear a Fly Deluxe or a Fly Classic through a clean amp, it might not be so obvious how differently they'll respond when they're cranked up, compressed, gated, and distorted, for example.
For what it's worth—and not to hijack this thread—this is the rig we developed and use in our lab for comparing individual guitar components to eachother:
...and we're refining robotic plucking mechanisms to ensure that the performance is the same each time, but even having a modular rig like this only let's you compare "component-to-component in this rig" and not "guitar-to-guitar in the hands of a human player". It's very difficult to make any real claims about how a player arrives at a particular "tone"—it's definitely not the "strings and pickups are the only things that matter" stance that some videos like this embrace.
All good food for thought, @Patzag—look at the rant you've sent me on!
Re: The Source of Guitar Tone
Yeah. I'm not endorsing what he said, but definitely food for thought.
And I think it leaves little doubt as to which elements are most important in electric tone.
And I think it leaves little doubt as to which elements are most important in electric tone.
- Big Swifty
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Re: The Source of Guitar Tone
Body/neck material, tuners, nut etc are negligible compared to to pups/electronics when it comes to the basic tonal characteristics of a solid body.
There, I said it.
Ima gonna die on this hill
B.S.
There, I said it.
Ima gonna die on this hill
B.S.
The system can't get you in your dreams.
Re: The Source of Guitar Tone
Poor Ken! He’s spent his whole career trying to explain that you can’t just make a guitar entirely out of carbon fiber or any ol’ material and expect it to sound good!
Not entirely related, but this video always makes me laugh…and cry a little :
Re: The Source of Guitar Tone
Tone is in the fingers.
Wood matters too- my hill to die on.
The whole is greater than the sum of its parts. But what parts make a difference. I still think “tone woods” is about marketing.
Up to you to decide how much. If you don’t think wood type matters I’m ok with it.
Wood matters too- my hill to die on.
The whole is greater than the sum of its parts. But what parts make a difference. I still think “tone woods” is about marketing.
Up to you to decide how much. If you don’t think wood type matters I’m ok with it.
Billy
Spruce spruce and CF forever...
Spruce spruce and CF forever...
Re: The Source of Guitar Tone
As many others have summarized in response to this video on other sites: “The best-sounding guitar is the one I’m currently selling.”
Summary of the Parker Guitars speculator market from 2020 onward: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greater_fool_theory
Re: The Source of Guitar Tone
My favorite info that’s left out of discussions about tone is that, despite my careful attention to what I can control, the mix engineer is going to cut all the bass below at least 120Hz, boost the mid-range, and shelve all of the high frequencies of my signal after it’s been run through two different compressors.
Re: The Source of Guitar Tone
Lol, no doubt. Sound guy has the ultimate say.
Woe to those who have a sound guy who thinks you’re after his girlfriend. Long story.
Woe to those who have a sound guy who thinks you’re after his girlfriend. Long story.
Billy
Spruce spruce and CF forever...
Spruce spruce and CF forever...