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Once again, it's time for Scott Grove
Well, regardless of whether or not the conclusions drawn by the videos I linked to earlier are correct (and remember, I'm not saying they are, I'm merely saying the results are interesting and lead me to question some of my beliefs), here are some pretty logical reasons why every guitar with the "same" pups, strings, bridge, and nut could sound different that have nothing to do with wood:Dingleberries":319vq4s9 said:Why doesn't every guitar with the same pups, strings, bridge, and nut sound the same?
tripstan":2p7owyvs said:For the record this could be the stupidest topic on guitar forums and I don't know why I am replying.
Anyway. . . . I have 2 Suhr Moderns. Same everything : bridge, nut, pups, tuners, trem block. Accept one is mahogany/maple top, mahogany neck. Other is Basswood/maple all maple neck. THEY SOUND COMPLETELY DIFFERENT. Not slightly, I mean completely. Try for yourself and make you own judgement everyone's ears are different. I'll believe my own ear over some crusty old dude that's been blowing his ear drums out on full stacks for decades.
Btw: thank you Business for posting the Scott "dumb motherfucker" Grove guide to bigotry.![]()
I also have two Suhr moderns - one basswood and one alder. Even when they shared most of the same make/model hardware, they always felt and sounded very different when amplified, so I know exactly what you're describing. Remember, I still haven't been convinced that wood doesn't matter. Far from it. But as a rational person, when faced with compelling test data that challenges my beliefs, knowing that perception and reality can sometimes be very different, I must concede that there are several things that could account for sonic differences between two "identical" guitars that have little or nothing to do with wood. Take your two Suhr Moderns for example. You say they're identical other than wood, but that's simply not true. Every pickup is a little different. Every pot is a little different. Every bridge is a little different. Every setup is a little different. And so on. Even though the parts may well be the same make and model.tripstan":3uexng29 said:For the record this could be the stupidest topic on guitar forums and I don't know why I am replying.
Anyway. . . . I have 2 Suhr Moderns. Same everything : bridge, nut, pups, tuners, trem block. Accept one is mahogany/maple top, mahogany neck. Other is Basswood/maple all maple neck. THEY SOUND COMPLETELY DIFFERENT. Not slightly, I mean completely. Try for yourself and make you own judgement everyone's ears are different. I'll believe my own ear over some crusty old dude that's been blowing his ear drums out on full stacks for decades.
jkkkjkhk":1dj4bmfz said:I've owned many identical guitars with identical specs and they sound completely different. I've had 3 of the exact same guitar and all 3 sounded completely different. Even if wood doesn't make a measurable difference or a recorded difference I don't care. The vibrations going through my hands and body are the very first thing I listen to. Pickups can change, pots and caps can change, nut and bridge can change... the woods (to an extent) can't change so I listen to all guitars (especially electrics) acoustically first. I can't think of the last time I even plugged in a guitar before I bought it.
Now I've also played many guitars with completely different specs (floyded setneck mahogany... vs string thru bolton alder...) that sounded and felt the same, so I don't go by the rule of what each tonewood sounds like, they're more like a guideline to me.
Vede":3945ywxm said:I have been playing for over 20 years and I've owned more guitars than I'd care to admit (to my wife). In my youth, I even sold guitars "professionally" at retail. And I have always, ALWAYS believed that wood matters. I mean, how couldn't it? Different guitars, even with the same pickups, clearly sound different - a mahogany-bodied guitar obviously sounds different than a basswood-bodied guitar obviously sounds different than a maple-bodied guitar, and so on. We've all played many different guitars and know this to be true.
And yet...
There are videos starting to pop up where people have actually tested the assumption, and the data suggests that the things that really matter are the strings, contact points (bridge and nut) and the electronics.
In this video, a custom guitar builder plays and analyzes the sound coming from a nice strat-style guitar, then takes the neck, pickups, bridge and electronics out and installs them in a different body made of cheap particle board, and sonically the two guitars are indistinguishable:
In this next video, the same builder plays the same guitar before and after removing the ENTIRE FREAKING NECK and the tone and sustain seem to go unchanged:
Videos like these haven't made me a full-fledged believer that wood doesn't matter, but it's definitely made me question what I think I know and I'm now more curious than ever to see more data on both sides of the argument.
As of this moment, the only thing I can say for certain is that every guitar FEELS different to play, and I wonder how much of that "feel" difference translates into what we perceive as sound difference. Also, even in guitars with the same pickups, how do we know that each pickup has truly been wound exactly the same? And how do we know that the wires and pots and capacitors, etc. are *exactly* the same unless we swap all of those bits, too, when we swap pickups? Could a bunch of what we attribute to "wood" really be differences in electronics, pickups, bridges, strings and nuts? Many of you will say no. The data, which doesn't rely on human perception, is starting to suggest maybe. Very interesting stuff, I think.
Sorry, I missed tripstan's post. It sounds like we agree (although we may differ on the degree) that wood may play a larger role in feel and acoustic sound than it does amplified sound. My favorite guitars all feel and sound great unamplified, and I definitely value acoustic sound when choosing new instruments. To be clear, my posts in this thread have been exclusively about amplified guitar tone. Acoustically, wood plays an undeniably large role in what we hear, and I don't think anyone would dispute that.tripstan":sfrjlvdu said:jkkkjkhk":sfrjlvdu said:I've owned many identical guitars with identical specs and they sound completely different. I've had 3 of the exact same guitar and all 3 sounded completely different. Even if wood doesn't make a measurable difference or a recorded difference I don't care. The vibrations going through my hands and body are the very first thing I listen to. Pickups can change, pots and caps can change, nut and bridge can change... the woods (to an extent) can't change so I listen to all guitars (especially electrics) acoustically first. I can't think of the last time I even plugged in a guitar before I bought it.
Now I've also played many guitars with completely different specs (floyded setneck mahogany... vs string thru bolton alder...) that sounded and felt the same, so I don't go by the rule of what each tonewood sounds like, they're more like a guideline to me.
Thank you. Someone seemed to miss my point.
I also buy/keep guitars based on how they sound acoustically.
But I would say that once you reach a certain amount of gain most guitars sound confusingly similar.
But when amplified, all guitars do sound very similar. Generally speaking, on recordings, strats sound like strats, LPs sound like LPs, teles like teles. Take 10 identical teles straight off Fender's line, plug them in and have all of us play them, and we'd probably say that some were better than others, some because of feel, others because of tonal quality. And yet if you recorded all 10 of those guitars using the same player, same amp and settings, I'd wager that they'd all sound really, really similar, to the point where I'd be surprised if any of us could tell a difference.Serratus":3cyo05ei said:But I believe that if wood made no impact on tone then all guitars would sound much more similar.
bulletproof_funk":a288o01v said:
Spaceboy":3d1g1lyw said:I don't believe in tone woods when it comes to modern high-gain rock/metal. I've had too many guitars loaded with the same pickups because I'm a big Duncan JB fan, and the differences are too small to worry about.