Do old strings sound different than new ones on the AMPLIFIED sound of an electric guitar or bass?
I know they sure as hell sound different to the acoustic sound of an electric, and when we had pro's in the studio, we'd be changing bass strings every few takes, or however long it took for the acoustic sound to change, sometimes thousands of dollars in strings for a single album.
But did that actually matter to the recorded sound?
After seeing no evidence whatsoever that the type of wood used has any effect on the amplified sound of an electric (and I was a true believer that maple fretboards had a way brighter sound than rosewood), I have been going back through all my fundamental beliefs about electric guitar tone
I know they sure as hell sound different to the acoustic sound of an electric, and when we had pro's in the studio, we'd be changing bass strings every few takes, or however long it took for the acoustic sound to change, sometimes thousands of dollars in strings for a single album.
But did that actually matter to the recorded sound?
After seeing no evidence whatsoever that the type of wood used has any effect on the amplified sound of an electric (and I was a true believer that maple fretboards had a way brighter sound than rosewood), I have been going back through all my fundamental beliefs about electric guitar tone
via International Skeptics Forum http://ift.tt/24YgK9u
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