T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
1682.1 | | LOOKUP::BUCKLEY | It's a mightly long way down R&R | Wed Feb 14 1990 11:20 | 5 |
| I think Les Pauls, sans the Pro Deluxe, have very fat tones to them!
The strats that sound thin are the ones with cheesy light bodies and
lousy pickups. I played a friends mid 70s strat...the thing was heavy!
and it had a big fat tone to it. The single coil pickups sounded
really nice...similar to a Dimarzio HS-3.
|
1682.2 | | MPGS::MIKRUT | Don't you boys know any NICE songs? | Wed Feb 14 1990 11:55 | 13 |
| I can't define what is "thin" and what is "FAT" (and I know Webster's
surely has it ALL wrong :^), but this is my idea of what I consider
to be thin/FAT:
Thin = Jeff Healy, most C/W, Jimmy Page's telecaster on solo to STH,
Hendrix' high strings
FAT = Tom Sholz' Les Paul, Hendrix' low strings, Eddie Van Halen, etc.
Of course, there's a scientific explaination for this stuff, but then
again, I ain't no scientist. :^)
Mike
|
1682.3 | Sinlge Coils | SMURF::BENNETT | from "Kingdom of the Bees" | Wed Feb 14 1990 12:03 | 9 |
|
I can get a nice fat jazzy tone out of the single coils on my
Rick w/out getting the bulldozer effect common the Gibsons. In
this case body weight and .10 strings appear to be the major
factors. I've spent quite a bit of time with a new American
Standard Stratocaster that a buddy of mine bought. I can get some
warm fat tones out of that too but there's a component to every
tone I've tried in that guitar that screams "Strat". Nice guitar
if you can live with that.
|
1682.4 | JMO | CSC32::G_HOUSE | Kittymania's running wild! | Wed Feb 14 1990 13:07 | 11 |
| I think what it has to do with is harmonic content. The "fat" tones
tend to be more low-midrangy, where the "thin" tones tend to accentuate
the high end. I think that lots of low end guitars sound thin because
they put cheap low output pickups in them.
I have a Strat that's ANYTHING but thin, but it's extremely heavy and
has EMG pickups in it. I played a Les Paul "Recording" model that I
thought was nasty thin (not to mention an utter piece of crap, but
that happens to used guitars sometimes).
Greg
|
1682.5 | I prefer fat.... | DNEAST::GREVE_STEVE | If all else fails, take a nap... | Wed Feb 14 1990 13:54 | 23 |
|
yeah, I agreed with Greg, my definition would be high freqs=thin
mid and low=fat, kind of.. there's another dimension that I can't
explain.. I've compared a bunch of cheaper Strats and Teles with
plywood bodies and really low impedance pickups and they all sound thin
as compared to my solid wood strat with Fender sensors or my Tele with
the Duncan humbucker in the bridge position. SRV, and Robert Cray
always get a fat sound (at least the stuff I've heard.. ) and they use
huge strings in conjunction with ash bodied Strats. I dunno, I'm still
pretty much working at developing some chops, but I know I could drive
myself nuts (more nuts??) striving for the right tone. Thing like the
way the bridge lays on the body, string guage, the neck the neck
attaches to the body (no kidding, I bolted my strat neck on five or six
times til it sounded right), the angle over the bridge of the strings..
etc. etc. etc. all seem to have an effect on tone.. The beach boys
play strats (right?) and they've always had a kind of thin sound...
Hmmm, maybe thin=then and fat=happenin'
Regards,
Steve
|
1682.6 | fat is in the ear of the beholder? | RICKS::CALCAGNI | punk jazz | Wed Feb 14 1990 14:08 | 9 |
| Hmmmm, this is very enlightening. At least two previuosly mentioned
examples are totally opposite to what I would say. To me, Jeff
Healy's tone is very "fat" and Robert Cray's is very "thin".
I'm not saying you're wrong, only that it's interesting that your
perceptions are so different from mine,
Strat through a clean amp always sounds thin to me
Anything through a cranked Marshall sounds fat
|
1682.7 | it's in the hands too! | RAVEN1::DANDREA | Let the Big dog eat | Wed Feb 14 1990 14:44 | 8 |
| Don't forget the effect of "fingers" on the tone of yer axe as well. A
blues nut friend of mine sat in with our band a few weeks ago and had
my Les Paul sounding kind of "thinish" just by the way he plucks the
strings. Mac McCloud sounds like Mac McCloud no matter what he's
pickin'....
Steve D.
|
1682.8 | But...But...
| TCC::COOPER | MIDI-Kitty-ADA-Metaltronix rack puke | Wed Feb 14 1990 14:57 | 11 |
| I guess whats buggin' me is an LP player will tell me how fat their
sound is in comparison to my Charvel, when I think the LP sounds thin
and wimpy compared to my tone... and it doesn't seem to be the Charvel,
because they tend to say the same about Fender...
Now Pat Blair has a american Strat thats new, and to me is the EPITOME
of FAAAATTTT... (BTW - Who ever said they thought Jeff Healy had a fat tone ?
I agree...). I guess it's just a different definition of Fat, Thin, Wimpy,
Ballzy... But I wish someone would do some standard settings... :)
jc
|
1682.9 | | PERN::STARR | its all over, all over but the crying... | Wed Feb 14 1990 15:10 | 10 |
| I don't think its the guitar as much as the pickups, effects, and amps.
Take, for example, a Strat. You can get a nice clean "thin" sound like Mark
Knofler does. But Strats are also used by Kirk Hammett of Metallica, and that
sound is hardly "thin" by any stretch of the imagination. Clapton's tone seems
to be somewhere in the middle.
I think the same goes for any guitar - you can make it what you want it to be,
with the proper accessories.
Alan S.
|
1682.10 | Boogie settings for fat and thin sounds | BSS::COLLUM | Just do the move! | Wed Feb 14 1990 16:03 | 51 |
| To me, "fat" and "thin" more describe the midrange content than
anything else. When I want a fat sound, I crank up the middle, when I
want a thin sound, I take it out. For example, on my Boogie, playing
my Strat, I can do this:
For a fat rock sound, use the bridge pickup and set the Boogie to:
Volume 1 (this is the channel volume): 8.5, Pulled for bright (I like
everything bright, with brand new strings, what can I say?)
Treble: 7.5, pulled to boost the midrange.
Bass: 3.5
Middle: 3-4
Master 1: 1.5 - 2 (nice practice level for in the house)
Lead Drive: 4.5 - 5, pulled for lead channel (Nice and crunchy with
my Strat's single coils)
Lead Master: 5 - 6
To get it fatter, either turn up Middle, Pull out Master 1, or pull out
Bass. All of them will add lower harmonics, I just don't like it THAT
damned full most of time.
I can switch to a full (in the BASS, not middle register) jazz sound by doing this
starting with the above. This is a much thinner sound (to me):
Switch to the fret board pickup, Take middle down to 0, Pull out Bass
(to bring in a jazzy low end), Push in the Treble, Push in Lead Drive,
Turn Volume 1 down to 5, Bring up Master 1 to compensate for the
decrease in volume and now the sound is much thinner for soloing, but
deep for rhythm on jazz.
If I want to go to extremes, I also throw in the EQ. To get extra fat
the EQ looks like this:
| | * | |
| * | * |
| | | | |
* | | | *
For thin, I use something like this (just the opposite):
* | | | *
| | | | |
| * | * |
| | * | |
Does this help at all? It's just my perception on fat and thin like
the other replies.
Will
|
1682.11 | forget it.... | RAVEN1::DANDREA | Let the Big dog eat | Thu Feb 15 1990 08:16 | 11 |
| Coop,
If you think Les Pauls are "thin and wimpy", you'll never understand
the defenition of a nice warm fat tone....give it up. I presume that
since my Les Paul is wimpy, you'll stop complaining that I play too
loud? (I guess I should ignore all the axe slingers that compliment my
guitars' beautiful tone...sheesh)
;^)
Bulldawg
|
1682.13 | "SG through Marshall" | TAGART::SOMERVILLE | | Thu Feb 15 1990 10:31 | 4 |
| I used to have a Gibson "SG", it was certainly fat!
Wish I'd never sold it now.
Robin.
|
1682.14 | easy big guy | RAVEN1::BLAIR | Set the Wayback machine Poindexter... | Thu Feb 15 1990 10:51 | 4 |
|
Steve, Coop is asking people what they think means thin and what
means fat. Saying he'll never understand the meaning is not really
answering the question. Also, his ears are different than yours...
|
1682.15 | my bich sounds like a goose | MRVAX::ALECLAIRE | | Thu Feb 15 1990 11:41 | 6 |
| Ash and maple are alot harder than mahogany. My baretta is heavy,
and growls thick. But there's always a cut to the sound, an edge, an
hardness that dosen't come from a guitar with soft wood.
Maybe that's it, a soft or hard sound. Maybe it's just another
can-o-worms.
|
1682.16 | wait a minute...... | RAVEN1::DANDREA | Let the Big dog eat | Thu Feb 15 1990 13:03 | 6 |
| Obviously several of my buddies misunderstood my reply to Coop. I
publicly apologize if any offense was taken, NONE was intended!!!!
Gee, can't ya bust yer friends in this conference any more? Please note
smiley faces ;^) 8) |)
Steve....
|
1682.17 | Bailiff... WACK his p-p... | TCC::COOPER | MIDI-Kitty-ADA-Metaltronix rack puke | Thu Feb 15 1990 14:40 | 3 |
| No problem dude...
:)
|
1682.18 | 8) | RAVEN1::DANDREA | Let the Big dog eat | Fri Feb 16 1990 08:19 | 4 |
| Doesn't p-p wacking hurt....I suppose it depends on several variables
|)
Steve D.
|
1682.19 | What's ka-chunka??? | CSC32::H_SO | | Fri Feb 23 1990 01:33 | 33 |
|
RE; .10
I own a Mesa Boogie as well, and the the settings you described for the
EQ seems little confusing to me.
| | | | |
* | | | *
| * | * |
| | * | |
| | | | |
This is the setting I'll normally use for rhythm playing and I'd
describe it as being "crunchy". For solo playing, I use the EQ on/off
pedal and turn the EQ off. That's what I'd describe as being "punchy".
As far as thin sound, that would be more like;
| | | | |
| | | | *
| | | * |
* * * | |
| | | | |
| | | | |
Also, something else to consider; Les Pauls have shorter neck (less
string tension) and Strats have longer neck (more string tension).
It seemed like no one really touched this subject????? It seems that
my Les Paul have throatier ka-chunka :*) than my Ibanez which has
tighter ka-chunka. I usually play my Ibanez with bridge humbucker on,
and tone at around 5 whereas my Les Paul also with bridge humbucker on
and tone wide open. My preference? Give me the name of the song
first, then I'll answer...
My $0.02...
J.
|
1682.20 | | BSS::COLLUM | Just do the move! | Fri Feb 23 1990 15:41 | 10 |
| re -1
Yeah, I'll buy that for being a little chunky. Just not "fat" to me,
anyway. I never use the EQ with lead mode, always in rhythm. I just
gave that setting because it's a setting I use sometimes. Usually on
jazz stuff, when I want the sparkle of the treble, but the smooth depth
of the base. To my ear, when that's the sound I'm looking for, the
mid-range sort of muddies up everything, so I take it out.
Will
|
1682.21 | Fat and Thin redefined by tubes | LOOKUP::BUCKLEY | B!tch!n riffs, dude! | Fri Feb 23 1990 15:50 | 12 |
| Ya know?
Tone can be affected different ways, too!
I was reading about Steve Stevens and his views on tone. He says what
a lot of people say...you can't get a good tone with just a preamp. ie
- tone, real tone, comes from overdriving your output tubes in your
amp...preamp gain will just give you a buzzy, fuzzy distortion, but
tone comes from the output stage getting a workout. I tested this out
on my 100wt tube amp last night, and yes, while it was loud, there was
a big round tone happening as well. I found this worked well for rock,
jazz, and funk idioms as my drummer and I jammed away for a few hours.
|
1682.23 | Fat and Thin | DNEAST::GREVE_STEVE | If all else fails, take a nap... | Mon Feb 26 1990 12:08 | 9 |
|
I'm fat and Tom Petty is thin!!!
Steve
|
1682.24 | | VLNVAX::ALECLAIRE | | Mon Feb 26 1990 14:17 | 10 |
| RE -2
on my 100 valve marshall I usually run the preamp all up.
Then i turn the MV just a little bit, you can definately hear a
new type of distortion kick in . You need a feather-touch, after
it kicks in it just gets louder and louder.
As if this has anything to do with it...
tOe
|
1682.25 | Power Tube Distortion | SMURF::BENNETT | Flicker Flicker Flam, POW! | Tue Feb 27 1990 11:52 | 13 |
|
Yup. That's why I have a 10wt champ as a practice amp. I
turn the clean volume to 10 and it distorts just right. Gotta
swap out the crap speaker on that bugger soon cuz I know it
can sound even better.
When I was out amp shopping a coupla months ago, I was looking
for an amp that I could open up far enough to get that windy
power amp tone without levelling downtown Nashua.
I think the logic behind the lower powered amps (AC30s, Bassmans,
JTM45s, Super60s ;-) ) is the ability to get that crank from the
power stage without loosing yer hearing.
|