T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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2715.1 | some ideas | RICKS::CALCAGNI | L'Angelo Minestronio | Wed Apr 28 1993 09:14 | 18 |
| Well, it's impossible to really say what it will sound like just from
the wood, as other things play into that significantly as well. Also,
there are different grades of hardness in maple that will have some
effect. But generally speaking, hard maple is fairly dense and heavy,
and a guitar made from this will give have good sustain with lots of
brightness in the tone and a fast attack to the notes. Soft maple
is significantly lighter, still bright but with a warmer sound and
a bit less agressive attack.
Pedullas are the only all maple production instruments I'm familiar
with and I've only tried their basses. These are usually soft maple.
The ones I've tried were suprisingly lightweight for an all maple
instrument; they have a nice, rich, warm sound, very even across all
the ranges, and you can get a nice edge out of them if you dig in.
Hope this helps
/rick
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2715.2 | | TECRUS::ROST | Don't fry bacon in the nude | Wed Apr 28 1993 09:26 | 7 |
| B.C. Rich also made all maple axes, and I think Carvin offers them as
well. Gibson offered an all-maple Les Paul at one point as a limited
production model.
Brian
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2715.3 | In the shadow of Mt. Fujiama | SUBSYS::GODIN | | Wed Apr 28 1993 10:40 | 3 |
| I know someone with an Ibanez or Charvel (I forget) all maple guitar,
but I think it's a limited edition also.
Paul
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2715.4 | | STRATA::KLO | don't get me wrong | Wed Apr 28 1993 10:46 | 6 |
| sounds like hard to get one witj all maple ha.....
Thanks alot for all the replies.
Kham
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2715.5 | | GANTRY::ALLBERY | Jim | Wed Apr 28 1993 11:10 | 6 |
| I used to have a '79 Carvin DC-something that was all maple. Pretty
nice guitar, actually. The body was a symmetrical double cutaway --
sort of like an LP Jr. I've seen these show up used now and then
for $200 - $250.
Jim
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2715.6 | One that got away | SSDEVO::LAMBERT | I made life easy just by laughing | Wed Apr 28 1993 12:04 | 6 |
| I had a Hohner P-bass clone that I bought new in ~77 which was all maple.
Heavy as a m-f, but one hell of a nice playing and sounding bass. Wish I
had never sold it.
-- Sam
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2715.7 | | SANDY::FRASER | Uppity blues woman... | Wed Apr 28 1993 17:37 | 5 |
|
Well, the question was about guitars, but my Rick bass was solid maple,
and my Peavey 5-string is as well. Maybe it's more common in basses?
|
2715.8 | | STAR::BECK | Paul Beck | Wed Apr 28 1993 22:32 | 3 |
| Brazilian rosewood, with a German spruce top.
Oh... you're talking about those plug-in appliances ... never mind -
|
2715.9 | How heavy is a M-F ? | SUBSYS::GODIN | | Fri Apr 30 1993 14:42 | 3 |
| RE: .6 & .7 I have a Peavey bass that's solid OAK. Now that's MF heavy!
Paul
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2715.10 | I make tables out of them!! | SALEM::STIG | Look in the eye!! | Mon May 03 1993 10:40 | 9 |
| re 9. Wow!! Now you can use that one as a bloody coffee table...
I have a Guild electric with Hard curly maple. I'll never get rid of
this one!! Since I've bought it I have not had to do anything with it
but play it. Talk about solid attack and nice fast comfortable
neck..and with an EMG on it....well I don't have to say anymore...Then
of course, I have a Rich Bitch #6 which is all one-piece maple. This
one isn't is heavy as the guild but it gives a warmer sound...
stig
|
2715.11 | | KERNEL::MCGOWAN | | Tue May 11 1993 06:54 | 11 |
| I'm sure I've seen pictures of blonde wood bodied strats - isn't that
maple ?
I was talking to a luthier a while back who works as a repair man in a
store here. he showed me some guitars that he's made - absolutely
superb craftsmanship, with lovely burred wood bodies (solid electrics).
He said quiet firmly "To a large extend you can forget what pickups are
on an electric, it's the wood that makes the tone"
Comments ?
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2715.12 | wood you believe? | WOLVER::SDANDREA | Kramer is my hero... | Tue May 11 1993 07:40 | 8 |
| My past (and current) Les Pauls, SG's, and ES335's have all had stock
PAF pickups and they ALL had different tones. The wood is different
but don't forget, the AMOUNT of wood is different, too.....
Interesting, the tone of my LP Deluxe (mini-humbuckers) is very similar
to an old LP std (PAF's) I had.....
steev
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2715.13 | Ash | ICS::CONROY | Havewe learned NOTHING from Footloose? | Tue May 11 1993 10:05 | 5 |
| My Strat (deluxe plus) has a natural finish and the body is ash.
No comment on how that might affect the sound though.
Bob
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2715.14 | | GOES11::G_HOUSE | Son of Spam | Tue May 11 1993 10:19 | 12 |
| > He said quiet firmly "To a large extend you can forget what pickups are
> on an electric, it's the wood that makes the tone"
I don't know, on the guitars I've had that I changed the pickups, a
different pickup made a big difference. Certain other things will
probably make more of a change, like where the pickup is placed along
the strings, the scale length of the guitar, that sort of thing. Some
people even say that how you affix the pickup to the guitar will make a
difference (hung by springs, or screwed into the body). I guess all
I'm saying is that there are a *lot* of variables that come into play.
Greg
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2715.15 | | RICKS::CALCAGNI | submit to Fred | Tue May 11 1993 12:17 | 6 |
| I interpret the remark a little more as "if the tone isn't in the wood,
you're not going to put it there with pickups". Granted, changing
pickups can make a difference, but generally I find I can't make
what I think is a poor or mediocre axe sound really great with pickups.
Conversely, it's hard to make a good axe sound bad by changing pickups
too.
|
2715.16 | mahogany = Les Paul | FRETZ::HEISER | raise your voice in shouts of joy | Tue May 11 1993 12:36 | 1 |
|
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2715.17 | | E::EVANS | | Tue May 11 1993 14:17 | 14 |
|
My take on this is that the qualtiy of the sound is the product of the quality
of many components.
Q = Q x Q x Q x Q etc.
tone wood pickups hardware strings
If the wood is no good, then the tone won't be good. In fact, for the tone
to be good, *ALL* of the components must be good.
Jim
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2715.18 | Fender natural finish | VOYAGR::JACQUES | Vintage taste, reissue budget | Tue May 11 1993 22:14 | 14 |
| re .11
I used to own a 1973 Fender Strat which had a natural finish.
I always thought the body was maple, but I later found out it was
ash. Apparently, Fender never made Strat bodies out of maple.
In the 1970's Fender made natural-finished Strats, Precision
basses, and Jazz basses, with maple fingerboards. I'm pretty sure
the bodies on the entire line were ash.
Mark
|
2715.19 | Ash for blondes | SALEM::LAYTON | | Thu May 13 1993 07:09 | 5 |
| I had a Tele Thinline with ash body and maple neck.
The Jag is made of mystery wood...
Carl
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2715.20 | | LUNER::KELLYJ | submit to Barney | Thu May 13 1993 09:50 | 1 |
| They used alder a lot.
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2715.21 | Thinlines = walnut | VOYAGR::JACQUES | Vintage taste, reissue budget | Thu May 13 1993 11:34 | 4 |
| The new Telecaster Thinline's have walnut bodies. I think at least
some of the originals had walnut bodies as well.
Mark
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2715.22 | | HEDRON::DAVEB | just 'cuz you own the land, there's no unique hand floods the dam | Thu May 13 1993 12:19 | 3 |
| My thinline has an ash body, natural finish, fairly pretty.
dbii
|