T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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3258.1 | | STAR::EVANS | | Tue Mar 04 1997 12:46 | 7 |
|
I cannot imagine playing a barre chord without touching the fret board.
I think I touch the fret board on most notes. The thought of only ever
touching the strings sounds strange. I'll have to watch myself tonight.
Jim
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3258.2 | | RICKS::CALCAGNI | thick slabs of dirt in a halo of airy twang | Tue Mar 04 1997 13:42 | 8 |
| Well, I've played a Yngwie Strat with scalloped board and all I can
say is you definitely notice the absence of wood under your fingers.
So they must be touching it a lot on a normal board.
Btw, my preference is for ebony. Guitars with ebony boards just seem
to play better for me as a rule. It seems to be partially a tactile
thing, partially a tone thing.
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3258.3 | It's a maple fretboard for me! ;^) | WEDOIT::ABATELLI | | Tue Mar 04 1997 13:54 | 9 |
| Maple, Maple and Maple!
This way when your fingers rub off all the clear coating, the fretboard
gets really cool looking!
;^)
Fred (who's old Strat fretboard is just starting to look good ;^) )
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3258.4 | | EVER::GOODWIN | | Tue Mar 04 1997 14:14 | 6 |
|
I prefer ebony or rosewood boards to maple. The three woods each
have their own unique look, sound & feel.
/Steve
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3258.5 | | ASABET::pelkey.ogo.dec.com::pelkey | Professional Hombre | Tue Mar 04 1997 14:23 | 13 |
| and your fingers do touch the fret board, btw,,,
anyways I like em all, and for different reasons,
I do think my favorite is rosewood at least to me
it's the more common, although ebony is close to
rose wood for me.. my Ibanez is ebony, paul and
strat is rosewood,, had a tele with a maple, maple
does seem 'stiffer, and for what ever it's worth I
could neva figure why.....
but, anyway,,,, I like em all..
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3258.6 | Ebony for me | GLDX02::ALLBERY | Jim | Tue Mar 04 1997 14:58 | 20 |
| For me, ebony wins hands down. Rosewood is next, and maple is a very
distant third.
Over the years I've tried all three. For me, finished maple is too
slippery. I'm sure I'd get used to it if I played a maple neck strat
or tele all the time, but since I play more acoustic than electric,
maple is not the best choice for me-- it makes the adjustment between
acoustics and electrics even harder.
Rosewood and ebony are a bit closer. I have 6 guitars with rosewood
and three with ebony. Ebony is finer grained, harder, and can be
finished smoother (without becoming as slippery as finished maple). I
wouldn't turn down a guitar with a rosewood fretboard, but if I had the
option, I'd gladly spend a bit extra for the ebony (provided it was an
option). For example, the ebony fretboard was the primary factor that
drove me to pick an OM-28 over an OM-21. The $300 difference was
worth it. On the other hand, I wouldn't being willing to go to the
Fender custom shop to get a strat with an ebony board.
Jim
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3258.7 | | PHXSS1::HEISER | Maranatha! | Tue Mar 04 1997 16:30 | 2 |
| Ebony & Rosewood for me too. Maple sounds too bright to me and gets
that awful looking appearance from finger oils.
|
3258.8 | rosewood | KAHLUA::PCUMMINGS | The perfect democracy | Tue Mar 04 1997 20:08 | 7 |
| I'd have to say I like rosewood the best (as in my Beck Strat and
ES335). I have a cheap classical with ebony and I like that too.
Maple - too slippery. Have to concur. I had a maple neck strat for 20
years and I don't miss that neck at all - other than the look 8>)
/paul
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3258.9 | A Matter of Taste | PHHSS1::SOBEL | Nothing But the Blues | Wed Mar 05 1997 06:38 | 17 |
| All the neck/fingerboard types mentioned here definitely have a
different feel. I actually like a number of different combinations for
different reasons. There are other factors too such as scale length,
fingerboard radius, fingerboard width and neck thickness and shape.
Also, the neck can significantly contribute to the tone - eg. on my
maple neck Clapton Strat I can HERE the resonance in the fairly big
("modified" V (boatneck) neck.) Also, maple is brighter...I've played
rosewood fingerboard strats and they DO sound "darker."
Maybe it's all based on feel, but on a Gibson type guitar, rosewood
fingerboards feel softer than ebony and have a mellower tone. Ebony
fingerboard Gibson electrics seem to be "colder" and the notes sound more
distinct..not better or worse, just different. BTW, I love the feel
of my strat but also my ES335 with its rosewood board.
Barry
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3258.10 | Like dem maple boards! | FABSIX::E_PHILLIPS | | Wed Mar 05 1997 06:58 | 13 |
| No real preferences; my Ovation's ebony board is real nice, the rest of
my acoustics have varying quality of rosewood. With electrics, I tend
to lean toward the maple neck on my PV Reactor (Tele copy); I *really*
like that slick feel for those pedal steel bends!
About the only combination that didn't work for me was the rosewood
board on my 1965 Telecaster. Definitely the *worst* sounding Tele I
ever heard, and one of the few instruments I *don't* regret selling.
--Eric--
P.S. Does the plastic "fingerboard" on my Sho-Bud LDG count in this
poll? No? Oh well ;^) ;^) ;^) ;^)
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3258.11 | unnatural axe | RICKS::CALCAGNI | thick slabs of dirt in a halo of airy twang | Wed Mar 05 1997 07:53 | 7 |
| Ever see a steel-string acoustic with a maple board? At a guitar show
there was a custom builder who specialized in acoustics and most of
them had maple boards. Something about that combination just seems
unnatural.
/rick
|
3258.12 | | 56744::HARMON | Paul Harmon, ACMSxp Engineering | Wed Mar 05 1997 08:09 | 26 |
| Well, last night I did some experimenting.
When I first started playing, I was surprized to find that there was a little
bit of contact once in a while. It didn't take long to figure out that this
was happening when I got away from the hand position I ideally try to use (a
fairly high arch in the fingers and the tips coming down perpendicular
to the strings). When I kept my fingers strictly in that position, I couldn't
make my fingers touch the fingerboard even when trying to (I was doing this
experimenting with my archtop - maybe more contact would happen with lighter
strings). Of course, I can't keep my fingers strictly in that position when
I'm really playing something; some kinds of chord shapes and melodic reaches
make it necessary to flatten some fingers out.
So, I found out that my fingers do touch the fingerboard once in a while, but
not nearly enough to make me care what it's made out of.
I guess this explains why the Telecaster (maple fingerboard) I had for about 9
years didn't have a trace of discoloration or other wear on the fingerboard
although its frets were fairly worn by the time I sold it.
Paul
p.s. Speaking of not touching the fingerboard, last night I picked up the new
Charlie Haden/Pat Metheny duet CD. On one cut, Pat plays an acoustic
sitar-guitar; I want one!
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3258.13 | | GLDX02::ALLBERY | Jim | Wed Mar 05 1997 08:28 | 7 |
| Re: steel-string acoustic with maple boards
I seem to remember a Gibson steel string acoustic with a maple board
as one of the guitars featured in Tone Poems by David Grisman &
Tony Rice.
Jim
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3258.14 | | SUBPAC::GOLDIE | Resident Alien | Wed Mar 05 1997 09:56 | 10 |
| ...another vote for ebony!Its because of ebony fretboard that I bought
my guitar that I have right now!(yamaha rgx1212s)
an ebony fretboard is one of the citeria that I look for in guitars!
ian
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3258.15 | | STAR::BENSON | My other fiddle is a Strad | Wed Mar 05 1997 10:11 | 6 |
| To me, a rosewood board feels like sandpaper on string bends and wide
vibrato. My favorite: Whatever space age material Steinberger uses!
Ebony is my other favorite. I prefer maple to rosewood, too, but the
clear finish on maple can sometimes feel sticky.
Tom
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3258.16 | The holistic view... | MSDOA::GUIDRY | Ghost Rider | Wed Mar 05 1997 14:51 | 13 |
|
Actually, all the meterials described can work on the right guitar.
Fingerboard material seems to me to have some synergy with the rest of
the guitar design.
Having said that, and looking at my guitar inventory, I find that I
have ebony (Gibson, Ovation, Fender), Rosewood (Fender, Gibson, Ovation,
PRS), and phenolic (Steinberger) guitars, but no maple. They all sound
great, but each has bias towards different music styles. The
fingerboard material is part of this bias.
I guess I never found that magic guitar with a maple fingerboard.
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3258.17 | this one sounds good with maple | GAVEL::DAGG | | Thu Mar 06 1997 07:11 | 17 |
|
Never thought I'd like a maple fretboard, but when I
played my Jerry Donahue Tele the notes just rang so
well _acoustically_, and the feel was so great, that
I fell in love with it. I do admit, its a pretty
bright sounding axe, and most of the time I roll of
the treble on the guitar.
There are some new woods being used by Anderson, Sadowsky.
Fender too I guess. Morado? Pao Ferro? These look a little
lighter in pictures than what I think of as Rosewood, so
they're taking a little getting used to for me. This may have
to do with scarcity of material? Which makes me wonder -
are there environmental correctness issues here? Just askin',
Dave
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3258.18 | I Like Maple | PHHSS1::SOBEL | Nothing But the Blues | Thu Mar 06 1997 11:28 | 11 |
| re .17:
I think you nailed it! The notes on my maple neck Clapton strat
"SPRING" out and as I said before the relatively thick neck REALLY
resonates.
I'm curious...what amp are you playing the Jerry Donahue thru and do
you have the custom shop model or the Japanese-made JD?
Regards,
Barry
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3258.19 | this coming from an Ebony man | POWDML::BUCKLEY | | Thu Mar 06 1997 15:26 | 1 |
| Maple roolz the universe!
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3258.20 | hard neck | GAVEL::DAGG | | Fri Mar 07 1997 06:17 | 9 |
| Its the custom shop model, and I've got a
Boogie studio caliber. The neck isn't
particularly thick or wide, but I think
the wood is quite hard. The
fingerboard finish isn't as slippery
as some.
Dave
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3258.21 | | BSS::MANTHEI | My wife is jealous of MS.DOS | Mon Mar 10 1997 10:11 | 7 |
| Ebony.
Clarity of tone.
However, as some others have noted, I just like guitars. ...Never
met a guitar I didn't like.
Mike
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3258.22 | Remember these? | FABSIX::E_PHILLIPS | Music of the spheres. | Sat Apr 12 1997 07:51 | 21 |
| Re. .21
>>However, as some others have noted, I just like guitars. ...Never
>>met a guitar I didn't like.
I thought so too .... except for my rosewood neck Tele (see my
previous note)....and then I remembered those infamous Applause and
Matrix guitars with the *polyurethane* neck and the *molded aluminum*
fingerboard and frets .... to me, these have all the warmth and clarity
of fingernails on a blackboard.... :^)
_ /|
\'o.O'
=(___)= Aack!!!
U
--Eric--
P.S. Hi Buck! Hope you don't mind my borrowing your Bill The Cat 'cos
it expresses my opinion the best ....!
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