
Monkey Allen
Fork and spoon operator
I can certainly hear the issue in your clip there. But for me, the issue eases somewhat when the G chord comes along. Most prominently, the issue is associated with the Am chord. These strings are quite fresh. They are not old strings. The nut and saddle...I mean...they seem fine to me. The guitar plays really nicely, feels good. But there's this "overtone". I'm glad you can hear what I'm talking about. Because I think people must be thinking I'm pranking them or something.For your sanity I hear it too or, at least, I hear something I don't like.
It's most obvious to me from from about 11 seconds when you switch to the G chord.
What I'm hearing's more offensive around 1900hz, which I've boosted to make more obvious for those who aren't hearing it.
Pretty much any frequency tight-q boost is going to sound offensive, of course, but I hear this particular area ringing out in the raw clip.
How to fix it? I don't know, but if it was my guitar I'd be doing a restring and working on the nut and saddle to make sure the strings all have a nice clean break and aren't rubbing where they shouldn't be.
I made an acoustic for my niece a couple of years ago from scratch, and neck-reset my own acoustic guitar too, and was pretty shocked to find that getting the nut and saddle right without weird pinched-like noises and buzzes were the hard bits.
View attachment 137168
Anyway, standby for a clip where I boost the freq in real time and lower it back down so that hopefully I can highlight the exact problem I'm hearing.