R
Royston
New member
Hey,
John Lennon played an Epi and so do I.
Nuff Said.
John Lennon played an Epi and so do I.
Nuff Said.
No one can deny that the best cars are German and Japanese. So it makes sense that guitars from these countries are manufactured better instruments.
in reply to your example of the various "different" sounds you can get by picking closer to or farther away from the bridge, consider this--the reason you get different tones by varying the location of your pick is because you have altered the time it takes for the "attack" to arrive at the pick-up--the closer your pick is to the pick-up, the greater your "attack"...exactly what one "hears" as a result of "more" attack is "more" level (loudness) and content at the beginning of a note or any other sound...this increased presence at the beginning of a note is described variously to include references to tone and resonance...however it is described, it is a function of the time it takes for the first few milliseconds of sound to travel whatever distance the player has set his pick away from the hottest spot under the strings...
toyL said:yes vox, the top-side of an elec.guitar (including the fret board) would seem to provide a very hard surface for "vibrations" to reflect off of...
....exactly what is the probability that any one vibration of a string will reflect "directly" back toward the string?
and when this does occur, what is the probability that a later vibration will intercept the reflected vibration and prevent it from "compounding"?...anyone?
I prefer my Epiphone to a Gibson. Period. You can not deny that I prefer my Epiphone.
....I am familiar with this "theory"