Originally posted by Five_E35
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Tone Snobs
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Originally posted by Gtr_tech View Post
or maybe Under Soldano as a sequel to Under Siege.Last edited by WholeToneMusic; 11-07-2010, 03:55 AM.Helping musicians optimize their sound.
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Whatever happened to the Woodshed. Hendrix use to fall asleep with his guitar. It was almost as if he had an invisible umbilical cord attached to his guitar. Maybe that is what his song Belly Button Window mean't (kidding.) He would live and breath it.Helping musicians optimize their sound.
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The beauty of “tone” and music for that matter is the infinite variables. Fingers are important but so are ears and emotions. From a players standpoint, it takes about 10,000 quality practice hours give or take to master the instrument. Believe it or not, it takes about the same time to become a good tech. But it’s more than that. Neil Young, Bob Dylan, George Harrison, Keith Richards and the Edge to name just a few, all brought something else to the table. Going back further, consider Robert Johnson, Howlin Wolf and others who inspired Page and Clapton. Good tone? Not to my ears! Did it have attitude, vibe and emotion? Yes indeed! Consider also what really separates Roy Clark from Brad Paisley or if you can take this; Glen Campbell from Joe Walsh. Technical proficiency alone is often not enough. From a techs point of view, I don’t think Leo or Jim had great fingers and I can’t think of any Guitar hero who plays through a cheap setup. Those who have “made it” and can buy the best, usually do. They chase tone or hire someone else to chase it. Think of all those great bands like Pink Floyd, Boston, and Yes and the amount of time they spent tweeking their signature sound. Consider Eric Johnson, perhaps the ultimate tone freak… SRV used unusually high action, thick strings and Leo’s amps. Yea, he had great fingers! I know I’m talking “old school” here with my examples but today’s players/bands continue to push the envelope. Consider 7 string guitars and 6 string basses and super high gain amps. It appears that heavy distortion is an acquired taste (like hot peppers) and it has spawned a new generation of amplifiers. I chase tone because I was completely floored by the sound of the first amp I modified based on a cooperative effort. There’s something special about coaxing the sounds you hear in your head out of a hand built amplifier. If I were a rich man, I’d do this full time. In the end I’d say it’s more art than anything else for players and builders alike
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Originally posted by frankeg View PostGoing back further, consider Robert Johnson, Howlin Wolf and others who inspired Page and Clapton. Good tone? Not to my ears! Did it have attitude, vibe and emotion? Yes indeed!"Take two placebos, works twice as well." Enzo
"Now get off my lawn with your silicooties and boom-chucka speakers and computers masquerading as amplifiers" Justin Thomas
"If you're not interested in opinions and the experience of others, why even start a thread?
You can't just expect consent." Helmholtz
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Hey guys and girls,Started reading this thread, and well I have a question what is tone.... I love to roll it back on my geetar and that farty sound that clapton had, honestly what is good tone.. I love the sound of the superstat on my peavey rage mum (MOM) brought me 25 years ago sure I can play it a million times better than then, most of my mates think it sounds really nasty, but when im playing it I love its tone as i love my hand made point to point wired amps.....its horses for courses....actually I think I might clone that rage
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Well, that rage into a *good* speaker in a large cabinet (make that 2x12") sure will sound awesome.
Most of the bad karma on small cheap SS practice amps lies on the *very* small, open cabinets and even more, on the junkyard special speakers they use.
Speakers affect tone 134958 times more than capacitors, tube brands, wiring , os most any other part "quality".
YM2CJuan Manuel Fahey
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