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Originally Posted by christianm77
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04-30-2021 02:36 PM
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I hear more of what I'll call a "thud" in a 175 compared to an L5.
As far as dark goes, if you listen to older jazz the guitar tones don't sound dark.
But, if you listen to a lot of country Tele sounds and then return to older jazz, it will sound dark -- by comparison.
I do sometimes hear overly "dark" sounds from archtops in live bands. I think it's because the player is hearing a brighter sound than the audience. Apparently, an easy mistake to make with an archtop
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I actually the opposite problem is more common - treble frequencies diffract less so they are more directional. If you are 'off beam' you might miss how trebly your amp is.
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Originally Posted by christianm77
I'm assuming that the player is not hearing the same thing I'm hearing.
What you say about directionality is right, but lower frequencies may predominate in the audience because of distance, dispersion and absorption, in the unlikely event that I know what I'm talking about.
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Originally Posted by christianm77
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Originally Posted by ruger9
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Originally Posted by christianm77
Where there is a will, and some wit, there is a way. No system is perfect; we must deal with the imperfect.
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Originally Posted by Cunamara
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Originally Posted by xavierbarcelo
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Originally Posted by lawson-stone
big yes to the above. carved tops are made that way for a reason. the longer scale produces more overtones as well.
that sound is my preference, especially for solo/chord melody work. but sometimes i hear single note lines on the 175 and think - man that sounds really good.
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It's a Jack Zucker original, and it filled a void in our lexicon. Thanks, Jack!
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Originally Posted by Donplaysguitar
I also love them both. I tend to say "thunk" is the great sound that is not an L5ces sound, and the L5ces sound is an example of great sound that isn't "thunk." Love 'em both.
I tend to think of a nice electric L5ces sound as being a little bit "reedy."
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Hopefully Jack will be along shortly to definitively straighten this out, but I too believe FG style 4 on 4 floor is chunk, not thunk.
Thunk is more correctly used to describe a smokin' single note soloing style which is satisfyingly deadened without a trace of mud.
It's also interesting to note that one of the most Thunkadelphic sounds on earth came to us by way of Philadelphia through a combination of string gauges like bridge cabling and a very large carved Gibson with no traces of plywood, tightly stuffed with a combination of heavy foam rubber and spent plutonium... or something :-)
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Originally Posted by ruger9
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The thunk sound is just a boxy sound, a harder boxier sound.
Carved tops are more alive sounding - and more prone to feedback?
you sound experts and luthiers can ‘splain all that.
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Originally Posted by blackcat
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Originally Posted by Donplaysguitar
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Originally Posted by Jabberwocky
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Originally Posted by rpjazzguitar
OTOH archtops often sound quite trebly and if you are hearing both the acoustic and amplified tone you might end up dialling in too dark a tone, sure.
It’s good to have a loop pedal if only for that reason. Loop some playing and then listen to it around the room (Scott Henderson does this apparently.)
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To the OP: Thunk is not a concept. Thunk is a lifestyle.
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Originally Posted by christianm77
Obviously, I need to get a life. Or maybe just a T shirt perhaps?
Musicalement,
David
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Who's going to tell Kurt Rosenwinkel then?
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Originally Posted by Stringswinger
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Originally Posted by blackcat
Who killed jazz ?
Today, 03:31 PM in From The Bandstand