metalmaniac93":1cwkfca6 said:
TrueTone500":1cwkfca6 said:
metalmaniac93":1cwkfca6 said:
TrueTone500":1cwkfca6 said:
metalmaniac93":1cwkfca6 said:
Thanks! I've ever played a Northern Ash guitar that I know of. I've heard he prefers Basswood, so I thought maybe...
He prefers Basswood since his days with Ernie Ball. Basswood was not used on guitars in the 1970's. There are articles/interviews stating that he hates Alder. I do not know why, but that is what was stated.
I've never been a fan of Floyd Rose tremolos on an Alder body, because (to my ears) the highs are just too bright. Most FR loaded guitars seem to be made of Alder, so I naturally avoided FR equipped guitars altogether.
Fast-forward >>> I purchased an EVH EBMM with a Floyd Rose a few months back, and I'm in heaven! At $1300.00, I didn't care what the body was made from, I wanted the guitar. After falling in love with it, I did some research and found that the EVH is made of Basswood with a maple top.
Fast-forward >>> I was doing some test-driving at Sam Ash, when I came across a Jackson Adrian Smith SDX. I was reluctant to plug it in, since (due to the weight) I assumed it was made of Alder. I decided to plug into a couple of Blackstar amplifiers, and was absolutely blown-away! Very similar to my EBMM EVH, but a bit warmer. After getting it home, I did some research... What do you know... Basswood!
The point of all this, is that I'm now able to get more authentic sounding 1st album EVH tones using these two guitars, compared to anything else I've ever owned. I've read that Ibanez was notorious in the 1970's for using dark Basswood for their bodies... Was the Ibanez Destroyer made of mahogany, or was is actually Basswood?
I have a CS Charvel that is made of Basswood and it is very bright especially with a JB in it,which I removed. Great guitar though.
I'm reading that the lighter yellow Basswood is brighter than the dark Basswood, so that me be it?
Basswood:
Basswood is a soft wood with tight grains. Its relatively inexpensive of all the usual guitar woods, and it’s easy on router bits in the factory, easy to sand, and easy to seal and finish. The softness of basswood means that sharp highs are dampened and smoothened. That helps offset the tinny sound associated with knife edged tremolo contacts. The softness also fosters a weaker low end. It’s light in weight, but not because of large pores. Rather it’s low in mass overall. Deep, breathy sub-lows aren’t resonated in Basswood. The reduction in these outer frequencies leaves the mids pronounced in a hypothetical response curve. Its very suitable for the typical guitar range, and very suitable for lead guitar, because of its pronounced “out front” sound. Complex overtones are muted along with the highs leaving a strong fundamental tone.
http://www.jemsite.com/jem/wood.htm
I also found this... EVH says the "Frankie" was/is a Charvel parts guitar.
“Tell me about your guitar,” I began, referring to the distinctive white and black-striped guitar he’d just used onstage. “It’s a copy of a Strat,” Eddie responded. “It’s not a Fender. It’s by a company called Charvel. You know, I bought a body from them for 50 bucks and a neck for 80 bucks, slapped it together, put an old Gibson pickup in it, and it’s my main guitar. Painted it up, you know, with stripes and stuff. I just didn’t like the fact of having the standard rock-star setup – you know, a brand-new Les Paul and a Marshall. I was really into vibrato, so the reason I started dickin’ around that way is I wanted a Gibson-type of sound, but with a Strat vibrato. So I stuck a humbucking pickup in a Strat, and it worked okay, but it didn’t get good enough tone because Fenders are kind of cheap wood – they’re made out of alder or something. So then I found out about Charvel, which makes guitar necks and bodies out of ash. But the main reason I made it was to have something that no one else had. You know, I wanted it to be my guitar, an extension of myself. I hate store-bought, off-the-rack guitars. They don’t do what I want them to do, which is fuckin’ kick ass and scream!”
http://www.vhnd.com/2010/11/19/eddie-va ... -roth-era/