Article 5W7B2 Musician Builds Electric Guitar Without a Body to Determine Where a Guitar’s Tone Comes From

Musician Builds Electric Guitar Without a Body to Determine Where a Guitar’s Tone Comes From

by
Lori Dorn
from Laughing Squid on (#5W7B2)
Story Image

Nashville musician Jim Lill decided that he wanted to learn more about where the tone comes from in an electric guitar. In order to determine this origin, Lill spoke with other musicians to learn what they thought, compared several guitars of his own, and switched out the necks, pickups, and headstocks from certain guitars, mixing and matching the parts.

Lill also built two instruments of his own design, a self-described 2*4 Guitar and a bodiless air guitar". The latter consists of strings stretched across a bench and a worktable, attached by a headstock on one end and a steel saddle with pickup on the other. He then compared the air guitar to his Anderson Telecaster.

Here are the things that the Anderson and the air guitar had in common: tuning, strings, scale length , pickup, pickup distance to strings , pickup position along the strings, pickup slant angle, and effective volume pop value

View this post on Instagram

A post shared by Jim Lill (@jimlill)

External Content
Source RSS or Atom Feed
Feed Location http://laughingsquid.com/feed/
Feed Title Laughing Squid
Feed Link https://laughingsquid.com/
Reply 0 comments