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Tone Woods Hey Ant, i have a question about tone woods. Before I order a new bass, I do an intense research on woods to find a tone which I want to have, or to best find the tone that is in my head. What are your favorite tone woods for your basses? Like when you order your Foderas, do they all have the same tone woods? |
I pretty much just use swamp ash for my 'main' basses. It has the snap that I like. And the weight is nice. But I suggest that you play as many basses as you can with as many wood combinations as possible. And play them acoustically as well as amplified with the EQ flat in the bass and the amp. |
I got your tone woods right here :hiding: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oH41R...layer_embedded |
In my opinion that wasn't a good sounding bass. It sounded like I was hearing electronics. I've played all of my basses 'flat' for so long that I can tell when I'm hearing the low end that is boosted 'electronically'. Same with the treble being boosted. And I have basses with different woods but identical electronics that sound totally different. And those basses are played by the same player through the same amp. And me and a lot of experience players can hear the difference between wood necks and fretboards and those made from composite materials. For me the video merely showed that you can make a bass from any material. But it didn't show that you can make a good sounding bass from any material. And I'm not saying electronics don't make a difference. You can put a singer in front of 20 different mics and those mics will make the same singer sound slightly different. But that doesn't mean that the singer doesn't make a difference. |
Yeah, that video didn't do anything for me. It would be nice if the video included a clip once the pickups were installed in a bass. And if the clips were unknown to the listener. |
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