Enc3f4L0
Well-known member
After going through the 10th anni JP speculation thread and comparing Music Man JPs with Ibanez JPMs I caught myself thinking too much about this...
I've been playing for maybe 10 years now... And have had a guitar for about 15, and I've yet to figure out how much each attribute of the instrument actually affects it's overall sound, and how.
Everytime I make comparisons and start extracting sketches of conclusions I'll find a situation that will contradict what I already have, and I'm back to ground zero.
Is it the wood combinations? The way/direction the wood is sculpted? The body shape? Neck shape/radius? Bridge choice? Nut? Weight of the instrument? Balance? Finish? Scale? String guage? Pickups?...
What I have noticed with certain consistency is that different brands sound real different from each other. That is to be expected obviously, but a name alone can't be responsible for the distinction in sound. Something along the way of the production line does the trick, what is it?
What I mean is... A brand (and I'm talking about decent ones, with personality, not those ripoff ones) will have it's signature sound even on different models, some of them quite different spec-wise...
Take a regular JP and compare it with a BFR. They sound a bit different but it isn't significant enough as one would expect from totally different woods, changes in body shape, finish, and whatnot... The 'soul' of the sound is essencially the same.
When pickups are swapped on a guitar I feel a similar experience. You get more/less gain, changes in the EQ , scoop here, boost there and that's it...
Nothing that you couldn't compensate for in amp setting IMO.
To make an analogy with HSV color principles... It's almost as if all these changes affected Value or at max, Saturation, but never Hue.
Let's look at it from another perspective now...
Instead of changing up specs within a same brand, let's look at different brands making similarly speced instruments...
When comparing MM JPs and Ibanez JPs (just to be clear, I love both), they are pretty similar spec wise. Basswood body, bolt on neck, rosewood board, dimarzio pickups (based on Steve's Special and Air Norton), position of knobs, pickup selection options. Granted, there are some differences, bridge, locking system, so on... But still, some of these differences are minor compared to how the BFR changed the original JP (atleast my uneducated opinion would think so).
The difference in sound between these instruments is MAJOR though (IMO also). It's hard to describe, but there's this 'spongy twang' (for lack of a better term) to the JPMs that isnt present on the MMs.
Similarly, if you hear the different PRS models you could still tell they're PRSs...
I know it's an art to build an instrument, but there has got to be one or two magic ingredients to each misterious signature sound.
Hope I'm making some sense exposing what I was daydreaming about. Excuse any of my communication flaws, it's hard to describe what I'm hearing/feeling, plus English isn't my first language anyway.
I'll let you guys take it from here... Share your opinions and insights.
I've been playing for maybe 10 years now... And have had a guitar for about 15, and I've yet to figure out how much each attribute of the instrument actually affects it's overall sound, and how.
Everytime I make comparisons and start extracting sketches of conclusions I'll find a situation that will contradict what I already have, and I'm back to ground zero.
Is it the wood combinations? The way/direction the wood is sculpted? The body shape? Neck shape/radius? Bridge choice? Nut? Weight of the instrument? Balance? Finish? Scale? String guage? Pickups?...
What I have noticed with certain consistency is that different brands sound real different from each other. That is to be expected obviously, but a name alone can't be responsible for the distinction in sound. Something along the way of the production line does the trick, what is it?
What I mean is... A brand (and I'm talking about decent ones, with personality, not those ripoff ones) will have it's signature sound even on different models, some of them quite different spec-wise...
Take a regular JP and compare it with a BFR. They sound a bit different but it isn't significant enough as one would expect from totally different woods, changes in body shape, finish, and whatnot... The 'soul' of the sound is essencially the same.
When pickups are swapped on a guitar I feel a similar experience. You get more/less gain, changes in the EQ , scoop here, boost there and that's it...
Nothing that you couldn't compensate for in amp setting IMO.
To make an analogy with HSV color principles... It's almost as if all these changes affected Value or at max, Saturation, but never Hue.
Let's look at it from another perspective now...
Instead of changing up specs within a same brand, let's look at different brands making similarly speced instruments...
When comparing MM JPs and Ibanez JPs (just to be clear, I love both), they are pretty similar spec wise. Basswood body, bolt on neck, rosewood board, dimarzio pickups (based on Steve's Special and Air Norton), position of knobs, pickup selection options. Granted, there are some differences, bridge, locking system, so on... But still, some of these differences are minor compared to how the BFR changed the original JP (atleast my uneducated opinion would think so).
The difference in sound between these instruments is MAJOR though (IMO also). It's hard to describe, but there's this 'spongy twang' (for lack of a better term) to the JPMs that isnt present on the MMs.
Similarly, if you hear the different PRS models you could still tell they're PRSs...
I know it's an art to build an instrument, but there has got to be one or two magic ingredients to each misterious signature sound.
Hope I'm making some sense exposing what I was daydreaming about. Excuse any of my communication flaws, it's hard to describe what I'm hearing/feeling, plus English isn't my first language anyway.
I'll let you guys take it from here... Share your opinions and insights.