Guitar EDjumacation Thread

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  • ace diamond
    replied
    nice job

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  • Romeo Delight
    replied
    Thanks Jay. I have no idea how this will sound, but I ordered the following last week:


    Seymour DuncanSTK-S10 YJM Fury Stack Neck Pickup White

    Seymour DuncanSSL-5 RW/RP Custom Staggered Single Coil Middle Pickup White

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  • jhale667
    replied
    Originally posted by Romeo Delight
    I did just order a Seymour Duncan SH4 JB for the bridge...what about the other two? Quarter pounder or these:

    Hand-crafted electric guitar pickups, acoustic guitar pickups, bass pickups and pedals. Helping musicians find their signature sound since 1976.


    Thanks

    You can't really go wrong with the Quarter Pounds. Very beefy, but they're true single coils and thus will be a bit noisy. The JB (and the Jr) is recommended for the bridge position. There's no law, however, that says you can't use a bridge pickup in the neck position. I'd recommend, if you get the JB Jr. try it in the neck, would probably sound better than it may in the middle position.

    If you want something by Duncan for the neck and middle that's noise-cancelling but still sounds like a single coil (dummy coil is nowhere in the audio signal path), I've had good luck with the STK-S6 in the neck, and the STK-S4 in the middle.



    Last edited by jhale667; 08-15-2015, 06:37 AM.

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  • Romeo Delight
    replied
    I did just order a Seymour Duncan SH4 JB for the bridge...what about the other two? Quarter pounder or these:



    Thanks

    Leave a comment:


  • Romeo Delight
    replied
    New Kramer Focus 3000

    Hey...check out my new Japanese Kramer...

    What pickups should I put in? It sounds good but feeds back too much.

    It is so mint, I can't believe it. $250 all in.
    Attached Files

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  • DLR Bridge
    replied
    Excellent thread. Never saw this one before. Great Thrills posts, too.

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  • Diamondjimi
    replied
    Originally posted by ace diamond
    JHALE....the stuff you put up on this thread has been of great help to me. my playing has made a massive leap in improvements since you shared this stuff with us. thanks.
    Ace
    Agreed Sir Ace!

    Here's your new siggy J ...

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  • ace diamond
    replied
    JHALE....the stuff you put up on this thread has been of great help to me. my playing has made a massive leap in improvements since you shared this stuff with us. thanks.
    Ace

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  • jhale667
    replied
    New Stuff BUMP. :D

    Recently got asked to do a series of articles for Seymour Duncan Pickups. Pretty frickin' stoked and honored. So here's the 1st one:

    Hand-crafted electric guitar pickups, acoustic guitar pickups, bass pickups and pedals. Helping musicians find their signature sound since 1976.





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  • rocknrolldork
    replied
    Originally posted by Nitro Express
    I think it's easier to do on bass because the strings are bigger. I can get great pinch harmonics just going off the tip of the pick and letting the string hit my thumb. It's a feel thing. I have the advantage of being a classical guitar player and also playing finger style bass 98% of the time. I have a lot of strength and dexterity in my right hand. It's helps.
    There are some great harmonic overtones for some of the higher runs on bass. Anthony Hamilton's bass player is a monster at getting those tones. Still a work in progress for me.

    Nitro.... I was trained in classical as well. I'm finding that I use the classical guitar right hand style more than the proper bass hand technique. Do you do this as well or have you adapted your right hand technique to the bass style over the years? Also... did you mod your epi head to gig bass through it? I tried it and it just completely distorts and doesn't grab the low like it should.

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  • Nitro Express
    replied
    I think it's easier to do on bass because the strings are bigger. I can get great pinch harmonics just going off the tip of the pick and letting the string hit my thumb. It's a feel thing. I have the advantage of being a classical guitar player and also playing finger style bass 98% of the time. I have a lot of strength and dexterity in my right hand. It's helps.

    Leave a comment:


  • Coyote
    replied
    Originally posted by jhale667
    Ever notice the best, most admirable players don't baby their instruments at all? They're literally smacking the shit out of them. Players like Ed, SRV, Gary Moore, Lonnie Mack...their vibrato involved the whole neck of the guitar, not just one or two strings...
    Can't get a decent "ricochet" pinch harmonic (á la Sykes or Wylde) with a feathery touch...

    Once you get that going on a bass, you're solid.
    Last edited by Coyote; 11-30-2011, 04:27 PM.

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  • rocknrolldork
    replied
    Originally posted by Nitro Express
    I really think that is the secret. I just got stuck playing bass in our band and had to focus on that and kind of forgot about the guitar and then one day I picked up a guitar and my approach was way different than it used to be. I really smacked the thing around and got good things out of it. You just have to eat your Wheaties and give her a mauling. I went to the Fur Peace Ranch and brought my Jack Casady bass with me. Jack himself taught the class and I wanted to get the sustain and ringing on my bass like he got so the man himself set my bass up for me. He set the neck perfectly straight and raised the strings quite a bit. I got the sound I wanted but man what a workout on the hands! So I played that setup for a few years and grabbed a guitar and man. Discovered something new.

    Jack started off as a guitar player and then out of necessity got stuck playing the bass because the band he was in needed a bass player. So he incorporated melodic playing, finger vibrato, and chords into his bass playing. He approached it from a guitar player standpoint. You do that on a bass and then go to a guitar, WOW! You get a harmonic and resonance thing going that you just don't get playing the instrument with a lighter touch. You really have to build up your hands to do it though.

    Eddie is basically playing funk on the guitar. Mean Streets is nothing but slapping and popping the strings like a bass player. It's harder to do because the strings are smaller but that is all it is. Ed uses a lot of bass trickery on the guitar and I just really started discovering that.
    I 100% agree. Playing bass totally changed the way I play guitar now. I even moved up to 11s on the sg and tele. still like 10s on strats and lps

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  • jhale667
    replied
    Yup, IIRC Ed said in an interview he came up with the "Mean Street" intro playing around with slapping ala Larry Graham, Stanley Clarke or some other Motown bassist he was digging on at the time...

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  • Nitro Express
    replied


    Actually apply these funky bass techniques to your guitar playing and see where it takes you. You will come up with some cool shit.



    See the slap funk technique in Ed's playing? He's slapping the shit out of those strings.
    Last edited by Nitro Express; 11-30-2011, 02:59 PM.

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