I will let Ted make my case of How a Hollow can sound different than a solid,,,,,,,,,,,,, in his many ways with this one song.
The "hollowness" comes from certain frequencies either subdued or enhanced which are consistent with... uhm... hollowness.Now tell me how, with the same amount of vibration, the hollowness affects what the pickup gets from the strings?

Tension, string thickness, amount of string vibration. Check
Now tell me how, with the same amount of vibration, the hollowness affects what the pickup gets from the strings?
The question is not whether a particular guitar can sound different depending on how you play it. Oh, and F. Nugent.
Sorry Chili. Honestly, my screen only loaded one clip, which is the reason I posted that.This whole statement confuses me, Ray.
Especially since I posted 3 different clips with not only 2 different hollow Byrdlands ( Live and in person, I can tell you both of the ones played by Ted are vastly different from themselves. Then I posted an example of his PRS sound from 1995. So I am not sure where " whether a particular guitar can sound different..." enters the conversation.
My examples of sound differences are Ted's percussive, ballsy, woody, almost like a wild beast ready to roar Byrdland tones, vs Derek St Holmes Les Paul/ Double Cut, and Ted's PRS sound when compared to one another.
I own 4 semihollows. I bet no one can pick them out in blind clips. That is when these theories all fall apart. Same settings, played clean and simple open chords. I can record 4 different semi v solid clips OR a clip of 8 guitars and you all can pick the semihollows from the solids....then mount the neck and strings to a wooden cigar box with the same electronics and I guarantee you will hear a difference.
But it hits the pickup before the wood.The "hollowness" comes from certain frequencies either subdued or enhanced which are consistent with... uhm... hollowness.
Dang... I think I just freaked myself out...![]()
I own 4 semihollows. I bet no one can pick them out in blind clips. That is when these theories all fall apart. Same settings, played clean and simple open chords. I can record 4 different semi v solid clips OR a clip of 8 guitars and you all can pick the semihollows from the solids.
With the same pickups and rig? With a 50/50 chance, I do not think most could guess 3x out of 4. However, I do think that most people think they could. I thought I could until I really started listening to my cs336 because I wanted to justify buying an es335. It didn't work.This may be true, but I bet you if you played a true hollow then switched to a solid, you would be able to tell.
Just listen to Esperanza on Fender vs Stand UP bass
Tension, string thickness, amount of string vibration. Check
Now tell me how, with the same amount of vibration, the hollowness affects what the pickup gets from the strings?
I guess what people perceive as a general difference between the guitar types really stems from the fact that hollows and solids tend to be used for different styles of music where the guitar tones are different. Hence hollows are associated with more "woolly" jazz tones in general. Whatever real difference the body of the guitar contributes tonally is bound to be so small it will be dwarfed by the amp, pickups, pickup placement etc.
Yes, there is no doubt differences between guitars, but my point is simply that the body type is not really a major factor. Pickup type and pickup placement are far more important. All other factors being identical, I think it would be rather difficult to differentiate between them. Personally, my ears are pretty screwed from loud rock ‘n’ roll in my youth and a noisy workplace anyway, so I would definitely have problems...Gahr, this may be the case for some, and I know what Ray is trying to say about very few people could differentiate hollow vs solid, or soild vs solid or different age and model of guitar if they hear clips or live examples of various guitars without being able to see the guitars demonstrated.
However, if I were to hear a certain guitar player playing the same song either all at one sitting, or over the course of time on various guitars, I'd be able to tell which he used if presented with a list to choose from. I also don't put type of guitars into neat little boxes depending on style of music normally played on a particular type of guitar.
Bridge to placement affects relative string tension over the pickup, hencevibration in this area. Scale affectsoverall string tension, hence overall vibration. In an event, none of what you said has anything to do with hollowness.With the same amount of vibration there would be no difference,
...BUT...
If you take 2 strings of the same gauge and put them both on 24 3/4 scale guitars,
lets say an SG and an ES 335 both equipped with a 57 classic in the bridge position,
tune them to the same pitch, select that pickup and pluck those strings in the same
spot with the same amount of force you will NOT get the same amount of vibration.
The entire ASDR of the plucked string will be noticeably different.
All the stuff the string anchor points are attached to will affect the string vibration.
Different guitar construction, different stuff, different string vibration.
I disagree, although everyone thins they can, which is why this debate rages on. Remember when Coke and Pepsi finally had a challenge? I challenge all who say they can tell wood tone to do it. What you will get: lots of complaints about the integretity of the test, no matter how it is done. What you won't get: accuracy.Gahr, this may be the case for some, and I know what Ray is trying to say about very few people could differentiate hollow vs solid, or soild vs solid or different age and model of guitar if they hear clips or live examples of various guitars without being able to see the guitars demonstrated.
However, if I were to hear a certain guitar player playing the same song either all at one sitting, or over the course of time on various guitars, I'd be able to tell which he used if presented with a list to choose from. I also don't put type of guitars into neat little boxes depending on style of music normally played on a particular type of guitar.
What you won't get: accuracy.