Can you hear the "hollow" in an electric guitar?

Which is exactly why I have made a very verbose point in other threads about tests being done in a controlled environment with test equipment, and not just listening tests which are subject to the hearing abilities of individuals.

Such tests would demonstrate, apart from human biases, if there is a difference, and to what degree. If such testing indicates there is a difference but just shy of being audible, it may provide insights into ways to exploit materials and construction to carry those differences over the threshold to become audible. Or, such testing my indicate no difference, at all...putting the entire question to rest. Or, they may indicate there is a difference, but so insignificant as to be beyond usage.

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Now, because I think listening tests are flawed...I'm going to treat you to a ...wait for it... a listening test!!!

Yay!

This is just for entertainment and doesn't really prove anything, but it's kind of fun. The actual test starts around 8:00. I get a kick out of the Anderton's gear reviews and listening tests.

(As a bonus, at 20:12 they guess between Gibson and Epiphone!)


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BTW, you're getting colder.


HAHA "What I really don;t want to do is get the Squier mixed up with the Custom Shop"

 
Don, I swear even despite 26 years since I owned my first guitar, my 1979 Black Les Paul Standard, I can still smell, feel and almost taste that guitar. If someone actually found it and a twin and gave them to me, I could possibly pick out mine.
 
Don, I swear even despite 26 years since I owned my first guitar, my 1979 Black Les Paul Standard, I can still smell, feel and almost taste that guitar. If someone actually found it and a twin and gave them to me, I could possibly pick out mine.

I've just tested mine, and yes, the Gibsons all smell different, as does the PRS. And my old acoustic with French polish smells like an old church - I think that is to do with the beeswax polish.
 
My Les Paul Jr smells like chocolate......several smell like musty old bars.....T-40 smells like Liquid Gold furniture polish ---as does the T-60....
 
My 1974 SG smells different from any other of my guitars. The second I open the case, I can smell it.

It makes me wonder...(<---Led Zeppelin reference).

We smell because our olfactory organs detect the molecules in the air. So, if we smell something, we are inhaling it.

Maybe the finish of different guitars acts like a drug and makes us subconsciously play differently, affecting tone?

Now THERE'S a debate, right there!

(Adrian...take this and and run with it!)

Maybe we don't hear the "hollow". Maybe we smell the hollow!

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(No, I'm not serious!)
 
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SO Ray--- when will you be posting the 4 hollow V 4 solid test?
Will all have same scale length---brand and gauge of string --pickup configuration-- Using the same pick--all going to same amp on same settings recorded on same device?
Nope, they will all be different. But why should that matter for those who can hear the hollowness?
 
My 1974 SG smells different from any other of my guitars. The second I open the case, I can smell it.

It makes me wonder...(<---Led Zeppelin reference).

We smell because our olfactory organs detect the molecules in the air. So, if we smell something, we are inhaling it.

Maybe the finish of different guitars acts like a drug and makes us subconsciously play differently, affecting tone?

Now THERE'S a debate, right there!

(Adrian...take this and and run with it!)

Maybe we don't hear the "hollow". Maybe we smell the hollow!

*************

(No, I'm not serious!)
So it is not my playing that stinks, it is my guitar...excellent!
 
It all matters......the pickups all need adjusted to the identical height within millimeters
 
Can't tell you anything for sure, but I can hear the difference between my former band's Gibson Les Paul and his Epiphone Casino without looking. I have strummed a Gibson ES-335 ONCE and did not like the sound of it....
 
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BTW, you're getting colder.
Sadly for me, I think I am right on. This started with a desire to justify an ES335 guitar and the hours it would take to fish the pots out through the F-Hole for a mod. Unfortunately, I think that my premise stands intact - there is no audible difference, so why bother. Then again, that has never stopped me before!
 
This started with a desire to justify an ES335 guitar and the hours it would take to fish the pots out through the F-Hole for a mod. Unfortunately, I think that my premise stands intact - there is no audible difference, so why bother. Then again, that has never stopped me before!

It doesn't take hours, at all. I've changed the pots in my semi-hollow Washburn in about 30 minutes, or less (not including the time to solder the components together outside the guitar). Build your harness outside the guitar. Then, run aquarium tubing from the holes for the pots, switch, and jack through the F-holes. Push the tubing onto the pot shafts, the switch (remove the switch tip), and into the jack. You may have to tape it onto the jack, as well. Then, gently pull the parts into position. It's not that tough, at all. You just have to be careful as you work the harness through the f-holes into the cavity.

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Also, my "warmer"/"colder" comments aren't referring to your premise. Your expectation of the outcome may be correct. You were careful to use the term "audible" which is a good way to phrase it, because a real test may show there is a difference, though not audible to us...or it may show other things which I've already mentioned.

But come to think of it....conceivably, you can run your own listening test if that's the way you want to go. You have some Les Paul-style Agiles, correct? Anyway, take all those components out and install them in an ES-335-type guitar, and see for yourself.
 
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Now I have Stairway... playing in my head again.
Smitty makes a good point, this really does make me wonder, AND I think you are on to something when you say the look, feel or even smell of a guitar affects YOU, and then how you play it, which in turn - that guitar WILL sound different - therefore the ESSENCE of the Hollowness is what makes it different.

Can I personally tell solid vs semi on any given track, probably not.

Similar thing: I was playing the used Ibanez AS73 I got recently. Bone stock, near mint. It has ceramics that I dont care for with OD for the blues rock type of songs I want to play on it.

So, at the same time I have been stumbling my way through Iron Maiden Number of the Beast and The Trooper rhythm parts as I have mentioned.

I turned up the pedal gain and guitar volume for some "more", and plugged away at those 2 songs on a guitar I would typically not play them on.
I tell you the stock ceramic didnt sound bad at all.

I cant say I identified any specific hollow body attribute to the sound, but I do believe it affects the way the strings vibrate, as some of the energy is dissipated through the nut, tuners, bridge, tailpiece and wood - the vibration or resonance you feel and contributing to what you hear unplugged.

I usually play those on the beater Pacifica with the Seymour Duncan Custom TB-5 bridge p/u.
A higher output PAFish ceramic.

What a dilema to have, right?
I'm just thankful to have at least one good playing guitar and plenty of strings to keep on keeping on.
 
But come to think of it....conceivably, you can run your own listening test if that's the way you want to go. You have some Les Paul-style Agiles, correct? Anyway, take all those components out and install them in an ES-335-type guitar, and see for yourself.
I sort of have done this. I picked up my beloved CS336 and wanted to hear the soft whisper of the blues, but all I heard was '57 classics! They are not my favorite pups, but I want to keep this one stock because it was a gift from my parents.

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I sort of have done this. I picked up my beloved CS336 and wanted to hear the soft whisper of the blues, but all I heard was '57 classics!

Why, of course you heard '57 Classics. Those are the pickups that are in that guitar!

(Nice guitar, by the way!)
 
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I sort of have done this. I picked up my beloved CS336 and wanted to hear the soft whisper of the blues, but all I heard was '57 classics! They are not my favorite pups, but I want to keep this one stock because it was a gift from my parents.

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That's one beautiful guitar.

The '57 Classics are an excellent PAF style pups. A "soft whisper of the blues" is only an amp adjustment and or a guitar's volume and tone adjustment away.

My LP R9 has a set of '57 Classics. A huge variety of tones anxiously await for freedom from this combo. Even the mysterious hallowed hollowness... :popcorn:
 
Answering the initial question, yes I can hear the "hollowness" in a semi- or full-hollow. The attack is different and there is a little bit of a midrange attenuation vs a solidbody. You hear these subtle things when you play them and you end up playing them differently because of it.

I know the tonewood argument is ongoing. I fall squarely into the camp that believes that wood type and construction do make a difference. One thing I am absolutely sure of is that a Les Paul with a maple neck plays, sounds, responds very differently from one with a hog neck and no matter how you switch the electronics around they are going to retain their individual character. With a semi the difference is even more pronounced. How does the wood effect the tone? Don't know, don't care, but I can hear it and feel it so that means I can use it to make the noises I want to make.
 
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