I really wish Johan would make an album. If he got hold of a good singer, I think he could make one hell of a rock 'n' roll record.I like this guy, very entertaining & informative, I love all his demo's!
A lot of times the main question I have to answer for a particular piece I am going to play is not which guitar or amp but which speaker cabinet to pug the amp into.
This,,, gball is right on the money. The speakers & cab have the final say in our tone & like anything else, speakers types each have a unique voice. Cab design also plays a big part. CheersA lot of times the main question I have to answer for a particular piece I am going to play is not which guitar or amp but which speaker cabinet to pug the amp into.
kernel says
1. soul (including creativity and originality, artistic voice)
2. practice (including experience & history, and CONFIDENCE...)
3. technique (including pick choice, or bare fingers)
4. Tone controls (including pedals, EQ, amp controls)
5. Amp quality (including design, components, workmanship, power)
6. Signal chain (including pickups, cables, speakers)
7. Guitar characteristics (including setup, scale length, fretwork,
Pickup Placement, nut and bridge contact, nut and bridge material,
quality of components and whether it's stolen or not...
8. Hair, if any... including How Big, how clean, how radical, or how absent
9. Pants... including how tight, how clean, whether they even fit
10. fingernails (how long, how clean, how strong)
I'm sure there are more factors to the quest for tone, but that's enough for now.
THE QUEST FOR TONE HAS NO FINISH LINE
SO IT'S TECHNICALLY A DEATH MARCH...
I always found the "tone is in your fingers" expression to be a bit strange. I wouldn't say tone as such is in your fingers at all. Style, skill, choice of notes, musicality and melody are in your fingers (and in your way of thinking about music), but not actual tone. That fact that a player is instantly recognizable no matter what guitar is because of his or her personal playing style, not tone. B. B. King would be recognizable if he played on a Stratocaster, but he would sound like he was B. B. King playing, well, a Strat. The sound of the Strat would not magically become identical to a Gibson ES345 just because B. B. was playing it. You play and sound like yourself no matter what guitar or rig, but the actual tone will not be the same. Now, where and you pick on the strings will be important, and how cleanly you play (in a technical sense) so your technique definitely matters, but it's still not really your fingers that create the tone. They "only" create the music.
For guitar tone I believe the speaker and amp are the most influential parts of the equation, then (disregarding any effects) the pickups and their placement in relation to the bridge.