15 Guitar Myths That Make Us All Look CRAZY!

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  • čas přidán 21. 08. 2024

Komentáře • 4,3K

  • @999manman
    @999manman Před 4 lety +771

    This video has that warm, vintage tone.

    • @timg7942
      @timg7942 Před 4 lety +26

      999manman must be the vintage pickups and the nitrocellulose.

    • @999manman
      @999manman Před 4 lety +5

      @@timg7942 Hahahah! No doubt!!!

    • @Skelly5962
      @Skelly5962 Před 4 lety +11

      It's because it was probably filmed with an Android rather than an iPhone.

    • @MrSparks54
      @MrSparks54 Před 4 lety +6

      Must have used matched Groove Tubes

    • @IgnazioPillitteri
      @IgnazioPillitteri Před 4 lety +8

      and now after three years it sounds even better, as the video has nicely aged, we can undoubtedly call it "vintage"

  • @TheJollyMisanthrope
    @TheJollyMisanthrope Před 4 lety +317

    A lot of myths have one thing in common: Trying to separate you from your hard earned money.

  • @philroe2363
    @philroe2363 Před 4 lety +132

    "Play jazz on an SG . . . play bluegrass on an Ibanez" . . .
    Yep. Just PLAY!!!

  • @GuitarLessonsBobbyCrispy
    @GuitarLessonsBobbyCrispy Před 3 lety +110

    When I was a teen just starting to play electric guitar, someone told me that Eddie Van Halen boiled his guitar strings in hot water on the stove before stringing his guitar ( to allow them to stretch ). I did that, and when I removed the string from the boiling pot, they were nothing but pure rust! Lol, I'll never forget that, so don't believe that myth! R.I.P. Eddie.

    • @cursedcliff7562
      @cursedcliff7562 Před 3 lety +1

      Thats why you do that to old strings

    • @GrungeyMr
      @GrungeyMr Před 3 lety +10

      its actually a cheap trick to make bass strings sound new and bright again, it removes all the natural oils, sweat and gunk that have been collecting on your strings, only problen. they dont last half as long as new strings does and sound even worse after they die.

    • @drkaplin98
      @drkaplin98 Před 3 lety +1

      I did that too! Such crap!

    • @s6g2k
      @s6g2k Před 3 lety +7

      I heard recently that Eddie deliberately told mistruths about what he did to achieve his sound. The specific item cited was whether he used a variac to provide more or less supply voltage to the amp. Apparently he told interviewers both at different times.
      To support that, apparently also Alex told Eddie early on to turn his back to he audience when he was using special playing techniques, so they wouldn't be learned by the other locals.

    • @mickavoidant4780
      @mickavoidant4780 Před 2 lety +2

      @@GrungeyMr I did it once and it did nothing more than waste electricity.

  • @paulsgotgas7307
    @paulsgotgas7307 Před 5 lety +941

    To my ears the rosewood fretboard had a warmer vintage tone than the maple, but that just might have been the poly finish.

    • @carlosoliveira-rc2xt
      @carlosoliveira-rc2xt Před 5 lety +21

      Lol.

    • @balamsky
      @balamsky Před 5 lety +69

      No... it’s the spaghetti logo what really matters

    • @spencersmokler4171
      @spencersmokler4171 Před 5 lety +8

      you're correct, rosewood is a warmer tone and maple is a bright tone

    • @functionform
      @functionform Před 5 lety +17

      To me the Maple sounds a lot better, fuller. I wish I was joking. Could I pick it out in a mix? No, but in a naked comparison like this, I highly prefer it.

    • @phillthorpe2643
      @phillthorpe2643 Před 5 lety +7

      What is more amazing is the tone was so similar coming from 2 completely different guitars .

  • @legryzzly2
    @legryzzly2 Před 4 lety +77

    The more important part of the guitar for tone ?
    THE AMP

    • @dylanadams1455
      @dylanadams1455 Před 3 lety +3

      I'd go even futher and say the speaker cabinet. Makes a huge difference.

    • @stevenshea990
      @stevenshea990 Před 3 lety +1

      Scale length too. The "fender sound" is as much the increased string tension from its 25 1/2" scale length as it is the single-coil pups

    • @brunnoteixeira9400
      @brunnoteixeira9400 Před 3 lety

      The speakers!

    • @legryzzly2
      @legryzzly2 Před 3 lety +2

      @@brunnoteixeira9400
      Agreed. Anything on the amp, (preamp, speaker, cab...) Is more important than anythig on the guitar. Important meAns AUDIBLE.
      Most of the time, only the guitar player can hear a difference on a pickup change. Especially in a mix.
      And 99,9 % of the audience don't give a F*** about the whole debate 🤣

  • @ryankelsey9646
    @ryankelsey9646 Před 4 lety +138

    “Wood is unpredictable.”
    Yes, I deal with that problem every morning! Lol

  • @bolland83
    @bolland83 Před 4 lety +115

    "Warm vintage tone" probably has more to do with the recording gear of the time being all analog tube gear, than it does with the guitar pickups.

    • @pyroman6000
      @pyroman6000 Před 4 lety +4

      Yep, and not to mention the vintage amps they were using.

    • @bgm9517
      @bgm9517 Před 4 lety +8

      @@pyroman6000 technically, wouldn't the "vintage" amps back then be new?

    • @goochguitar6967
      @goochguitar6967 Před 4 lety +4

      And everything was recorded to tape!!

    • @alexeypolevoybass
      @alexeypolevoybass Před 3 lety +3

      @@bgm9517 there still is a big market for analog gear, so they didn't even get old yet.

  • @shokid
    @shokid Před 5 lety +213

    You need to boil the guitar picks to get that vintage warm tone, then you freeze them and then deep fry, to get that crunch 😂😂

    • @sagespane7617
      @sagespane7617 Před 5 lety +9

      shokid Thank you so much dude! Only know I realized that I always mixed up the order. That‘s why it never worked...

    • @paulfrombrooklyn5409
      @paulfrombrooklyn5409 Před 5 lety +6

      If you stir fry the picks, too, they will sound warmer.

    • @keithblaney9064
      @keithblaney9064 Před 5 lety +9

      Don't forget the Sriracha if you want a hotter pickup.

    • @dustrider9306
      @dustrider9306 Před 5 lety +5

      Remember to always grease your fretboard for those fat neck tones!

    • @TruthSurge
      @TruthSurge Před 5 lety +4

      I usually like to add a little honey to the fretboard just before playing a really fast song. I think it helps with the bending, too.

  • @RobertBakerGuitar
    @RobertBakerGuitar Před 5 lety +736

    Ok can confirm was triggered multiple times in this video hahahahaha

    • @andrewmoseley4029
      @andrewmoseley4029 Před 5 lety +12

      Robert Baker You and me both.

    • @ladariusjohnson709
      @ladariusjohnson709 Před 5 lety +42

      Hahahaha
      Myth #16
      Long silky hair enhances guitar skills and brings out the rebel in you
      Hahahahahahahahaha

    • @j_freed
      @j_freed Před 5 lety +14

      If you enjoy these debates you don't have to think anyone's right.
      People like Phillip McKnight have tons of gear experience and he says a good inexpensive set of pickups isn't necessarily inferior to some expensive custom set, because the same basic correct materials are widely used.

    • @napalmhardcore
      @napalmhardcore Před 5 lety +13

      @@j_freed Regardless of whether he is correct on that particular point, I don't consider Phillip McKnight an authority on guitar tone regardless of how much gear he owns. He did a video on attenuators and didn't even realise that the model of RockCrusher he owns has no cabinet emulation.

    • @roberttownsend7064
      @roberttownsend7064 Před 5 lety +12

      no. flames. flames make it faster. just like cars.

  • @fondoman3884
    @fondoman3884 Před rokem +5

    .. thank you, Darrell!
    I do feel that you deserved some kind of award for all the work/effort that you've put into the making of your excellent videos and all the knowledge/info that you've shared through all the years!

  • @ianrickey208
    @ianrickey208 Před 4 lety +17

    Darrell proves that “made in Canada” can sound as good as anywhere. Love his comment about CNC machines hahahahaha - well said Darrell!

  • @jpalomino93
    @jpalomino93 Před 5 lety +220

    0:28 Nitro finish vs Poly finish
    1:34 Vintage pickups vs Modern pickups
    2:32 Gauge & Tone
    3:26 Thin lines vs Solid bodies
    4:03 Maple fretboard vs Rosewood fretboard
    6:06 Power supply pedals vs 9V batteries pedals
    6:42 "Vintage tone"
    7:18 Strat bridge vs Tele bridge
    8:40 Guitar versatility
    10:00 Small Strat headstock vs Big Strat headstock
    10:54 Boiling your guitar strings
    11:32 True bypass vs Buffered bypass
    12:31 Noiseless pickups
    13:12 Country of manufacture
    14:06 Tonewood

  • @jarrydee2799
    @jarrydee2799 Před 5 lety +66

    Damn near spit my coffee out when I seen that chopped up strat... Awesome!

  • @jaytaylor9232
    @jaytaylor9232 Před 5 lety +26

    I boil my guitar for revived tone.

    • @99rpm
      @99rpm Před rokem

      A warm tone it will be!

  • @nameismy_ethan
    @nameismy_ethan Před 5 lety +164

    Somebody call Rob Chapman to do these hearing tests

    • @lordofthestrings7261
      @lordofthestrings7261 Před 4 lety +9

      Robs clean tone sounds like an angry bee though :(

    • @jacebeleren1703
      @jacebeleren1703 Před 4 lety +14

      Rob Chapman believes the tonewood myth, so i wouldnt really trust him on the matter, accomplished guitarist as he may be.

    • @DocMcStuffIt44
      @DocMcStuffIt44 Před 4 lety +7

      matthias umagat kind of scary how accurate he can be 😭

    • @destianpatrianagara1119
      @destianpatrianagara1119 Před 4 lety +2

      @@jacebeleren1703 cause he own a guitar company so that's obvious

  • @AnomieTrain
    @AnomieTrain Před 5 lety +65

    I always start the day with a big bowl of guitar string soup

    • @gregorp8406
      @gregorp8406 Před 5 lety

      Soup is practical too because afterwards, you dont need a.. tooth-pick!!😂😂😂

  • @BillDutton
    @BillDutton Před 5 lety +60

    This was perfectly entertaining! I laughed as you poked each sacred cow - well done Darrell, I always enjoy your videos.

  • @TheWolvesCurse
    @TheWolvesCurse Před 4 lety +21

    myth9: finally! i can play deathmetal on a hollowbody guitar!

  • @The030Berliner
    @The030Berliner Před 4 lety +8

    Another wonderful myth to add: The brand of your potentiometers and capacitors changes everything! You'll need CTS pots, Switchcraft switch and input jack, and an Orange Drop capacitor to sound good!

  • @rollandcolon6566
    @rollandcolon6566 Před 5 lety +22

    You just changed my perspective in a huge way. I've been stuck in a lot of these myths for a very long time. So much that I have avoided buying a new guitar because I couldn't figure out which direction to go and what exactly I wanted to spend my money on. Your videos are awesome and greatly appreciated! Big thanks to you sir!

  • @stroumyi
    @stroumyi Před 5 lety +15

    This video should be a link in every guitar buyers guide. All of the concerns of someone who is about to buy an electric guitar for the first time are here!
    The man said it all and he said it right!!!!
    Nice video! Again..!!!

  • @dylanporter8105
    @dylanporter8105 Před 5 lety +11

    A strat sings while a tele growls

  • @luca9408
    @luca9408 Před 4 lety +91

    Is it just me or do Teles always sound better than strats

    • @lydiapelling4636
      @lydiapelling4636 Před 4 lety +5

      Teles sound so beautiful, honestly after watching his comparisons I've realised I'm not much of a strat fan. Teles will always be superior in my opinion :)

    • @luigivonbootheven2854
      @luigivonbootheven2854 Před 4 lety +2

      Ask Hendrix...

    • @leonraine44
      @leonraine44 Před 4 lety

      Well, it depends on your preference 😊

    • @rikardocarvalho
      @rikardocarvalho Před 4 lety +11

      @@luigivonbootheven2854 Since when any legend player must be a reference for his tone ? Hendrix used mostly what he had available at the time. They hadn't have much options to choose from. I am pretty sure they aren't as picky as modern players are

    • @hammerofgodminiatures
      @hammerofgodminiatures Před 4 lety +2

      A strat can't do tele but a tele can do strat so tele is always my go to

  • @Ryuu87
    @Ryuu87 Před 5 lety +61

    Dude, I’m so glad you brought all those things to the table, I expect a lot of the tonewood freaks bitching but that only works for acoustic guitar, if anything. I am a physicist and I’m tired of explaining that a bad capacitor will affect the tone muuuuch more than a rosewood slab on the neck

    • @eriklundstrum4656
      @eriklundstrum4656 Před 5 lety +10

      Ryuu MV what we should really be talking about is how much the color fo the guitar affects the tone. As you know the biggest difference in the world exists between a light red and dark red finish.

    • @Ryuu87
      @Ryuu87 Před 5 lety +8

      @@eriklundstrum4656 Yeah white ones sound better, and red ones are faster.

    • @BoltRM
      @BoltRM Před 5 lety +1

      He said the tone is affected, just not enough to go crazy about it.
      Playability is #1 + decent pickups #2 should be the main focus. That plus a good amp. That's ALL we need to focus on..

    • @Ryuu87
      @Ryuu87 Před 5 lety +1

      @@BoltRM Let me put it this way: If you can hear the difference, you have an ear way better than the average human.

    • @JoeBaermann
      @JoeBaermann Před 5 lety +2

      ​@@Ryuu87 I doubt it's about having better ears, I think it's more been playing loads with both types of fretboards, hence why it's easy to hear the difference at once when the guitar is all on it's own, still not enough to pick one over the other just for the little difference in sound.
      Almost inclined to say no one will ever be able to point it out in a full mix, but there are probably some trained ears that can.

  • @spottedsaint5776
    @spottedsaint5776 Před 5 lety +14

    If you sneer and hop around on one foot like Angus Young, while grasping the guitars neck like you're attempting to strangle an ostrich one handed ,it'll give you that warm vintage sound.🤣

  • @asgeirosnes3850
    @asgeirosnes3850 Před 5 lety +17

    You're forgetting one very important thing with the f-hole, that makes the Thinline the better guitar. It just looks cool. :D

  • @jerkforsure8387
    @jerkforsure8387 Před 5 lety +18

    People in the firearms community are similar. Its almost like some of these people believe they could tell you if they were shot with a 9mm or .40 S&W.

    • @jerkforsure8387
      @jerkforsure8387 Před 4 lety +1

      @David Calloway yes, however, not the point I was trying to make.

    • @jerkforsure8387
      @jerkforsure8387 Před 4 lety

      @David Calloway so, you could tell if someone shot you with a 9mm? I am aware of what I am speaking on, are you?

    • @jerkforsure8387
      @jerkforsure8387 Před 4 lety

      There is no "meaningful" difference between being shot by a .40 or a 9mm. One could not notice the difference

    • @jerkforsure8387
      @jerkforsure8387 Před 4 lety

      @David Calloway 🤦🤦🤦🤦

    • @jerkforsure8387
      @jerkforsure8387 Před 3 lety

      @ eye roll

  • @DarrellBraunGuitar
    @DarrellBraunGuitar  Před 5 lety +178

    This is a video I've been wanting to make for a LONG time!
    Make sure you stick around for Myth 15, because an old friend makes a glorious return!
    Enjoy :)

    • @Osmorales90
      @Osmorales90 Před 5 lety +2

      Amazing return!!

    • @Supperconductor
      @Supperconductor Před 5 lety +16

      You “rescued” that guitar like a serial killer picks up a hitchhiker - LMAO!

    • @caseyking8394
      @caseyking8394 Před 5 lety +1

      That guitar looks like a transformer lol

    • @hanomag251
      @hanomag251 Před 5 lety

      One of the best video of the year!!! All because of the Super Red Strat!!! :) Like they say: It's all in the wood!!!

    • @tdtom1376
      @tdtom1376 Před 5 lety +1

      hey Darrell, I was just looking at your Teespring page. I think you should market the guitar pick design that you have on the coffee cup. a 20 pack of picks? also, the system defaults to Aussie dollars when I'm looking at it... can't convince it that my currency is NZD.

  • @RudyAyoub
    @RudyAyoub Před 5 lety +140

    i like your shirt

  • @draganm7823
    @draganm7823 Před 5 lety +2

    I've watched this educational session and each time I come away with more info, it's gr8. Thanks Darrell!

  • @markk2285
    @markk2285 Před 5 lety +6

    Hell, my ears hear differently from day to day. A quality guitar, fresh enough strings and a good day playing and happiness abounds. Great vid, Darrell. You real players can make a shovel with strings sound good; us duffers, however.........

  • @TomMacalisang
    @TomMacalisang Před 5 lety +17

    People from the 60's were already searching for that "Warm, vintage tone" 😂

  • @TarkMcCoy
    @TarkMcCoy Před 5 lety +230

    Practice...why does it ALWAYS come down to practice...can't I just PAY to sound like Hendrix???
    :)

    • @stevetaylor827
      @stevetaylor827 Před 5 lety +4

      Of course you can, mime to a Hendrix recording!

    • @EddieOtool
      @EddieOtool Před 5 lety +16

      Of course you can. If you want to sound like him for a single note length that is. But for a whole solo... You gotta do some Voodoo, Child.

    • @cdreid9999
      @cdreid9999 Před 5 lety +4

      I have a 7 string fanned fret thats awesome. therefore ..technically.. im better than Carlos .. who only plays a silly six string :D :D :D

    • @hans-joachimbierwirth4727
      @hans-joachimbierwirth4727 Před 5 lety +2

      I once played a C chord on a 12 string. Tommy Emmanuel said he's already busy with 6.

    • @azmike3572
      @azmike3572 Před 5 lety +2

      Tark, there's a LOT of us who also want that! Let us know if you're successful! Would be so much easier. Like trying to lose weight by watching the exercise videos.

  • @roymiddel9380
    @roymiddel9380 Před 4 lety +2

    The way you start your video's always put a smile on my face

  • @FrankJamesMusic
    @FrankJamesMusic Před 4 lety +2

    Right on Darrell! I'm 76 and have been playing for over 65 years. Couldn't agree more. I own a $95 Dollar Lag Dreadnought that Blows away Martins and Gibsons at Parlor Jams. I have also own Imports that I was totally happy with and they played Both Rock and Country wonderfully. Love your Videos!

  • @masterrick2759
    @masterrick2759 Před 5 lety +54

    Was hoping the metallic flakes in my gold top were adding sustain and bite. Thinking of starting that rumor anyway

    • @mattymodeerf
      @mattymodeerf Před 5 lety +5

      nah nah man, to try and make it more marketable, youve got to say that the gold flakes add to the magnetic pull of the pickups on your strings and kills your sustain!

    • @gregorp8406
      @gregorp8406 Před 5 lety +1

      Combine it with active pickups with 18volt mod and see the flakes turn while you turn the volume knob!

    • @guitarprepnplus1
      @guitarprepnplus1 Před 5 lety

      Metallic flakes affect pickup tone..🎸😎😳

    • @cdreid9999
      @cdreid9999 Před 5 lety

      duh they add crunch! :P

  • @SoManyDogs
    @SoManyDogs Před 5 lety +143

    CABLES CABLES CABLES! Do a comparison between cheap and expensive cables. I spend nearly a 1/4 century in the high end audio sales world, where crazy has been refined to a degree that makes the guitar world look completely and utterly rational. As a newly minted student of stringed things (Yay! Another obsession!)' Y'all aren't crazy. I'd like to see a cable comparison since $10,000 speaker cables exist, and sell, in high end audio.

    • @DarrellBraunGuitar
      @DarrellBraunGuitar  Před 5 lety +12

      Yikes!!
      Welcome to the club! 😁

    • @YouTubeHandlesAreMoronic
      @YouTubeHandlesAreMoronic Před 5 lety +15

      Without a doubt; the mythology of the guitar world is bush league when compared to the absurdities of the audiophile realm. Ever heard of Shakti Stones? Egad...

    • @tomaszwota1465
      @tomaszwota1465 Před 5 lety +8

      Don't forget to get ceramic supports under your $10,000 cable, so that the signal flows better.

    • @jaytee1086
      @jaytee1086 Před 5 lety +3

      An electric guitar signal needs a quality cable that is shielded to eliminate noise. It is called Hi-Z because there is a lot of resistance to the small signal your pickups make. Your guitar will sound better thru your amp if your signal chain is designed to eliminate noise and interference. It's just a fact. Learning this changed my guitar playing world. It allowed me to find my tone and made people take notice. Yes better (shielded cable) makes a difference in your tone.
      Now try a matched triode tube (12ax7 with matched triodes) in the phase inverter socket of your amp. You will hear that loud speaker hiss go away and the feel of compression and attack and even order harmonics take it's place. Try it. For $20 its worth a shot. I know many players that live by it. I know I do.

    • @tomholton235
      @tomholton235 Před 5 lety +2

      I did notice a difference some years ago from upgrading my guitar leads and patch cables but that was a fair length of cable and it was going from super budget to decent cables. Once you get over a certain point you can spend all your money on oxygen free copper and gold plated connectors and it isn’t going to make a difference. I’d have said that it could be placebo but the big thing was less noise (shielding helps) and the fact that the good cables have lasted 10 years and the connectors have since broken on the cheap ones even with minimal use.

  • @Pharesm
    @Pharesm Před 4 lety +2

    Good videos you make, crisp voice, crisp narrative!
    String gage: I think you're right that it matters not on electric guitars.
    But on acoustics - which you probably weren't talking about in the first place - I find a fairly distinct improvement with thicker gage strings:
    low strings seem to flap less and the high strings are definitely less harsh, especially on spruce tops.

  • @aeroshack
    @aeroshack Před 5 lety +10

    I thought most levels of hyper sensitive human audio perception had a direct relationship to wealth. The more you have, the more you have!

    • @Wolf_K
      @Wolf_K Před 4 lety

      The wealthy must justify their Custom shop purchases with claims of “superior” this and that, that only they can hear.

    • @ricklewis5804
      @ricklewis5804 Před 4 lety +2

      Wolf H
      Gotta say it. My $679 Epiphone sounds just as good to me as my $6,790 PRS and honestly looks as good too.

    • @Wolf_K
      @Wolf_K Před 4 lety +2

      Rick Lewis
      Anyone that can say that is judging quite honestly in my opinion. ;)
      I like nice things, we all do, but the difference between a thousand dollar guitar and a $5000 guitar is not $4000 in quality upgrades, like some claim. However, the difference between a $200 guitar and a $1,500 guitar is quite dramatic.
      After a certain price point (no idea what it is to be precise) we are paying for name brands which do nothing for the sound, elaborate decoration which does nothing for the sound, and also buying into the special little club of owners of such instruments.
      My most expensive guitar (a 1966 mustang) isn’t my favourite guitar. I like LP and SG juniors the best. SGJr a bit more than the LPJr.

    • @ricklewis5804
      @ricklewis5804 Před 4 lety

      Wolf H
      I can’t tell if you’re agreeing with me or disagreeing. My point was the inexpensive guitar looked and sounded as good as the expensive one. Perhaps Paul Reed Smith is a good Luther and a better marketer or ppl just expect a more expensive item to be better to somehow justify their lavish purchase. Good point you made about at some price point the difference drops off but Darrell demonstrated a $200 Indio that had really good sound. I’ve enjoyed every DBG video I’ve watched, they’re all interesting and educational.

    • @ricklewis5804
      @ricklewis5804 Před 4 lety

      Does the guitar that cost ten time as much look and sound ten times better, of course not. It isn’t even twice as nice. The difference is negligible yet ppl that can afford to prefer to buy the expensive stuff all the time. It’s an image they want to project. My Subaru is just as good as a car that cost twice as much, there’s plenty of examples of expensive stuff not being worth the extra cost ppl just think it’s better. However the flip side holds true too in some cases. A cheap pickup selector switch may fail or get scratchy while a good quality one can work properly for years. So, yeah, you get what you pay for is true ... sometimes but not always.

  • @niklnik1008
    @niklnik1008 Před 5 lety +29

    "now the question: maple or rosewood?"
    Me: looks at my Ibanez with ebony fretboard...

  • @MrDokek
    @MrDokek Před 5 lety +15

    I want to say about the nitro vs poly finish, on top of that, the only reason they really went to a poly finish over a nitro back in the 60's was simply because guitars with nitro finishes that were shipped to stores often arrived with finish damage or marks. Poly made that problem disappear and far fewer guitars were shipped back to the factory.

    • @seanbrooks2583
      @seanbrooks2583 Před 5 lety

      @@BlazonStone because some manufactures tend to put so much on it makes the guitar feel like plastic.

    • @JoeBaermann
      @JoeBaermann Před 5 lety +1

      Poly is also a lot easyer to work with, plus it's not as unhealthy as nitro since it doesn't take years to fully cure.

    • @scottnathanphoto
      @scottnathanphoto Před 5 lety

      @@BlazonStone It feels hard and plasticky. I like Nitro because it clouds up, flakes off, cracks and crazes.

  • @Ginanity
    @Ginanity Před 4 lety +4

    The overarching takeaway message seems to be: stay away from 'forums'

  • @Nikoo033
    @Nikoo033 Před 5 lety +10

    Myth8: strat and tele has sthing in common: both slightly out of tune 😅

  • @sirbaronvoncount4147
    @sirbaronvoncount4147 Před 5 lety +46

    I will take a tele bridge pickup over a strat any day. So much more balls

    • @rknisple
      @rknisple Před 5 lety +2

      I agree man.

    • @jharsch3453
      @jharsch3453 Před 5 lety +1

      What's that other pickup even for?

    • @arnolddealiii4259
      @arnolddealiii4259 Před 5 lety +2

      Led Zeppelin I. Mic drop!

    • @rknisple
      @rknisple Před 5 lety +5

      @@arnolddealiii4259 i used to think he used an lp on that record, when i found out it was a tele I was blown away, bought a tele the next day

    • @jonthehermit8082
      @jonthehermit8082 Před 5 lety

      I concur...I've personally changed my strat bridge 3times searching for perfection.

  • @mickeybreezy
    @mickeybreezy Před 5 lety +19

    "This is what my life has devolved into." I feel that homie.

  • @martin13rm
    @martin13rm Před 3 lety +1

    damn these are the videos that internet guitar forums needed since decades, love em darrel thank u so so much

  • @foxki6071
    @foxki6071 Před 4 lety +2

    It's true, I tried Gibson Les Paul standard Blueberry burst and it felt uncomfy at all for me, like my Epiphone les paul standard which I wanted to replace. Eventually I replaced my Epiphone with Gibson Les Paul Standard 2019(from the new original series) and it felt and feels amazing and sounds amazing. So really it sums up - no matter the price high or low or the brand, it depends on the guitar and model and quality control.

  • @RobertBakerGuitar
    @RobertBakerGuitar Před 5 lety +147

    *gets drink* Let's do dis thang!

    • @paramediccpo
      @paramediccpo Před 5 lety +7

      Robert Baker you 2 need to do something together on a video! Love to see that

    • @stevesoldwedel
      @stevesoldwedel Před 5 lety

      @@paramediccpo Yes!

  • @BG-jg4pt
    @BG-jg4pt Před 5 lety +260

    The funny thing is that your amp matters way way more than your guitar and no one talks about it

    • @ayylmao5121
      @ayylmao5121 Před 5 lety +31

      SPEAKERS matter most

    • @DarrellBraunGuitar
      @DarrellBraunGuitar  Před 5 lety +23

      #truth

    • @buyana114
      @buyana114 Před 5 lety +2

      @@ayylmao5121 I agree it's speakers, amp, pickups and lastly the guitar itself for the tone

    • @SaxJockey
      @SaxJockey Před 5 lety +14

      Agreed this is often glossed over, however Darrell often mentions in his videos that a good amp is the great leveller. A good amp will make a reasonable guitar sound good. A crap amp will make a great guitar sound...well like crap 😉. His advice about more practice, less agonising over detailed mechanics/astaetics is great advice.

    • @Aeronaut1975
      @Aeronaut1975 Před 5 lety +1

      @@ayylmao5121 I'd say the cabinet is just as important as the speakers

  • @adrianramirez7122
    @adrianramirez7122 Před 3 lety +1

    Speaking for the bigger fender logo, it JUST LOOKS BETTER! I love it so much, I love it so much more than the small one

  • @ckallaher
    @ckallaher Před 8 měsíci

    I know it’s an older video but I just love this, especially the maple versus rosewood fretboard because no question the second one sounded more like the “conventional wisdom” rosewood but of course it was the maple. A plug for the beefiness of the Tele bridge pickup (at least vs. the Strat bridge) was much appreciated too. You’ve done a great service to the guitar playing community!

  • @ThomasAtzinger
    @ThomasAtzinger Před 5 lety +7

    The funniest thing about this discussion is: who does really hear subtle differences when all the audio you got is a youtube- compressed file made out of an mp3 😀

  • @rayganadamson2005
    @rayganadamson2005 Před 5 lety +39

    Boiling strings is typically a bass thing, the one thing it does is helping stretch them and pulling dead skin cells out. One is for new strings one is for reusing

    • @noi5emaker
      @noi5emaker Před 5 lety +9

      Yup. Especially when you play a 5 or 6 string. They're a little more than $7!

    • @pica6sedg
      @pica6sedg Před 5 lety +5

      Or it helps them to rust!! Metal + water + heat + salt from sweaty hands = disaster.

    • @pica6sedg
      @pica6sedg Před 5 lety +6

      If you really want them clean use isopropanol.

    • @KaitouKaiju
      @KaitouKaiju Před 5 lety +9

      @@pica6sedg Nickel and stainless steel don't rust.

    • @greasyt9400
      @greasyt9400 Před 5 lety +5

      Every time I swap strings (4 string epi t-bird pro bass) I boil my oldies and dry them. If I break a string (has happened this year) and can’t afford new ones/store is closed I pick up an oldie and bam, solid temporary fix

  • @saintwcf
    @saintwcf Před 3 lety +3

    never in over a half century have I ever boiled guitar strings. Glad to know my instinct was correct.

  • @giancarlogimang9207
    @giancarlogimang9207 Před 4 lety +2

    Myth #16. The more guitars you buy, the better you get at playing.

  • @asmallfarmhomestead3657
    @asmallfarmhomestead3657 Před 5 lety +52

    That “warm vintage tone” slogan always confused me as well...almost everything “vintage” was way brighter and trebly than anything today...I never knew what they were talking about with the “warm” aspect.

    • @escalator9734
      @escalator9734 Před 5 lety +3

      Maybe because now the magnets lost their charge (or whatever it's called I don't remember) and treble goes down with it. So they can make pickups matching the old ones, but with the sound they have now instead of 60 years ago

    • @DMSProduktions
      @DMSProduktions Před 5 lety +3

      I think the 'woodiness' of the sound output too as most electric guitars of that era, were all hollow, and as early pick ups were not potted they were quite microphonic so picked UP body resonance along with the string resonance.

    • @K0sm1cKid
      @K0sm1cKid Před 5 lety +5

      I think people associate old music with warm tones in part because of vinyl too. People hear that old music was more "warm" and apply that to the tones of the instruments when that wasnt necessarily the case.

    • @DMSProduktions
      @DMSProduktions Před 5 lety +5

      Yes, that too is a good point. ALL prev recording media imparted their own colour to the sound, acetate, wire, & tape all had their own slant and natural compression to the sound it accepted and played back!
      The reason digital recording sounds clearer but more harsh is it is completely NEUTRAL, and records and plays back EXACTLY what was put on to it! All the wave forms are turned into NUMBERS, the numbers play back exactly the same, on any player. Records and tapes being PHYSICAL media do not, as they have physical shapes of wave forms on them, and are physically played!
      THAT is they key difference!

    • @user-oy7gz5bf2h
      @user-oy7gz5bf2h Před 5 lety +2

      EQ is tricky. Sometimes, more treble registers as fuller to the ears or brain. It's not straightforward.

  • @TedSchoenling
    @TedSchoenling Před 5 lety +12

    well said on all of it. And as somebody who builds their own pedals I can tell you this.. True bypass is EASIER to build than buffered bypass.
    I'll tell you, you'll need some buffering.. maybe not all of the pedals but like you said at least one!

  • @jameshayes3225
    @jameshayes3225 Před 2 lety +2

    I love your reviews Darrell. You've almost single handedly doubled my guitar colletion. I was looking for the "I Like Guitars" shirt in your shop and didn't see it. I would be interested in having one because, first, I really like guitars, and secondly, my wife will hate it HA! Seriously, let me know where I can get one. Thanks for the inspiration!
    Let the music set you free.
    James Hayes

  • @Nikoo033
    @Nikoo033 Před 5 lety +3

    Disagree with myth 3. I received my PRS with 46-10s. On my boss Katana, sounded lovely with all the knobs at noon. But I wanted more bass/sustain/thickness in the tone. I have switched to Ernie ball custom beefy 54-11s. Big big difference.

  • @williamolsen20
    @williamolsen20 Před 5 lety +18

    The Fender head stock is the craziest one, it is all about the look.

    • @MyRealName
      @MyRealName Před 5 lety +3

      I honestly never heard anyone say such nonsense in person.

    • @SideEffectsmusic
      @SideEffectsmusic Před 5 lety

      I haven't even noticed.

  • @scottraycraft1885
    @scottraycraft1885 Před 5 lety +87

    In a corner
    Crying
    My f holes aren't haunting or organic

  • @Zoso7227
    @Zoso7227 Před 4 lety +5

    I was really hoping for the “fiesta red” strats sound better. It must be true 🤷‍♂️

  • @nealixd.3011
    @nealixd.3011 Před 5 lety +2

    Strat single coil bridge pups usually sound a bit thin. If so, I think a great substitution to achieve more of a Tele bridge tone is the Seymour Duncan Twang Banger, designed for Strats. That really sounds good from videos I have listened to, even better than some stock Teles. Most of my Strats are already compensated by a humbucker or hotter single coil, so I have not had to do the substitution yet. However, I could see that substitution with a 7 way pup switch (push pull pot or other switch in addition to the 5 way Strat pup selector) as a great way to turn a Strat into an all around tone machine giving you all the good Strat and Tele tones in one guitar.

  • @mikewhitfield2994
    @mikewhitfield2994 Před 5 lety +10

    I think your comment that 90% of tone is pickups and the other 10% is split among a hundred things is spot-on. Love to see a string gauge test too.

    • @schmoemi3386
      @schmoemi3386 Před 5 lety +2

      And string material... 8)

    • @mikewhitfield2994
      @mikewhitfield2994 Před 5 lety +1

      Yup, assuming he has the time to test another variable.

    • @rickmooney8800
      @rickmooney8800 Před 5 lety

      and 9% is the person playing it.

    • @Snoopdave2000
      @Snoopdave2000 Před 5 lety +2

      40% amp and speakers 40% pickups 20% a hundred other things I would say !!!

    • @mikewhitfield2994
      @mikewhitfield2994 Před 5 lety

      Snoopdave2000 I think we were discussing just the guitar signal. But if we discuss the entire delivered tone, I would agree that the amp could easily be 40%, and considerably more if it’s a modeling amp. But then we’d also have to consider pedals, which can completely transform the guitar even more than amps.
      I think it all comes down to the fingers though. I have a thousand dollar pedal board (just received a Headrush Eleven HD multieffects processor/pedalboard in my Premier Guitar Mystery Stocking), a top rated $250 modeling amp and several $400 - $500 guitars and there is zero chance of me producing any sound that anyone wants to hear. I can change them in a thousand combinations but none of them don’t suck. Yet someone like Darrell could take a $25 Salvation Army Hello Kitty guitar played through a $5 10W practice amp and make it sound great. It’s in the hands, heart and head, not the equipment.

  • @Mark70609
    @Mark70609 Před 5 lety +10

    I think there are a few things in this video people would disagree with. It has been my experience that the guitar sounds fatter with heavy gauge strings. I thought there was more output from the strings and sustain, though this could be due to the mass of the string.
    The guitar pickup works by a string passing through a magnets lines of flux and inducing a voltage on a coil. Thus the string has a direct relationship with the output.
    I agree people do sound good with thin gauge strings too, but there are other factors which come into play such as their amp and speakers.

    • @cdreid9999
      @cdreid9999 Před 5 lety

      I think the trick is.. it's the ear of the musician and how he adjusts his gear/electronics. Ive heard STRATS of all things playing metal with megacrunch. And teles. And ive seen some very twangy music played on lp's and rg's...

  • @stevennash9095
    @stevennash9095 Před 5 lety +3

    Excellent assessment of some of the nonsense we all get fed as guitarists. The Fender book claims that the larger headstock was to address warping problems! Wouldn’t a larger headstock be more likely to warp? Another piece of nonsense.
    Of course, if you want your Les Paul to sound true vintage it’s essential that the poker chip and the knobs are made of butyrate...!
    I have 20 guitars and have owned many more over many years and everything you have said has been borne out by my own experience. I use 009 -046 strings because they’re easier to play, prefer Rosewood to maple because it’s less sticky under the fingers (especially with nitro finished necks) and have found no discernible difference between ash and alder other than weight (sometimes) and that ash looks better for clear finishes.
    Great mythbusing piece. Well done....

    • @cdreid9999
      @cdreid9999 Před 5 lety

      the fretboard thing is hillarious because the only reason we even HAVE fretboards is that Leo fender didnt like the way his guitar necks started to look ugly and dirty once musicians had been playing them a lot..

  • @elgamal1982
    @elgamal1982 Před 4 lety

    Man, you are an awesome honest respectful person who I really admire. I just found your channel like 2 or 3 days ago and since then I am watching all your other videos to try fixing the mess some other reviewers and forums did to me. Everything started to make sense now. Thank you.

  • @jenbill
    @jenbill Před 5 lety +33

    Well you left out a couple of most important tonal factors the Color and Time of day Ahahahahaah!

  • @alocasio5896
    @alocasio5896 Před 5 lety +332

    Guitarists swear they can hear a dog whistle being blown from the other side of the moon when they should be focused on practicing instead of these silly myths.

    • @kalypso4133
      @kalypso4133 Před 5 lety +6

      Sorry to say that on a good speaker,there is a bit of a difference in the maple vs rosewood. Maybe not enough to make much of a difference in tone, but it is there.

    • @aliennomad3532
      @aliennomad3532 Před 5 lety +6

      @@kalypso4133 I'll bet though you've never done a blind test. It would be interesting to try, but it's difficult unless you have what are basically two guitars the same but made from different woods. However, you might find it interesting to look up some of the blind guitar tests.

    • @pete5668
      @pete5668 Před 5 lety +1

      Where is CZcams's laugh button? hahahaha

    • @kalypso4133
      @kalypso4133 Před 5 lety +2

      @@aliennomad3532 I have done a huge amount of blind tests xDD maybe you are just deaf?

    • @frankkolton1780
      @frankkolton1780 Před 5 lety +12

      @@kalypso4133
      Let's talk science. Electric guitars work by magnets in the pick ups detecting and then voicing the vibration of the string above it. The material of the neck or fretboard has absolutely zero influence on the way the strings vibrate.

  • @genegarneau3822
    @genegarneau3822 Před 2 lety

    Everytime, when i watch Darrells videos, i go plug in my guitar and start playing. Darrell makes guitar playing so fun.. so addictive. Love it...👍🎸

  • @AntonioRockGP
    @AntonioRockGP Před 4 lety +2

    Great!
    I repeat over and over to my students, if you want the lest expensive and most effective way to improve drastically you guitar Tone, practice!

  • @micdf
    @micdf Před 5 lety +78

    Bass strings actually can be revived somewhat from boiling. Not a myth at all. But buying new ones is still preferable.

    • @henkehakansson2004
      @henkehakansson2004 Před 5 lety +19

      Actually yes. It depends. Boiling PLAIN guitar strings is really kind of moot and futile. But the wound strings were gunk residue resides in the wound cavities as all strings on bass are wound plays a role. And if you use Fender bass tuners you just put the strings back again without distorting or weaking the turns they have shaped form in.
      My take instead of boiling, is soaking them in isoprpopyl alcohol. For a while. The de-gunking of finger dirt and residue inside the wraps starts creeping out. But guitar strings are so cheap these days so it's a no brainer buying new strings.

    • @connorross6921
      @connorross6921 Před 4 lety +1

      Yeah I can go from really crappy tone to a completely new better tone just by boiling them

    • @JLindebergful
      @JLindebergful Před 4 lety +2

      I agree. Boiling crusty wound strings makes them sound lively again. Not so for dead-sounding plain strings (sorry Eddie). For years as a cheap-ass, I'd just replace the three high strings and boil the wounds for 20 minutes. Now I can afford to buy full sets whenever I want.

    • @irwinfc
      @irwinfc Před 4 lety +2

      totally agree! i did that several times on the E, A, and D strings from a set of peavey stainless. worked every time!

    • @hunter5028
      @hunter5028 Před 4 lety +3

      ...dont boil strings. Please, for the love of all that is holy, just get new ones.

  • @TheMusicalMedic
    @TheMusicalMedic Před 5 lety +275

    String gauge test.
    String gauge test.
    String gauge test.
    String gauge test.

    • @stevenpippin6079
      @stevenpippin6079 Před 5 lety +31

      For real. And let’s be clear, you can get great tone on 8’s or 9’s, but you CAN NOT sound like SRV on them.
      It’s not a matter of good tone. It’s more a matter of specific tone.

    • @EpicStuffMan1000
      @EpicStuffMan1000 Před 5 lety +6

      @@stevenpippin6079 i dunno man. Not with stevie's exact rig, but if you switched some stuff i'd bet you'd get 60% of his tone. The rest was the player himself.

    • @drbosommd
      @drbosommd Před 5 lety +7

      Strong gauge makes a difference on acoustic BUT the acoustic guitar has a bunch of different factors.
      Body wood does makes a difference too.

    • @dochort21
      @dochort21 Před 5 lety +11

      Spent a weekend switching through several string gauges - everything from 8s to 11s. Guess what, recorded on GarageBand, it still sounded like me playing, though I did have to work to control bends with 8s. No difference in tone at all. I stuck with 10s because that’s what was most comfortable to me. If you don’t sound like SRV, it has nothing to do with the fact that you’re not playing 13s.

    • @TheMusicalMedic
      @TheMusicalMedic Před 5 lety +1

      @@dochort21 yeah, I definitely believe that string gauges don't actually change the tone, but I know that bigger strings are better for lower tunings, I play 10s in D Standard and it works just fine, sounds great and feels perfect!

  • @vladbroski6190
    @vladbroski6190 Před 4 lety

    Just love your videos Darrell. I can't get enough of your "contagious" enthusiasm. It is honestly a shot in the arm of true guitar wisdom. Wishing you all the best through this crazy time! Long may you run brother. (From Calgary, Alberta).

  • @katherineberger6329
    @katherineberger6329 Před 4 lety +1

    10:25 I know you've probably heard about this before, the Strat only had the small headstock for a decade (1954-65). Starting in December., 1965, Strat necks started being made with the bigger headstock. We think of it as 20 years because the big head is associated with the 70s, with Rainbow & Ritchie Blackmore. But Jimi's classic Strat that he bought in '68 and brought to Woodstock was a big-headstock model. Love the vid :)

  • @Axess-sv8nq
    @Axess-sv8nq Před 5 lety +163

    Myth #14 - You have to buy American guitars only. THANK YOU! I get so tired of the gear/guitar snobs who look down their noses at you if you don't own THE most expensive guitar. It's like playing an Epiphone instead of a Gibson makes you less of a player in their minds. Screw that noise!!

    • @adriannasanchez468
      @adriannasanchez468 Před 5 lety +11

      Axess2084 you should want to support American companies and help the American economy...

    • @Axess-sv8nq
      @Axess-sv8nq Před 5 lety +44

      You want to pay the prices for me? I worked for decades in this 'American Economy'. I was forced to retire early from the business I owned due to a stroke. In a few years, I had used up the retirement money I saved up and am now on Social Security. I worked for decades of my life helping to build this 'American Economy' and now, I have to live on table scraps through no fault of my own. You want to pay $3000+ for a guitar, you go right ahead. I am not wealthy like YOU apparently are, lady. I was not born with a silver spoon in my mouth. Or is that a FORKED TONGUE in yours?

    • @spottedsaint5776
      @spottedsaint5776 Před 5 lety +18

      @@adriannasanchez468 if Axess2084 bought his budget priced import guitar and gear from a local pawns hop, or music store, he STILL supporting the American Economy. The store owner still gets the profits.

    • @Yu2beFool
      @Yu2beFool Před 5 lety +7

      @@Axess-sv8nq Hi, "Axe". I fully understand your anger, because - like you, and many others who like to play the guitar - I had to save quite a long time to afford an instrument that is worth the money (it has to fill my needs, crap won't do that!). And my patience was worth it when I came across a beautiful Paul Reed Smith Custom 24 SE Dark Ebony showroom model that costed me just over 700 euros (800 USD) in stead of over 1200 at the time. Just saying: being short on money does not have to take away your dreams. I love this instrument and it could sound better with Seymour Duncans, but it will not look any better than this! Besides: who cares if I get home from a nasty day's work and play the hell out of it? Even more: a skilled guitarist - the one who realizes practising is important - can get good sound out of any (good) guitar. Videos like these teach us how to improve a good instrument and to separate junk from good stuff.
      I got this - American - instrument from a store in England. So, tell me: where does the money go to? Can we ever really tell?

    • @Axess-sv8nq
      @Axess-sv8nq Před 5 lety +2

      Jeff Peccato - Well said, sir!

  • @ichbrauchmehrkaffee5785
    @ichbrauchmehrkaffee5785 Před 5 lety +8

    about that boiling thing.
    yes, it's definetelly smarter to just buy a new set of strings.
    But I don't think getting out the mechanical defects in the strings was really the goal of the boiling,
    but rather to get rid of dirt build up on the string.
    Glenn Fricker from SMG actually just recently did a test
    where he compared new strings vs old strings vs boiled old strings,
    both in the context of a full mix and soloed.
    The result: it makes no difference, even the new strings didn't sound too much different from the old ones.
    Of course, it may be worth noting, that he was comparing the strings on a heavy rythm tone, so minor differences may not have been that audible

    • @UmVtCg
      @UmVtCg Před 5 lety

      Try again on a clean tone

  • @brentrusche2056
    @brentrusche2056 Před 5 lety +8

    I hope this comment doesn't fall of deaf ears...with regard to Myth #6 and Batteries vs. Power Supply in an effect pedal (and batteries in general):
    Well, I can tell you with absolute certainty that I own a pedal that sounds vastly different when using a 9V battery as opposed to a Power Supply. Believe it or not, my Boss CE-5 Chorus Ensemble pedal suffers from massive 60-cycle hum when connected to a power supply and completely quiet when powered by a 9V battery. Perhaps a manufacturing defect, but all of my Boss pedals are from the same era and no other suffers to this extent. I would be happy to send you the pedal for your own evaluation.
    As far as "brands" of batteries are concerned, I don't get it. HOWEVER, there is absolutely an argument to be made between Alkaline vs. Zinc Chloride/Carbon batteries. The former rules the day with regard to sales and dependability (Duracell & Energizer) but the latter (Eveready) seem to lag in terms of power output length and linear output. While I have heard maestro Eric Johnson state that he was able to discern b/w the batteries used, it wasn't the brand but (most probably) the type of cell used to power his pedals...a very, VERY possible observation on his part.
    Again, I hope to read some feedback.
    Nice video!
    Brent

    • @1dgabel
      @1dgabel Před 5 lety

      Much more likely a solder issue than the actual power source. Or a bad connecter,

    • @cdreid9999
      @cdreid9999 Před 5 lety +1

      Electricity running through copper creates magnetic fields.. magnetic fields affect the electrical characteristics of metals they pass through.. and reversing (ac) or switching off (cheap/normal rectifiers) those fields can have an effect on the TINY currents your amp by design amplifies the living hell out of. So a bad connection.. a tiny magnetic field in the wrong place because you have wires coiled all over each other etc can have an effect. 9v batteries really serve two purposes.. you isolate your pedals from the AC power supply and get rid of hum.. and the magnetic signals put out by that ac power supply. And to eliminate cables .. And brands DO MATTER. The chemicals in those batteries arent identical. A cheap generic walmart battery is produced by using the cheapest things they can buy.. such as impure chemicals etc. And there have been a Lot of tests of battery brands especially vs generics.

    • @TheStompboxer
      @TheStompboxer Před 4 lety

      A fuzz face has 11 components. Thinking the power supply DOESN’T make a difference sounds crazy.
      If the voltage going to the transistor doesn’t matter, why bother biasing them?
      The internal resistance of the battery makes a difference. It’s akin to the difference between a solid state and a tube rectifier.

  • @EddieOtool
    @EddieOtool Před 5 lety +2

    About tonewood: I replaced a cheap plastic pick guard on my entry-level Ibanez for a mahogany plywood one. It did make a noticeable difference unplugged, but a marginal amplified difference if any. If your guitar has a huge plastic guard and you find it has a plastic-like, unenjoyable resonnance, especially unplugged, I strongly recommand this fix. Anyhow between bandmates and crowd I'm probably the only one noticing, which is still good since I'm the one playing the thing. Since it did positively affect my feeling while playing, I dub it was worth it. Doesn't it all come to that in the end?

  • @lowlifeangler
    @lowlifeangler Před 5 lety +17

    More Stickers ,
    More sustain!

  • @Osmorales90
    @Osmorales90 Před 5 lety +23

    . I love the way you put back together the strat of the tonewood myth! Looks sick and it is still and amazing functional guitar... 👌🤙🤙🤙🤙

  • @lent7156
    @lent7156 Před 2 lety

    Best guitar related video I have seen!! Practice, or just play all the free time you have, workout best in long run and much better than spending money.

  • @timgermanyjr
    @timgermanyjr Před 4 lety

    I've been playing for 3 months and every bit of research tells me that there are 5 things to consider when choosing one. Ergonomics, aesthetics, build quality, price,and what pickups and bridge type you want. I've been shopping guitars a lot lately. First I narrow it down to around 500-1800 dollars, rule out teles and odd shaped bodies, narrow it further to HSS or double humbucker pickups, and search through those for what I've learned is a quality instrument that I love the look off. It's tough between a Fender American Professional Strat and a PRS S2 McCarty 594 in Whale Blue. I drool over the PRS but the Fender seems so iconic and versatile.

  • @Arfshesaid457
    @Arfshesaid457 Před 5 lety +3

    Thanks for demythologizing the guitar marketing. This is a much-needed and gentle application of journalism and science to rampant folklore.
    Also I was glad to see you on Robert Baker’s top 5 list.

  • @artiefischel2579
    @artiefischel2579 Před 5 lety +24

    TL;DR Just play.
    Somehow I knew that's what your tonewood experiment would end up looking like.

  • @crusherbmx
    @crusherbmx Před 5 lety +4

    thick strings do sound different, or behave differently, but not in the way way you's expect. And, my Thinline Tele is heavier than my Standard Tele!

  • @theHAL9000
    @theHAL9000 Před 2 lety +1

    Big difference when I switched out the stock pickguard with one made from a hand-selected tone acrylic ...

  • @TheToneLounge
    @TheToneLounge Před 5 lety +240

    Don't forget that, according to Billy Corgan, the color of the guitar also affects the tone! lol Great video by the way. Just subbed the channel. Are you Canadian, I'm hearing an Ontario accent, heh?!

    • @tomaszwota1465
      @tomaszwota1465 Před 5 lety +26

      DEM RED GEETARZ GO FASTA! WAAAGH!
      __
      Basic fact of 40k.

    • @gillesgenete9598
      @gillesgenete9598 Před 5 lety +12

      Arksolva Studio it is for sure ! A red guitar excites you, then you play rocky, a sonic blue calms you and you play pop balads, a black one gets you in blues ,and a green one makes you quiting guitars , haha 😂

    • @TheToneLounge
      @TheToneLounge Před 5 lety +1

      Gilles Genete it’s all about perspectives lol

    • @noi5emaker
      @noi5emaker Před 5 lety +8

      @@gillesgenete9598 Totally agree. Green guitars just sound terrible. Can't stand green.

    • @joshiuahallenbeck531
      @joshiuahallenbeck531 Před 5 lety +5

      Billy sounds like a bad RNG system.

  • @Yu2beFool
    @Yu2beFool Před 5 lety +3

    "The most beautiful instrument ever created..." AND the only instrument that gives so many possibilities to express your (inner) self!
    I love playing the piano, but nothing beats any guitar, wether amplified or plain nylon.
    Thanks Darrell, this was educational, as always of high quality video and sound and sometimes hilarious (9V batteries?).

  • @RadekG
    @RadekG Před 4 lety +1

    14:11 - this immediately reminded me of beginning of "It might get loud" - "Who says you need to buy a guitar" -- Jack White.

  • @sixthview
    @sixthview Před rokem

    This video, right here is exactly why I watch your channel!

  • @JK-nr2eu
    @JK-nr2eu Před 5 lety +13

    You forgot a big one, Darrell: All ceramic pickups suck and all AlNiCo pickups sound great! There are plenty of great sounding ceramics out there and also poor sounding AlNiCo pups out there too. It's all about the overall design!
    There is a lot of brand and cost bias going on in these subjective evaluations. I would love to see a video comparing the sound of a $1500 American Fender Strat to a $250 Squier Standard Strat with the pickups secretly swapped. I think the vast majority of people would still bias their opinions toward the sound of the Fender just because their brain tells them it is supposed to sound better.
    The comparison has been done between these two guitars plenty of times and people tend to say things like, "The Fender just has the fullness of tone that you need and the Squier sounds too bright and harsh to me."
    If the pickups were swapped, I'm sure a few very experienced players would know simply because they know what the pickups sound like on their own merit, but I would bet my bottom dollar a majority would be saying things like, "The Squier sounds okay but it's slightly dull and it doesn't have the brightness and bite of the Fender."

  • @hobbyknight9962
    @hobbyknight9962 Před 5 lety +83

    THANK YOU! Finally a CZcamsr cuts through the B.S. that is guitarist superstitions. Thank you thank you thank you.

    • @noahodum9737
      @noahodum9737 Před 5 lety

      I mean if 90% of your tone is pedals amps and pickups, and you use plywood for the guitar, you're missing out on 10% of your tone. Is that important to you?

    • @jackallen6261
      @jackallen6261 Před 5 lety

      Yep, practice practice practice!!

  • @robwallace1619
    @robwallace1619 Před 5 lety +1

    I could hear the difference between the maple and rosewood fret boards. But I'm fairly certain it's only because I was prepared to listen for the difference. I don't think I'd be able to tell just from hearing one riff; or call out what type of wood a guitar's fret board has on a certain song.

    • @evilcowboy
      @evilcowboy Před 5 lety +1

      Your not the only one. I know I wouldn't hear a difference. I've owned both and really the only difference I heard was due to one being a tele and the other a strat which I still believe the middle pickup in a strat is what really makes the difference where even if it is dormant and not being used it is still a magnet so this can affect the output. Where the tele don't have a middle pickup so it had a different sound.

  • @jrpggolf
    @jrpggolf Před 4 lety +2

    The genre myth is my favorite. I don’t shred or really play much metal (I play jazz/blues) but I use a kind of metal set up: an Ibanez through a Mesa/Boogie.

    • @alecmullaney7957
      @alecmullaney7957 Před 3 lety

      I love seeing people shred metal on a 335 or Gretch jazzbox

  • @stevesoldwedel
    @stevesoldwedel Před 5 lety +7

    Would definitely love a string-gauge test.

  • @TheResidentSkeptic
    @TheResidentSkeptic Před 5 lety +9

    Regarding power supplies: A transformer/rectifier power supply will give you a noise-free power source given sufficient capacitance to minimize ripple at a given load. This is pretty similar to a battery that will give you a "perfectly" clean voltage. Battery brands won't make any difference apart from capacity and discharge rate at varying currents. There is another power supply however that can introduce noise to your signal and that's a switch-mode power supply - similar to what's in your computer or laptop power supply. Instead of a heavy transformer and a large amount of capacitance, it uses MOSFETS to do high-frequency PWM switching to step down the voltage and provide a stable current. Like a class-D amplifier, this method doesn't lend itself to low total harmonic distortion, save for some specialized and patented circuit designs.
    So are you likely to hear noise from a switch-mode power supply designed for guitar pedals? No, probably not. Are all power supplies the same? Definitely not.

    • @EddieOtool
      @EddieOtool Před 5 lety +1

      I am the kind of guy who believes everything matters, but when the impact is lesser than 3%, you shouldn't bother and leave that to optimization, that is focus on it when and only when everything else that do matter is sorted and already up there. This includes most other myths here mentioned.
      Besides, food for thought: why invest in a noise-free power generation when half you pedals are dedicated to induce noise into your sound? I think the ear should be the ultimate judge, not the brain.
      Fun fact: I changed the pick guard on my cheap Ibanez, removed the cheap plastic one and put one made of mahogany plywood. That did make a huge difference and was totally worth it; it got rid of a cheap plastic-like resonance it had when playing unplugged. The amplified improvement, still, might be lesser than 10%; that is unnoticeable to untrained ear, which is the most of my public.
      This said, music is a matter of feeling above anything. Whatever makes you feel better and improve your "playmanship" is totally worth it, even if the net gain is objectively negligible. I know to me what makes me feel the "most better" when playing my instrument: it is practice. When I get to practice a lot, I become more and more akin to my instrument, and whatever I do - be it playing music or just setting up my tone - is drastically improved.

    • @cdreid9999
      @cdreid9999 Před 5 lety +1

      @@EddieOtool for me it was hum. And theres something youre all forgetting. Every electronic device you own transmits random radio waves.. energy.. which your other electronics pick up. Thus why EVERY electronic device you own has a sticker saying it complies with the maximum that device is allowed to put ou

    • @hans-joachimbierwirth4727
      @hans-joachimbierwirth4727 Před 5 lety

      Power supplies don't feed your circuitry. Power supplies feed capacitors that feed your circuitry. If designed properly they function as low pass filter so that no high frequency pass into the audio pathway. If not designed properly result is static coloured noise.

  • @williammidgley3905
    @williammidgley3905 Před 5 lety +7

    11:23 I don't know about guitar but after boiling my acoustic bass strings it made a world of difference

  • @teknical100
    @teknical100 Před 4 lety +4

    String break on stage, guitarist uses my spare - I can't believe it is the same guitar.
    All in the guitarists hands and experience, he was great and I was pants.
    And nothing much has changed.

    • @malcolmwindust3888
      @malcolmwindust3888 Před 4 lety +1

      teknical100 Been there!! 😢

    • @JasonTeach
      @JasonTeach Před 4 lety

      95% is the player. The guitar matters, but just not as much as people like to make it out.