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Electric Guitar Tone

    One of the biggest mistakes guitar players make is neglecting their guitar tone!

There are many factors which contribute to an electric guitar's tone - here are a few:


1. Brand, model, and quality of the electric guitar

Brand- Each brand of electric guitar tends to have it's own unique tone. Fender-usually has a brighter, more twangy tone. Gibson usually has a darker, meatier tone. Danelectro usually has a bright, unique tone.

Gibson players:

Jimmy Page, Angus Young, Slash

Fender Players

Jimi Hendrix and Kurt Cobain (Jimmy Page also used Danelectros)

 

2. What type of pickup (single coil, humbucker, etc.. Gibson, Seymour Duncan, etc..)

Humbucking pickups are two single coil pickups that are wired together. They were made to get rid of the annoying ‘hum’ or 'buzz' that older single coil pickups would have. They have more output (make the guitar louder) and have a darker or warmer sound than single coil pickups.

Electric Guitars with humbucking pickups
     
Gibson Les Paul Standard Gibson 335 Gibson 345
Gibson 355 (BB King's Lucille) Musicman EVH Les Paul Custom
Gibson Flying V SG/ Les Paul Standard  

Single-coil pickups were the first guitar pickups ever made. They have a brighter, twangier sound than the humbucking pickups. Modern, high-quality, single-coil pickups have virtually no 'hum' or 'buzz'.

Electric Guitars with single-coil pickups
     
Fender Stratocaster Fender Telecaster Fender Mustang
Fender Jaguar Fender Jazzmaster Danelectro
Les Paul Junior Les Paul T.V. Les Paul Special
  • Many modern single-coil pickups now are made to have virtually no hum.
3. String Gauge

String gauge is a measurement of how thick or heavy a string is. Usually a thicker string means a fatter or meatier guitar tone. A thinner string usually will have a thinner, twangier tone. There is, as usual, a trade off. It is harder to play and bend thicker strings. Each string on the guitar has a gauge. A set of strings is named by the gauge of the 1st string. For example: "A set of .009's" or "A set of .013's". The higher the number, the heavier the string. Stevie Ray Vaughan used .013's! He was a madman, but he had some serious meat to his tone. Eddie Van Halen uses .009's and he still gets a very big, meaty sound! In the end what really matters is your hands and your ability.

4. The Pick

There are almost as many choices of picks as there are electric guitars! Picks are measured in gauges or sizes. The thicker the pick, the higher the gauge or size. Fender picks (I highly recommend these) come in extra thin to extra heavy sizes and are a smooth texture. Some picks have a rough textures also. Beginners should start with medium picks. Thin and medium picks are especially suited to acoustic guitars also. Once you have played for a while, experiment with different brands and sizes. Picks really do play a part in your guitar tone.



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