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Guitar equipment & accessories Part 1. MUS1472 Brendan Lake 1/23/13. Overview. Types of guitars Classical Steel-string Electric Amplifier basics Structures Solid state vs. tube amps. Classical/Nylon-string Guitars. Soundboard Cedar (orange): warmer tone
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Guitar equipment & accessoriesPart 1 MUS1472 Brendan Lake 1/23/13
Overview • Types of guitars • Classical • Steel-string • Electric • Amplifier basics • Structures • Solid state vs. tube amps
Classical/Nylon-string Guitars • Soundboard • Cedar (orange): warmer tone • Spruce (blonde): brighter tone • Strings • Different guitars sound good with different strings • Experiment with multiple types • Aim for solid woods • Needs humidity control (40% is ideal)
Acoustic/steel-string guitars • Two body types: • Dreadnaught and Jumbo • Cutaways • Needs humidity control • Some acoustic/classicals have electric pickups (which also have tuners built in)
Electric guitars • Require an amplifier (you can still hear them, but barely) • Don’t typically need humidity control • Jazz guitars have a hollow-body (or semi-hollow) and these may require more humidity care • A heavier electric guitar or a hollow-body typically equates to a warmer sound • The two most popular guitars are the Fender ‘Stratocaster’ and the Gibson ‘Les Paul’
Electric Guitar Pictures Hollow-body guitar Fender Stratocaster Gibson Les Paul
Fun fact: • The top of stratocasters (and many other guitars) with the one-sided tuning machines is a throwback to old guitars with violin-scroll shaped heads
Buying a guitar • Don’t buy a guitar online unless you’re willing to spend an extra $75 on adjustments • Evaluate the straightness of the neck and the action of the guitar. This will usually correspond to how easy it is to play • Avoid guitars with frets that naturally buzz • Evaluate its ability to stay in tune • An electric pick up may be useful if you’re planning on playing outside of your home • Don’t buy the pick-up just for the tuner. A great clip-on tuner is $10. • Consider re-stringing it after you buy it
Amplifiers/Amps • More watts = more volume, and all other factors (sensitivity/efficiency/clarity, etc) depend on the materials and organization of the electronics • Amplifiers below 75 watts will typically only consist of one box unit. Higher wattage systems will often use an amp head (containing most of the electronics) coupled with one or more speaker cabinets (half-stacks and full-stacks for instance)
Amplifiers A single-unit amplifier, a half-stack, and a fullstack
Tube Amps vs. Solid State • Two types of amplifier: tube and solid state • Tube Amps use vacuum tubes to transmit the sound to the speaker • Solid state amps use transistors, and sometimes software, to transmit sound to the speaker • Both amps generally look the same
Tube and Solid State pictures A tube amp head and a solid-state amp head
Tube Amps • Pros • Are generally better-sounding amps. Compared to solid-state, they are warmer and respond to certain players in unique ways • Clear with strong power: 20W can sound as loud as a 200W solid-state • Cons • Tubes need replacing every year or two • Can sound thin at low volumes
Solid State • Pros • Clean, quick and accurate • Very sturdy with little or no maintenance • Usually weigh less than a tube amp • Cons • Can sound cold or sterile • Distortion can sound too bright • Doesn’t vary in sound and respond to different players the way tube amps do (but they can change character using various software)
Next week • Microphones • Cables • Accessories • General maintenance