String suggestions for Acoustic Archtop
I got my first Archtop and I'm looking forward to experimenting with strings at some point. I just love tinkering.
Any suggestions for strings for acoustic play? You know, bright but not brash, mellow, but not dull? Good sustain. It would be nice to have a starting point. |
Start with a set of MM13 Martin Retro Monels - a modern-day iteration (lighter gauge/improved manufacturing techniques) of the strings favored by the Big Band-era compers - and work from there...
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What guitar are you talking about? Acoustic? Acoustic/electric? I've liked Newtones, Martin retro monels, Ernie Ball aluminum bronze and Curt Mangan round core monels all in medium gage (13's) for my Eastman archtop.
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I like the Thomastik Swings. They’re a bit expensive but I really don’t change arch top strings that often.
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Here's my archtop with D'Addario NB (nickel-bronze) light gauge (.012-.053) to give you a vague idea of what might be expected. The first video is from the day I put them on, 12/7/22 and the second is from 12/27/22. I've been playing it almost daily since. Your mileage will vary, but it's indicative of how lively they're capable of being. Best, Howard Emerson |
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PLEASE IGNORE THIS POST. I HAVE MEASURED THE RETRO STRINGS AND THEY ARE LONG ENOUGH FOR THIS GUITAR. Sorry if I have misled anyone. Mike |
Mine came with flat wounds and I have really liked the tone from day one. It’s jazzier for sure. I’m gonna try monels soon.
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I’m a fan of TI flat wounds on big box archtops. I have tried the nickel-bronze DAs on my parlor and do enjoy the tones. They last a pretty long time too. I might have to try them on the archtop. The TI flat wounds seem to last forever.
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If you play fingerstyle: Thomastik Spectrum or Plectrum; AC112 (brass-wounds with a flat-wound G) or SB112 (wound with some kind of bronze). A bit more expensive in the US but they last a long time. They also seem to use a finer wrap wire giving less fingernoise.
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I'm a fan of Stringjoy, and their Foxwood line (coated phosphor/bronze) provides a good balance of tone between being too "jangly" and too "dark." I'd go for the 12/54 set, but they have lighter and heavier, and you can get custom sets, too.
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I have been using D'addario Nickel Bronze for a couple of years on my purely acoustic archtops (Gibson L4, Harmony Monterey, and Eastman AR805).
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Depends on the guitar, I would think, along with whatever one's ears and fingers vote for. To my ears, my 1946 Epiphone Broadway likes a fairly heavy set (though my fingers are getting to prefer mediums rather than an .058 set), and if it were acoustic-only, I would stick to phosphor bronze. But since it gets played amplified more often these days, it's Thomastik BeBops, which have decent acoustic sound and last a long time. Same compromise goes for my X-braced Eastman 805, though it's currently operating amplified-only with Galli tape-wounds. (Very muffled acoustic sound.)
My general observation is that a too-light set will sound thin and twangy, which is not my idea of an acoustic-archtop voice. On the other hand, less-than-mediums might drive a light-built modern archtop acceptably, and probably will sound fine amplified. And I've never liked the sound of flatwounds, even amplified, but as someone who came up not as an electric player, I may be in the minority about that. |
I used Retro mediums on my Epi Devon, but my local shop strongly recommended the D’A NBs, so they’re going on next.
I did find out there’s no disadvantage if the wrap on the D string doesn’t make it to the tuner, as happens with a Frequensator. Not relevant here, but I had a strong need to get that out. |
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