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New Archtop Day !!!!!!!!!
I had been wanting an Archtop for years, and my wonderful wife surprised me today with a new D,Angelico EXL-1 with the sunburst finish. I pulled it out of the case, and cant put it down. Plays and sounds great unplugged or thru my Fishman amp.
The fit and finish is incredible. So now the string quest starts. I play mainly classic western swing and classic country. So would love to hear your opinion on strings you think will work good on this archtop with a 25.5 scale. Thanks in advance Bill |
#2
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This post is useless without pictures!
Cincy
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2018 Buscarino Italia |
#3
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Nice!!!! But you just got a whole new set of “honey do’s” to deal with... [emoji6]
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Blessings, Kip... My site: Personal Blog Yamaha LL16R-12 L Series A.R.E. Yamaha FG-75 Fender CF 60 CE Ibanez AF75TDG Epiphone Les Paul Std PlusPRO Eastman MB515 Mando Yamaha YPT230 Keyboard |
#4
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Quote:
If you're after more of a mainstream jazz tone, flatwounds are the way to go - this was the sound of post-war bop guitar as well as circa-1950 electric honky-tonk, first-generation electric blues, and rockabilly; while there's much merit in their flat, even amplified response (with fewer overtones) - strings of this type were standard factory issue on electric guitars through the early-70's, through about 1980 for many basses (FYI Hofner still equips their German-made line with flats), and I still use them on nearly all of my electric instruments - they can sound dull, lifeless, and "thuddy" when played acoustically. If played with a classic archtop technique - what the old Big-Band compers called "coaxing the velvet out" - they can be very expressive, punchy and percussive on louder passages yet mellow and purring on ballads, with no abrasive "twang" when you play near the neck; not for everyone - most guys under age 50 who aren't hard-core jazzers don't really understand or know how to get the best out of them - but may be a good match for a 17" archtop with a suspended pickup like yours... A good compromise might be a "half-round" set - these start out as a full-roundwound set which is then ground to spec, leaving an outer surface that approaches the smoothness of flatwounds but retains most of the brightness of roundwounds. I recently rediscovered these when I put a set on my Godin CW II, an all-laminated twin P-90 single-cut archtop in the mold of the early-50's ES-175; although it was a fine-sounding guitar with flats, the half-rounds just boosted things to the next level - punchy, crisp, with enough unamplified volume/tone for couch practice and basement jams with acoustic instruments. The lesson here is pay attention: just like your S.O. your guitar will tell you what it "likes" - ignore at your own risk... Last but not least are the ubiquitous nickel-wrap (actually nickel-plated) roundwounds - easy to find anywhere in just about any gauge necessary, no-surprises tone, but IME not always the best option for guitars of this type; as I suggested above archtops are, by their very nature, idiosyncratic/often temperamental and unforgiving beasts, and while nickel roundwounds are the string of choice for solidbodies IME I've found them to be lacking in both acoustic volume and "personality" - the interaction of string, guitar, and player that defines "your" signature sound. From what I understand the pure nickel-wrapped strings are somewhat better in this regard - punchy and smooth like flats/half-rounds, with a hint of crisp brightness in both electric and acoustic modes - but you may have a hard time finding a pre-packaged set in a suitable gauge unless you order by mail... Bottom line: get to know your instrument thoroughly, know what your goals/expectations are and what sound(s) you're hearing in your head, proceed from there - and realize that it's going to be a process until you find what works best for you... Hope this helps - use it well and often...
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#6
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Wow, uhhh,,,,is your wife married? What a gift!
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Dump The Bucket On It! |
#7
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Pure nickel or monel .013's.
Congrats, thas a great box you got there. |
#8
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Great big "THANK YOU" to everyone for the kind words and great information.
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#9
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Nice, congrats. I always pick one of those up to play when I get the chance at GC.
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Barry My SoundCloud page Avalon L-320C, Guild D-120, Martin D-16GT, McIlroy A20, Pellerin SJ CW Cordobas - C5, Fusion 12 Orchestra, C12, Stage Traditional Alvarez AP66SB, Seagull Folk Aria {Johann Logy}: |
#10
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She IS a wonderful wife. Congratulations. Does she have a sister?
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~Dave ~Music self-played is happiness self-made |
#11
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I play my archtop(Ibanez 2471NT), in a Western Swing band called the Telegrams, http://thetelegrams.com. I use D'Addario Chromes Flatwound, 12-52. They sound great, with lots of snap for those twanging lead lines.
They are very nice under the fingers and last about a year for me. |
#12
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THANKS !! Take her sister..please |
#13
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#14
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I also use those on my Excel, gets a great jazz tone. My only complaint about the guitar is it's quite heavy after a while.
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#15
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Thats what straps, chairs and vicodin are for.
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