Nick-O
Active member
- Joined
- Aug 12, 2015
- Messages
- 223
^^^ WOW Mr. Pellman73, just WOW ^^^
I dig it!
can you give a nod towards provenance?
Do you mind if I share this photo at the "Gil Yaron Handmade Guitars" group on FB?
I do not mind at all :saludeDo you mind if I share this photo at the "Gil Yaron Handmade Guitars" group on FB?
Jeebus. I don't blame you.
New pics with recently exposed double creams:
Gorgeous wood- that looks terrific with the DW's.
Beautiful guitars Ed!
Any tonal differences?
Sorry, just seeing this now.... sure there are some differences... I dont think Ive ever played two LPs that sounded identical, whether they were vintage, replicas or reissues.... The honeyburst is a bit warmer with the mids sucked a bit more than the cherry burst which has more pronounced mids.... both sound great... I feel that after having dozens of reissues, four '50s goldtops and 3 replicas that there is no real science that explains the difference in tone.... Its really just each piece of wood used has its own character and how it combines with the other pieces of wood along with the build is gonna dictate final tone... I do believe there are generalities we can hear... like 'old wood' seems to have a certain character, heavier guitars generally sound different than very light Les Pauls.... but overall its hard to predict what any LP will sound like until you play it right?
Sorry, just seeing this now.... sure there are some differences... I dont think Ive ever played two LPs that sounded identical, whether they were vintage, replicas or reissues.... The honeyburst is a bit warmer with the mids sucked a bit more than the cherry burst which has more pronounced mids.... both sound great... I feel that after having dozens of reissues, four '50s goldtops and 3 replicas that there is no real science that explains the difference in tone.... Its really just each piece of wood used has its own character and how it combines with the other pieces of wood along with the build is gonna dictate final tone... I do believe there are generalities we can hear... like 'old wood' seems to have a certain character, heavier guitars generally sound different than very light Les Pauls.... but overall its hard to predict what any LP will sound like until you play it right?