Generally speaking, guitar manufacturers seem to have largely settled on using mahogany (and to a lesser extent korina), alder, basswood and swamp ash for their bodies- and often combining these woods with laminate maple tops.
And it makes sense- they are all great tonewoods and hit a large cross-section of what most guitarists are looking for in an instrument.
However, I am interested in hearing opinions and experiences regarding the less-commonly used body woods; for example, hard ash, maple, walnut, koa, etc.
Personally, I have had some great luck with heavier guitars- something I know a lot of players dislike because of the weight on stage and the often brighter tone. Specifically, I have had some hard ash and solid maple guitars with either maple/maple or maple/rosewood boards that have sounded killer. A bit less conventional, but definitely happening.
I'll use George Lynch as a great example, as I know there have been many discussions in this forum regarding his tone and instruments. He proved with his original maple/maple tiger (and later his ESP Kamikaze with the maple body and maple/ebony neck), there are some great tones out there to be had if you experiment. I think basswood is a good tone wood, but I distinctly remember the story of how his famous tiger came about- he tried basswood on Grover Jackson's advice because Grover and Allan Holdsworth had gone through a bunch of bodies and thought that basswood sounded the best. He tried it, thought it was awful and went to the maple body- and has used it ever since.
Look forward to the responses.
And it makes sense- they are all great tonewoods and hit a large cross-section of what most guitarists are looking for in an instrument.
However, I am interested in hearing opinions and experiences regarding the less-commonly used body woods; for example, hard ash, maple, walnut, koa, etc.
Personally, I have had some great luck with heavier guitars- something I know a lot of players dislike because of the weight on stage and the often brighter tone. Specifically, I have had some hard ash and solid maple guitars with either maple/maple or maple/rosewood boards that have sounded killer. A bit less conventional, but definitely happening.
I'll use George Lynch as a great example, as I know there have been many discussions in this forum regarding his tone and instruments. He proved with his original maple/maple tiger (and later his ESP Kamikaze with the maple body and maple/ebony neck), there are some great tones out there to be had if you experiment. I think basswood is a good tone wood, but I distinctly remember the story of how his famous tiger came about- he tried basswood on Grover Jackson's advice because Grover and Allan Holdsworth had gone through a bunch of bodies and thought that basswood sounded the best. He tried it, thought it was awful and went to the maple body- and has used it ever since.
Look forward to the responses.
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