I've always heard this phrase applied to electric guitars regarding pickups, and I have to ask: What is this based on? What's the foundation for this statement?
If you compare an acoustic guitar to an electric, one need only stick a mic in front of an acoustic to amplify its natural tone. Whether the tone is thin or full is based on the woods and bracing, but a solid-body electric doesn't have internal sound chambers or bracing, and therefore the "natural tone" - interpreted as acoustic tone - is much lower in volume and thinner.
Is this what pickups and amplifiers are supposed to amplify?
Or did someone somewhere say "I have an acoustic made entirely out of mahogany and it has a given tone, so if I make a solidbody guitar out of mahogany, I will have the same tone as the acoustic with x pickup design"?
What about semi-hollow and chambered electrics: which tone is the pickup targeted for, amplifying the acoustic tone or capturing the solid core tone?
If you compare an acoustic guitar to an electric, one need only stick a mic in front of an acoustic to amplify its natural tone. Whether the tone is thin or full is based on the woods and bracing, but a solid-body electric doesn't have internal sound chambers or bracing, and therefore the "natural tone" - interpreted as acoustic tone - is much lower in volume and thinner.
Is this what pickups and amplifiers are supposed to amplify?
Or did someone somewhere say "I have an acoustic made entirely out of mahogany and it has a given tone, so if I make a solidbody guitar out of mahogany, I will have the same tone as the acoustic with x pickup design"?
What about semi-hollow and chambered electrics: which tone is the pickup targeted for, amplifying the acoustic tone or capturing the solid core tone?
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