I did a quick search but couldn't find out whether this is an old chestnut or not...
I'm a complete beginner where G-J is concerned so excuse my possibly quite naiive question...
What, at a guess, is the choice of most of the players here and elsewhere as regards a wound/plain G-string? Is there even some sort of etiquette which suggests only wound is 'right' or does 'anything go'?
I've been using a wound G on my '40s Antoine di Mauro for the last year or so but, at the suggestion of a REAL G-J player, tried a plain G at the last change and find it to be much more useable and can get closer to the sound I want.
In general I'd suspect 'Play whatever works for you' but I'm mildly curious.
What say you good people here?
Philip.
Comments
My Dunn Ultrafox balances nicely along and across with a standard set of Argie 11's fwiw.
I am not sure what a real gJ player is. Btw. Are there fake ones or??
There are fake GJ players, people who talk about Django in their promotional material but don't play anything even close.
"It's a great feeling to be dealing with material which is better than yourself, that you know you can never live up to."
-- Orson Welles
Co-incidentally, Jazza, I use Argie 11s too. When I switched to try out a 'plain' obviously I had to get something with enough 'meat' so as to retain both balance and intonation as, obviously, the di M. has a non-compensated bridge. I just found pulling-off snappy whole-tone bends more accurate in 'feel'. I was also going through (literally!) wound-G's at an alarming rate...
And just because one can Pompe their way through 'Minor Swing' or improvise a Django-flavoured 'September Song' it doesn't follow that they can classify themselves as a 'Real' Gypsy-Jazzer.
I mean to say; even I can do that much...
Philip.
It has some cool sound to it, but unlike the E and B, the Boink is at a low enough frequency that it is out of character with the rest of the strings especially played open, unfretted.
Any wound G has a tighter sound signature that is a good deal more in character with the other string set. I spose we put up with the much smaller but still out of character sound of the unwound B and E because you can't wind anything that small, but I'm sure you can hear the difference in character of the high strings vs the wound ones.
My audience didn't seem to care and I got compliments both ways (which certainly counts but is only a rough way to measure sound). Anyone who objected was probably polite so I never heard the objection.
I know why you asked your question cause I've gone back many times to see if I can handle the boink just so I can use those bending skills that took so long to acquire.
For me, I'm just bending the wound G and kinda modifying the character of the bends as necessary. I play a lot more melodicly (sp?) than in the old days so I want the sound of the wound G so my G string blends nicely. It's a tough call when you have to just give up on making sounds you've come to love making (whole note bends). But each time I try it (unwound G) again, I go back to the better sounding wound string as the sound is more important as my style moves more and more away from my old ways.
If I need to bend I can easily go a minor third on the sax on the high notes