I have a Gitane Lulo Reinhardt model guitar. I've been trying to get the floating thing happening recently - as the volume drop from my standard alternate picking technique is driving me insane - but I find that my sound is absolutely awash in sympathetic vibrations. The sound coming from the rest of my non-muted strings is only slightly quieter than actual notes I'm picking. This is a problem as it makes any playing on the first couple strings sound muddy and sloppy.
I've read posts in the forum about "wet" guitars, and I suppose I have one. Is there really nothing that can be done about it? Are the options just "get a better guitar" or "don't use the Gypsy right hand technique"?
Comments
That said, if it is just that you have an extremely wet guitar, I'm not so sure there's a lot you can do about it. Overtones, are generally more pronounced on lower end guitars (and gypsy guitars have more overtones than normal guitars as it is). There have been threads about wetness, and I've tried some of the suggestions, and none have worked.
The suggestions, by the way, are generally around putting a soft, sound absorbing object (like a cloth or a felt pad) under the space between the strings and the body behind the bridge.
Cheers and good luck.
Anthony
I find the corking and refinishing tips interesting, though. I dunno, it may just be cheaper to buy a better guitar at that point. But, the Lulos go for a grand new. That's certainly not Dupont territory, but it's also not $200, beater-guitar territory either.
I may just say "screw it" and work on very powerful alternate picking with a thick pick. That's probably easier than developing a new technique anyway
Swang on,
I increased the weight of the bridge by about 4 grams which in this case muted the overtones a bit.
Didn't solve the problem totally but did neutralize some of the overtones.
Its a matter of experimentation.
I replaced the handmade ultra light bridge with a machine made #3 Dupont.
Which off the top of my head weighed around 11.4 grams.
The hand made bridge was super light 9 gram.
I've been weighing bridges.
Its the easiest component to switch.
Has a large impact on tone.
Not apples and oranges.
But an improvement has been made.
I still need to play it more to assess the changes.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N-BKDNBHEkE
www.scoredog.tv
Here is a link to the Grappelli FaceBook page: https://www.facebook.com/TributoGrappel ... arget_id=0
See this clip to learn how Groucho Marx applies the floating technique to his wet guitar!
The guitar in the clip is Groucho's Gibson L-5, but a stunt "double" was used at 1:15 <g>