People often ask me: "So, what's the difference between a Selmer sound and a Busato sound?"
I typically say something like:
Selmers have a balanced but present lowend, a moderately bright highend, and their main feature is their proud midrange - nearly 'cupped hands' and very focused. They have a shimmery quality that is hard to describe. It shows up when playing two and three note chords high on the neck and so it became part of Django's signature sound. (think of Django's famous intro to J'Attendrai)
Busatos have a deep sonorous lowend, a very bright - almost hard - highend. Their main feature is their range - both dynamic and frequency. They have lowends that are solid in a way that makes even old Favinos envious and a highend reminiscent of a mandola. Busatos also have the shimmery quality in the highend - though to a lesser degree. In that aspect, they tend to sound a little cleaner which I think actually is part of their appeal. The simpler midrange character gives more attention to the lowend and highend that defines the Busato Grande sound.
But hey, why take my imperfect and subjective words when you can have (relatively) objective soundclips. These were the two clips that I found that most nearly compared these two instrument types to help you get the feel for the instruments - they're close enough... just my humble opinion. Oh, and yes, Fijkelie does have his low string dropped to a D, but listen to the character of the instrument, not its tuning.
Thanks Ivan, for your wonderful clips - I don't know who to thank for Fijkelie's clip - his son I think.
You get one chance to enjoy this day, but if you're doing it right, that's enough.
Comments
Selmers are more filled out in the mids and have more complex overtones. Loud, but not total cannons like Busatos. They have a tad of "wetness" but just enough to make them sound interesting. Selmers are a bit sweeter in character...
Of course, every guitar is unique and the setup of any given guitar makes a big difference. Generally speaking, I've found that Selmers can be setup with somewhat lower action and still sound good. I've been surprised to find that overly high action on Busatos often has a muting effect. Most seem to open up with a more medium action setup. Favinos seem to demand the highest action, but there are exceptions.
We've had so many Busatos come through the shop over the last year...each one different but all share the same basic Busato sound (i.e lack of mids, growly lows, and piercing highs). I've had customers who have played or owned just one and think all the rest are the same...big mistake in my opinion because there are huge differences between each and every one.
I attached an mp3 of the one we just had for sale which is the loudest I've ever come across!
Busato
Grand Modèle 14 Fret Oval Hole Guitar with Hardshell Case
Great clip of the Busato..extremely dry, high volume, awesome high end and very simple/innocent in character and tone. Nice piece that you played too. Is that something in the Unaccompanied Django book?
I was playing Django's solo arrangement of Nuages....yes, it's in the Unaccompanied Django book.
The only copy that really sounds like this is the Dell Arte Hommage. Other Favino copies tend to have the dimensions but not the nasal, barky sound that is the Favino trademark.
JP Favinos are different, although there is some of the old Jacques sound in them.
Again, these are huge generalizations but seem to hold up pretty well.
The old Bireli recordings from the 70s are a great example of a Jacques. Recordings are interesting, but in the end you really have no idea what these guitars are like until you are in the drivers seat. A guitar that may have sounded harsh on a recording suddenly fills the room once you have it your hands! And the nice warm sounding one on a recording can sound totally dead when you play it in person.
I've found that my Holo Busato is less forgiving of "timing" errors between the subtle upsweep and chord damping of the "La Pompe" rhythm than my Dell 'Arte Hommage which may be due to the "crunchiness" of tone slightly masking timing errors. The Holo has a quicker tone "attack" also. This just means I need more work on my rhythm!
Congrats Phil on your upcoming Holo arrival! Looking forward to hearing it next DFNW!
Rocky