Hi fellow gypsy jazz fans!
I have been playing this style now for about half a year.
I own a Dell Arte Jimmy Rosenberg model that I purchased here on Djangobooks.
So I am an obvious Jimmy Rosenberg fan. I want to get as close to his sound as possible, and I know
that he uses real high action.
If anyone here know approximately how high action he uses, I will be happy to know it.
I am not a "hobby player" , I practise guitar all day long so accomodating to the action is no problem - I will work up to it.
I am more a player than anything else, so I am not that knowledgeable around guitar setup. If anyone can explain how to raise the action on gypsy jazz guitars, or have any links, please help.
Your help will be appreciated!
Comments
There is a running argument about gluing vs. not gluing the shims to the bridge bases. Personally I can't hear the difference and do not glue mine so as to make easy changes. Once you get the height figured out and dialed in, you might want to have someone make a new bridge for you that fits just right, but shims are very commonly used and should not be seen as bad.
Craig
Swang on,
I am practising all day, but the gear side of things is not my strong side. I can barely string a guitar right. Setting it up is something I know nothing about. I know that the bridge moves when you take off the strings, so when I have been changing strings I have used tape on the bridge to keep it in place.
I have an old credit card that no longer is valid that I think of chopping to pieces and using these to elevate the bridge slightly - or I might go for the popsicle sticks idea. Right now I get fret buzz. I use the blue argentines and the buzz is not there when I use red ones. I played bebop jazz on archtops with very heavy strings for three years prior to starting manouche, so the blue argentines are most comfortable to me(I like medium or heavy strings) - with a 3.5mm Wegen I get a strong sound using gypsy picking. I liked the red ones too, but I get less volume. I think raising the action will not only remove string buzz with the blue argentines, but also make me able to articulate better and give me more volume.
However, my problem is I do not know how to intonate the guitar. If the bridge moves, I do not know how to make the guitar properly intonated again so it is in tune all up the neck.
If anyone can give me a short step by step explanation on how to raise action and then intonate, I will be very grateful.
I have flirted with the idea of getting a D-hole so I have something to play and then send the Dell Arte to a guitar tech(There is a guy in my town who builds fantastic GJ guitars - he ought to know to set it up). I "need" a D-hole anyway, but the wallet says no currently so I just have to figure out how to raise the bridge without messing up the intonation.
Thanks in advance for any help!
Swang on,
BAM! What a sound! I find it is more responsive now. A bit harder to play, but not too much. I will accomodate to it in no time.
If it messed with the intonation, it is very subtle because it sounds in tune to me.
I put the bridge in the same place. Now I no longer have buzz because the action is higher.
After hearing the result I would say it is a matter of preference, but for those who like the strong dutch sound it is not a bad thing to raise the action. I will have to see how I like the higher action over time.