The Prodigal Sounds

Progressive Rock Artist seeks Audience

Page 34 of 39

Thomastik Strings

I read on unfretted.com that the choice of strings really makes a difference to the fit and handling of a fretless classical guitar. One guy recommend Thomastik-Infield KR116 strings, but mentioned the caveat that they were about three times the price of regular nylon strings, but in his opinion, they were worth it.

I tried purchasing some at Ed Roman’s (ok, he may or may not be an arsehole but he has an unbeatable range of stock) but they didn’t have them in stock and the price they quoted was ~$40! Ouch.

Fortunately, I discovered an online resource that had them for $19. Check out Elderly Instruments. I ordered a couple of sets and they arrived three days later. Thanks!

Ok, basically as soon as I opened the packet I could see why they cost more than regular ones. You can smell the quality. And it’s not just the smell. It’s the little things. For a start, they have the perfect length. You don’t need to trim them. All six are ball-terminated, and have blue fabric binding at each end. At the ball end, this is just sufficient to cover the length of the string that passes through the holes in the bridge. At the other end, it forms a nice grippy section of string that makes winding and securing the string to the tuning pegs a breeze.

The next thing I noticed is how thin the treble strings were. I thought I’d ordered a completely wrong set, but no, this is correct. They are just much thinner than regular nylon.  The bass strings are “flat-wound” which much reduces the “rasp” of finger movement during slides. Surprisingly, the treble strings are “tape-wound” which actually makes the finger movement sound louder than regular nylon.

The sound of an open string is much brighter than regular nylon. I have to say that these strings most of all remind me of violin strings.

Working without a Fret

I’ve had a spare guitar knocking around the place for several years. It’s a Yamaha APX-10N nylon-string classical with under-saddle pickups. It’s been pretty decent but since bringing it across the Pacific, I think the climate change from muggy Auckland to dry Las Vegas has put a little out of sorts. I tried tweaking the truss rod but I couldn’t seem to bring it back to life. I haven’t been playing it much at all – it’s been hanging on the wall as a dust-gathering ornament.

Well, the other day I took it down and pulled the frets from the fingerboard, effectively turning into a fretless guitar. I followed some online advice and used a soldering iron to heat up the individual frets prior to levering them up using a pair of flush-cutting nipper pliers. The frets came out relatively easily, with only very minor chipping of the ebony fretboard. At this point I could have just left the fret slots as-is, but being a perfectionist I wanted to try filling them with a lighter-coloured wood. Using a craft knife, I cut slivers from pine shims and wedged/tapped/forced them into the slots, welding them in place with liberal application of crazy glue.

After trimming the excess with the craft knife, I used successive sandings with 180, 240, and 320 sandpaper to eliminate the bumbs, strip off the spots of over-flowed crazy glues, and liberate a large amount of dense, dark brown wood dust. The end result is rather effective:

I’ve put a standard set of nylon strings on it, and tuned it in fourths: EADGDF. Playing it takes some getting used to. Standard barre chords are out of the question, but that really isn’t a desired function of a fretless guitar. Think slurred melodic phrases and eastern-style riffs. I’ll post some samples here in a bit – when I’ve practiced some more.

Chapman Stick + J-Station = Rocks

I’m re-recording the Chapman Stick tracks in “Painting Abstracts”, using the ROCK BASS settings on the J-Station. Wow. This really rocks. It’s so much better than the previous bass line. It’s not just the resulting tone, but the fact that it inspired me to go somewhere else with the bass.

OK. I’ve redone everything now except the vocals, and you can bet I was planning to do those as well. So much for the “tidy-up”. It’s more like a cover version of my own music.

A New Microphone

Guitar Center -the Wal-Mart of musical instruments – are having a “green tag” sale this month. Normally I ignore their advertising bumf that appears in our mailbox. Their “deals” are never quite as good as they make out. Online stores will offer a better selection and better prices. This is sad for the local stores. (On the other hand, if there was a local store run by people I respect and wanted to support, I’d go there. But I haven’t found one yet. It probably doesn’t exist.)

OK, so the point is, I *did* browse the flyer and saw a bunch of things I was interested in. After actually visiting the premises, I escaped having merely purchased a new microphone. It’s a MXL 2001 condenser, requiring 48v phantom power but that’s ok, I have that on the Mackie 1604 mixer.

Initial tests are good. It’s very sensitive, in fact it picks up the drone of the fan in the computer. *sigh*. Hopefully I can use it for vocals and percussion and stuff, without resorting to isolation boxes or sound-proofed closets. The picture shows the mic with the standard “coathanger+nylons” pop filter.

Cakewalk SONAR 4

So Cakewalk has just announced SONAR 4. Wow. According to the feature list, this release will address every single one of my most-requested features:

  • At last: a navigator view.
  • At last: group tracks into folders.
  • At last: a nudge feature for making small adjustments in position.
  • At last: color preferences that stay with the track as you re-sort them.
  • At last: an audio metronome. No more routing a MIDI click track to one of my synths.
  • The “freeze” function for rendering selected tracks to a mix behind the scenes to free up processor power is pretty cool also.

They’ve also thrown in AV and surround-sound support, neither of which I’m particularly excited about, although if I was doing movie soundtracks I’d probably flip.

Over the last few months I’ve been working steadily away using SONAR 3 and if you’d asked me if I expected to upgrade I would have said “forget it”. But I’m placing my advance upgrade order tonight.

Erase, and start again

In the process of mixing and remixing “Listen” I think I have figured out what is wrong. The crunchy guitar isn’t letting the other instruments breath, and what’s more, it obnoxiously interrupts the vocals. It’s gotta change, duh. As a result, I’ve been re-doing the guitar part and I think it is somewhat cooler than it was. Downside: I’m still not done with this behemoth.

Editor’s Note, August 2020: Curious about where this track ended up? It was finally completed in 2019 and is included on The Inevitable Obscenity of Autonomous Weaponry, our second album:

http://www.prodigalsounds.com/inevitable/listen.html

https://theprodigalsounds.bandcamp.com/track/listen

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