While everyone is busy looking for difference.... I'm gonna appreciate ur effort for changing neck and then tuning it again on guitar...which as a guitarist I know how hectic is....Thanks man....
Changing the neck on a tele is not hard at all. Maybe its a little "hectic" your first time changing a neck, but Darrell could probably to it with his eyes closed.
The maple sounds more yellow with semi-sweet rectangular square berries, while the rosewood sounds more like octagonal dark green in a crispy cube of a mellow platonic triangular spice
+Darrell Braun Guitar I have quite good studio speakers, and i clearly hear the difference. Furthermore I really like your videos, keep up the good work! Yet, you should try to avoid the overdrive of the high frequencies. There is definetly a strong saturation and it is cracking quite strong. E.g. check 4:16. Nevertheless nice comparison!
As a luthier I appreciate videos like this. The guitar industry has perpetuated so much BS and snake oil for so many years. They are pushing a product, and will try to make money in any way shape or form.
Well, one day a was reading a Guitar World (I think) that had an interview of Leo Fender. One part got to the neck wood decisions..... Leo said that he was watching television one evening. A guitar player was playing a Stratocaster with a maple top neck. It was chewed up from digging in. Leo thought it looked awful, so he really began to push rosewood topped necks because they looked better on television. Leo was more concerned with looks.
It’s not capitalism that’s behind this. To real expert there’s surely a slight difference and a niche for it. The problem is a lot of guitar “experts” are basement dwellers hoping to look sophisticated.
Highs are brighter on maple, crisper as well. More dirt and a fuller tone on rosewood. Every weapon has its application, every tool as well.. Same with a strat
There is definitely a player feel difference with maple versus rosewood. Which, for certain music styles and amp settings it changes how the player responds to that feel, and ultimately what he/she is hearing from the speaker.
I swear people say it sounds different because they clicked on the video already believing it would sound different. They are so identical that any difference you might hear could be as minute as the fretwork from neck to neck.
Eyes closed, and several tries. Zero difference. When I knew there were different fingerboards, I could make myself hear the difference. The best comparison. Time consuming, but the best way to test it out. Thanks for the effort.
Its more about the feel than the tone. Maple is smoother and more slippery, especially when sweating onstage. Rosewood is more raw, unfinished but also resists more bending strings. You need to oil rosewood and treat it to keep it in peak condition. Maple you just have to keep clean occasionally. I have both and prefer my Clapton strat with a maple neck.
I happened to be at guitar center today test driving some guitars. Couldn't have said it better. I like to play more blues style like BB and Buddy. My favorite was the telecaster with the maple neck. Fingers glide easy and bends have little resistance. The rosewood is more grabby. If I ever play live. Like a bar gig I doubt any customer is going to notice the difference in tone between the two.
Thank you for this video. I worked in audio algorithm development and acoustics for many years. One issue with these kinds of listening tests is that often our expectations play into perceptions. To get around this, there are a number of listening protocols that are used. One is called the ABX test. In this test there are two audio samples, A and B which do not change. X randomly switches between being A and B. The user is instructed to determine if X is A or B for each trial. At the end of the test (typically 16 trials), a confidence score is given indicating the probability that the listener was guessing. It is an incredibly sensitive test that can reveal if even the subtlest details are audible.
Yeah I agree, tbh I never cared what tone rosewood offered. I simply fell in love with strats that had rosewood frets cause 1. Strats sound godly, look godly and 2. Rosewood on a strat makes it look godlier. But coming from playing my own strat and the one at school, aka rosewood vs maple, the feeling was very different. In fact I absolutely hate the feel of maple fretboard. Rosewood feels much more smooth and right. Maple feels like it's hollow and just wrong. But that's my opinion
Yea. After you add distortion and effects any difference in sound of the wood is negated. But how it feels is what's important, and they def feel different
@@LeglessWonder To some degree that's true but you're not really going to make a Danelectro sound like a Les Paul just by putting it through distortion, and definitely not with less-destructive effects like chorus or flange.
The maple has a faster decay, especially in the lows, making it sound clearer after the attack. The rosewood sounds louder and warmer and fuller after the attack because the lows don't decay as fast. The more pristine sound of the maple come from the lower quickly leaving room for the top-end to shine.
If you would like to check out my tonewood comparison between Alder and Basswood Strats, you can check it out here: th-cam.com/video/YILmjHtK0UI/w-d-xo.html
You do a lot of work to present these videos and it clearly shows. In my own little world of making music with my guitar I always come away watching, feeling a little bit smarter. I just subscribed. Thank you for your efforts. Keep up the great work!
I can hear a difference, though not too massive. I think I prefer Maple in almost all of these tests. But it depends on the style of playing, genre, etc. Was getting some great Baroness vibes from the earlier tests, really enjoyed it.
Solid wood body guitars age beautifully and sound better overtime unlike laminated guitar bodies because the wood fibres will in time VIBRATE sympathetically with the vibrating strings. In multi-laminate guitar fingerboards/bodies the wood fibres cannot align easily with the sound waves and are broken up by the glued interfaces. Hence laminate cheap chipboard guitars do not improve with age. Solid wood will always be more sonorous and carry better sustain than laminate guitars. Try this! Put a vibrating tuning fork on a solid body guitar compared to a laminate body guitar, the difference in sustain is markedly noticeable👏 Even more marked on cheap laminate classical guitars compared to solid wood tops there is a huge difference in tonal and dynamic range at all frequencies.
@@trevorsaunar3158 I think if you played so much that you wear down your fretboard, you can just get a new neck every decade. Plus if you wanted to, you could probably refinish (ie; re-laquer/varnish) the fretboard when you start wearing through it to the wood.
no,actually there isn't any difference or if there is it is so subtle that you couldn't tell the difference without expensive calibration and comparison instruments.
+ trillriff-axegrinder Why do people who don't believe in "tone woods" always talk about comparisons using elaborate testing gear? - the only relevant thing is whether the woods sound different to your own ears.
+trillriff-axegrinder Fingers are pretty expensive, and you can calibrate things with them, which is probably why a finished maple fretboard feels different then rosewood and people have a preference.
When choosing a certain neck, when all choices are types of wood, it isn’t sound you should be using to determine which to get, but feel. Maple is much smoother, and easier to play, for me anyway. Plus, much of the vibration through the neck is being muffled by your hand anyway.
I honestly never knew there was supposed to be a difference in tone between the two. I always just thought it was about feel and playability. I’ve always preceded maple because it always feels better to me.
I preferred the Maple... go figure! I've always liked Rosewood Fretboards both for their sound and looks however, after watching your comparison... I think I've found a new appreciation for the one Maple on my Mexican Strat. Love your Video's, Lots of useful and unbiased information in a fun and easy to follow format. You're a Natural at this... Good on you!
But, for all of the guitar manufacturer snobs who sell you guitars, they will say that they used a Rosewood fingerboard because it is BRIGHTER than Maple. So, you are simply hearing with your eyes. Thinking that a brighter color sounds brighter and that a darker color sounds darker. This mistake happens every time that someone looks at the color of the fingerboard. So, your eyes and ears lie to you. Simple as that. It's not just you, it's most people that see dark sound etc.
That was an interesting comparison. I've always been a rosewood player, because of the feel and the sound. I guessed correctly everytime whenever I heard rosewood. :D To me it sounds different to Maple, a bit fuller. I can't really explain it, except say that maple has a twangier sound and whenever I play on it I feel as it my fingers just slide off the neck. Yuck. Thanks for the video!
Wow, I'm really surprised! Even though the difference in tone is minor, I've noticed it. I loved the rosewood neck tone, it sounds a bit warmer and more well balanced than that of the maple one. But as for how do they look, to my mind, a mapple neck guitar looks more genuine. So, now I've got a dilemma between a perfect tone and a prefect look 😬
Apparently not, listened to lots of guitars, it affects the sound as well, sometimes TH-camrs even ruin their pick up comparison videos because of it, Rosewood is more bluesy and deeper-warmer where maple can be more country-ish and bright-direct sounding, both work for metal :P.
I remember watching a Trent Reznor interview where he talks about how Atticus Ross taught him the benefits of rearranging the studio. Somehow, even though the instruments were the same with the same sounds, the different aesthetic differences or arrangements of the instruments would change their approaches to those instrument. I think this is probably what people experience when they talk about maple vs rosewood, etc.
Wow, the differences are almost nothing. I plugged in to the headphones, and did the whole thing blind. I guessed right most of the time, but I had to hear both of them. If he just played one, on a black screen, and asked whether it was a maple or rose, I couldn't pick it out. I don't think anyone could, other than 50/50 guessing.
Loved the video and I loved the comments even more. There is a slight difference in tone between maple and rosewood fingerboards, there is no doubt.. Some of it is caused by the wood directly, but I believe its more because we play them both differently. They both have different surface textures, which offer different resistances to our fingers.. So its logical that we play em differently to play same notes. I have to work harder to bend notes on rosewood fingerboard, thus bends are more aggressive... And that I am sure affects tone.
I’ve had rosewood neck guitars for the last 20 years and just picked up one with a maple neck. I thought the PUPs made the difference but my maple neck guitar does sound brighter!
I worked for Fender from 1972 - 1999 (Luthier, Floor Super, Prod Mgr, Off-shore Prod Mgr). I was also a studio musician during that time. I have both Rosewood and Maple in my extensive collection of Strats and Tele's from the 1950's thru 2000 and while I love both my ALWAYS go to is ALWAYS a Maple neck/board Tele and Strat. Reason? You can always diminish the brightness and note clarity of a Maple neck with your amp (or distortion) or "the board" you are recording thru, BUT, you can't add that Maple brightness back when the guitar has a Rosewood or Ebony board. Period! BTW, my favorite studio Gibson guitar is my 1972 L6S that has a one-piece maple neck and maple body and 7-selection rotary selector switch like a ES-335 "Lucille" model
Vint Guitarz I disagree with you that amp, or any other kind of, tone controls can compensate the very subtle differences between fingerboard material. The differences are much more substantial than frequency response, which is all that tone controls can affect. The volume envelope of every note is noticeably different on a maple fingerboard. That has nothing to do with tone.
Vint Guitarz hmm... that’s a great point. Thank you for diminishing my regret for having a maple fretboard on my strat. After this video my wheels were turning, but your point makes sense. I pretty much always roll down the treble knob as most strat players do
I have an American Strat HSS that shipped and still has a RW fretboard. I also an EVH Wolfgang with Maple and a newer one that has Ebony. I realise that this comparison is not apples to apples, but... I have never loved the RW in my mind it does not have the bite during aggressive playing that the Maple does. In my findings, especially when used on a pure Rock machine like an EVH Wolfgang special with Ebony FB, the Ebony is the best materrial for Rock and Metal. You mentioned that you equate Ebony with Rosewood. In you opinion; why is Eddie Van Halen and a large percentage of Pro gigging Metal players have made the switch to Ebony? Cheers!
cleaning maple is much less work. A quick wipe with cleaner and you're good. Cleaning rosewood means getting out all that sweat and finger cheese thats in the wood, which is more work. Then you have to oil it after you clean it so it doesn't dry out.
The difference was so subtle it's not worth arguing about, now the way it looks and feels is different. I have maple on my Strat and I love it. But I love the feel of ebony the best.
Extremely late to the party, but I was surprised that, to my ears, the maple bass notes sounded better every time. More resonant. I expected the opposite.
There's quite a noticeable difference between them: the maple is brighter, the bass and treble stand out and it sounds clearer; the rosewood highlights the mids more and the sound is a bit darker and more pasty with less definition when you play multiple strings together. I like maple more, at least on that guitar.
Very interesting. I agree with your summation, but a fly landing on the tone knob would make more difference to the sound in my opinion. Thanks for your video
No it wouldn't. Thats like saying you can record two different peoples voices and roll off the treble on the EQ in a mix later and they would sound like the same person. There's way more to the tone of a guitar than just EQ.
May be in quality of elaboration during production, but not in sound, IMO. The influence of neck wood is rather weak, other factors are stronger, the strongest is that of pick-ups (here the same).
Yep, physics of sound waves prove the wood's got nothing to do with tone (save sustain). But hey, let's let them take some more designer drugs so they can "hear the wood".
+antonius augustus go back to school to study physics,as a audio engineer i can give a explanation of how wood affect tone,but first your studies please ;D
The maple sounded noticeably nicer to my ear, I was surprised there was so much difference. However, I can't stand the feel of a maple fingerboard so I'm a rosewood fan.
Kudos for taking the time to swap out necks, thus forestalling any debate regarding differences in instruments. It's funny, go to any guitar forum, and you can find endless debate regarding various woods and their _vast_ effect on tone, whether they be on fingerboards, bodies, or even just the headstock cap. I think most of those folks, though, would have to involve a luthier if it came to swapping necks. :) And what most of them seem to leave out is the one and absolutely most important factor regarding tone: the player.
As a bass player, I worked with a great guitar player for many years. He had a '58 Strat body, with an early-sixties Tele neck on it. It looked a bit weird, but sounded wonderful. And as things go, after you got used to Pat with that guitar, it just looked like Pat. Unfortunately, one night he got hustled by one of those "You sounded great! Here, let me give you a hand carrying your gear out." guys. And before he had a chance to notice, the old Strat was gone. He wound up buying a Squier Tele as a temporary replacement. And of course he noticed a difference, but I think that difference was mostly in feel, and in his head. I'd stood next to him for years on stage, and to me he sounded pretty much exactly the same. Blindfold me and I would not have noticed any difference at all. Another example is a guitar player (named Ron) who used to play around here in Top 40 bands in the early eighties. He had that slithery, legato Holdsworth style, and his tone, sustain, and all that stuff were amazing. And the amp he played through was an old Fender Bassman head, of which the bottom half of the cabinet had been cut away. He set it upside-down on his speaker cab, and there it sat, with all its guts exposed and sticking up. :) All the local guitar players flocked to listen to him, and once he admitted he had modded his Bassman, many of them ran right out and bought Fender amps and begged him to hotrod them. He did so for most of them, reluctantly. And I was present when one of those guitar players tried out his newly modded amp for the first time. And, boy, was he disappointed. He sounded nothing like Ron! So he called Ron up, and Ron came over. He strapped on my buddy's guitar and played through my buddy's new amp. And suddenly, there was that Ron sound all the guys were after but couldn't get. Once you develop your own sound, you're pretty much going to sound like you, and all the gear mods or replacements are probably not going to make you sound like anyone else. :)
In that vein, the thing I often find is that newer players often go in search of that "perfect tone" without actually learning to play first. I think this is why articles that list all the gear of "guitar gods," even down to their picks and cables are so popular. New players often seem to think that if they can just get all the same gear, they will sound just like their heroes. This, to me, would be rather sad if it were true, because what it says is the player makes no difference whatsoever. Play on the same plank, with the same wires, through the same signal modifiers and amplification, and you can't help but sound a certain way, whether you are a rank beginner or a seasoned pro. Fortunately this is not at all the case, but the mythology persists, and drives the sales of lots of gear.
I agree but rosewood doesn' t get dirty as easily. Or show it as quickly as rosewood. I think that is why most guitars manufacters us rosewood for their products. All my Fenders have maple fretboard. I just think they look more traditional. My Opinoin.
955rocket i couldn't hear A LOT of difference between woods, but I want your opinion guys on the look, I'm gonna buy a modern player Jag in crimson red body and basing only in looks, should I go with all maple or maple/rosewood? I'm more prone to the maple but I want your opinions :)
Your guitar, go with whatever you want. I think some guitars look better with a maple fretboard others rosewood. Personally for dark reds I like rosewood though seeing as you asked, although colour of the pickguard can sway me, it really is dependent on the general look of the guitar.
Nick Hartley I just picked the body because it's cheap and all mahogany, it's a modern player Jaguar in red. It's missing the p90s and for me only in looks I'm torn with the colors, also it hasn't got a pickguard it's all plain wood
The BIGGEST difference was caused by the doughnuts I was eating when I watched this video! One was a jelly doughnut and the other was a plain, no frosting or other decoration doughnut. I found myself deciding that I liked the jelly doughnut better, and went to get another jelly doughnut! So I pretty much missed most of the video! THAT was unfortunate!
Wow I was wrong all the way even after playing three times. You made a very convincing comparison for me at least that the difference is so subtle that I have to agree that it would be visual preference now for me and the feel. Thank you for this "Outstanding" comparison. The fact that you used the same body and hardware really was important. I'm assuming the amp settings and amp itself were also the same.
For the comparisons, got the "neck" and "bridge" positions correct and felt fairly confident when choosing my answers for them. The middle position I got incorrect and found it more difficult to choose an answer. Anyone else had a similar experience? Just about to enter the electric world and this comparison changed my perception for sure. I was pretty dead set on Rosewood (100% for looks), but for "this comparison" at least, I much preferred the Maple, especially in the neck position. Great comparison video!
Same I got the middle pickup wrong. I’ve owned two telecasters. One with rosewood the other with maple. I prefer maple for sure but I almost never use the middle pickup.
Ok,..I’ll admit I was stumped even though I’ve played a Tele preferably all my life. But to my experience,...there IS a slight in tone with the Maple 🍁 being a bit brighter sounding...but I feel that’s only the Neck or Bridge only tones...both Neck/Fingerboards seem to sound even in the middle position to me. As for “feel” & aesthetics it’s a matter of taste I guess. Nice comparison done though,..got the Blind Test totally wrong!!..🤭
I clearly hear the diffrence between those two necks! Rosewood sounds darker than maple and more round. Maple sounds like a bite in the ass! Sick and bright! I have 2 teles and i changed on one of mine neck with maple fingerboard to stratocaster japanese '84 neck with another radius and rosewood fingerboard, and my tele became almost like a gibson in neck position! Maybe it's only because it has humbucker pickups. But on other tele i use maple with single coils and that's a tele sound it has to be! Greetings from Russia. Hope my english good enough :) And again thanks for the video. Blind test was funny.
Размышления Музыканта oh thank god someone else heard it too. I was about to comment that most of the people on here must tone deaf not to hear it. There is a definite difference between the two. And yes, that maple is piercingly bright. That’s why the country players love these things.
The difference is almost unnoticeable to my ear. I always preferred the feel and look of maple on a Fender. Never really liked the look of rosewood on Fenders, much in the same way maple looks odd on a Gibson.
i do like the maple but hardly noticeable. But before I watched this video I liked maple waaay more for its brightness and clarity. damn you and your accurate comparisons defunkting my maple neck arrogance.
I agree about the “nasally” and increased definition on single notes maybe, of rosewood. I would like to see the frequency graph, because it seems to be bumping up certain frequencies that remind me of old portable transistor radios. I hate to say I prefer maple, due to the fact that one is solid wood, and the other is a fretboard. We need the solid vs solid, comparison. It’s a good video though.
Having been in home electronics for over 20 years, specifically in high-end audio equipment, I have found that discerning small differences in sound is a learned skill. To a casual listener, the difference between a $100 speaker, a $1,000 speaker, and a $10,000 speaker are not apparent. Also, the general public listens to the music, not the instrument. If Eric Clapton played "Layla" on a plywood guitar, most people would enjoy it just the same. If you like the look or feel of one wood over the other, buy it. Unless you're a very experienced musician, you probably won't notice a sound difference.
The difference is tiny, I found I could hear it most in the held more sustained notes, the rosewood sounded a fraction warmer. But man these video's are busting preconceptions!
I doubt it. I have 2 G&L ASAT Specials from roughly the same time period. Once is a Special Deluxe and has a mahogany body and a maple top. The other has a swamp ash body. Otherwise, they're essentially identical. You can't tell the difference side by side.
The choice of wood in the neck does not affect the sound, as this video proves. The choice of wood in the body also does not affect the sound of an electric guitar. Only the pickups, and their adjustment affect the sound of an electric guitar, assuming the strings and all other adjustments are a constant.
I was expecting the maple to sound brighter but it was the other way around. however, I've previously noticed that strings can make a big difference so there may be slight difference due to that.
shockingly i have heard a comparison of two identical guitars using the same electronics,one made entirely of maple the other mahogany and again the maple guitar sounded warmer and smoother, WTF? i thought maple was supposed to add brightness?
To be fair both maple and rosewood are pretty much equally hard woods so big part of the tone difference is due to the fact that maple is covered with hard lacquer and the rosewood is just bare wood. And even still it's not really a big enough difference to sway you either way sound-wise in my opinion. Just get what looks the best to you.
I dyed my maple fretboard darker to look like ebony, because i can't stand the color and look of maple on a guitar, looks like construction wood I love the dark color of ebony but I don't care for its fragility/susceptibility to temperature changes, or the high maintenance it requires having to oil it all the time so it doesn't crack. So I just "ebonized" my maple fretboard, it worked pretty good Overall rosewood is my favorite and the color looks amazing to me
Siento una gran diferencia entre un mastil y otro . El arce suena más brillante y chillón y el palo de rosa suena con más cuerpo y más graves. Hay mucha diferencia entre una y otra
@@luismudry yo también siento un poco de diferencia pero sí me parece que depende más de que uno tenga poliuretano encima y el otro esté natural, o te refieres a ambos al natural?
[Spoilers ahead! Don't read until you've watched the video!!] Wow I got the middle section wrong and the bridge section wrong. I thought the the two were in reverse, Maple/rosewood and maple/rosewood. Though I had to admit the last one was really hard for me!
Wow! I can definitely hear the difference! I’d been torn between a maple neck and a rosewood color nice I’m able to afford a Telecaster! The maple had more of that classic jangle to me. Great video! Thanks!
I agree. The maple sounds like it has more note separation. It's funny, I have always played rosewood necks, and also do a lot of distortion. Think the maple may handle the dirty tones a wee bit better.
Awesome video comparison, but remember guys, while there is a slight audible difference, it could be attributed to the neck wood itself as well. Every piece of timber sounds different, even in the same species. Tone is about 80% player, 10% amp, 5% scale length, 4% strings, 1% wood in my opinion.
I would put scale length at a close second to player, ahead of the others, but basically I agree with you. At least you realize that the player is far more important than the gear. :) Also, an instrument's tone, and even its perceived and expected tone, can influence the way someone plays it. So, really, the only way to do these tests accurately would be to blindfold the player as well.
Cornelius Sneed Perceived tone does have an effect on mentality and playing style, never thought of that though, but certainly does! I agree, scale length can make a huge difference, but with proper amp/electronic settings, it can be reduced to a negligible difference as well, unless playing clean.
+ Dan L "Every piece of timber sounds different, even in the same species" Exactly right - which is why you can go into a Guitar Center and try every one of a new batch of supposedly identical Strats or Teles they've just got in and they'll all sound slightly different, and sometimes one will stand out as sounding head and shoulders above the others.
+ Cornelius Sneed I used Guitar Center as a example, but I can guarantee you'd find the same thing in a store that has all their guitars set up before putting them on the sales floor. FYI, Jack Person (ex Allman Brothers) said he tried all the Strats in a store before walking out with a Squier Bullet. He said it had such a natural resonance unplugged that he just just knew it would sound great. (There are videos of him playing that same guitar on youtube).
The solid comparison i was looking for. I own both on two strats but they are slightly different guitars, different pups. Here we realize there is actually no tone difference with rosewood or mapple fretboard, only a feeling difference under the fingers (which is, yes, a lot). Brings me back to a sort of "play more, wonder less" about guitars...
I don't think the tonal differences are big enough to make me choose RW or Maple. More important is the feel under the fingers. And a bigger diff here is the amount and type of lacquering you get on some maple necks. You make great vids, BTW.
I totally agree, some rosewood necks feel dry to me, they tend to bite (even if only a little), whenever i play a maple, its like my fingers tend to glide with the only resistence being my beginner to intermediate ability! Have love, do love and will always love the finish on a maple.
One of the best 'comparison' videos I've seen as you eliminated as many variables as possible. We've all seen videos of someone using two different guitars for comparisons like this. As others have posted, I think the eyes lead the ears in this case. First of all, I could rarely hear a difference and when I could, I had the two necks reversed! Generally, guitars that have maple necks are quite different from guitars with rosewood necks. My Gibson Les Paul (rosewood) sounds different from my Fender Telecaster (maple); but the pickups are, obviously different. Yeah, get what looks and feels good to you!
I vote for maple 🍁 Not only for the sound but the feel. Just can’t stand rosewood. I feel maple is lighter brighter colder and firmer which feels good 😌 Thank you! Great job 👏
It is, in fact, fun to hear these. But first, this was about fretboards, not necks. Both necks were maple, but the fbs were the different feature. And I still think you have to have a theory how that is even possible. The neck is anchored to the body through the maple wood only, not the fretboard. The string is isolated atop a metal fret on one end and the metal bridge on the other, and the bridge is anchored to the body wood. The fretboard is isolated from the neck by a layer of glue. Anyway there's also a potentially more significant factor that those two specific necks were 1-2 years apart in age (based on serial numbers). So any number of factors could come into play that are more significant than the fretboard material. Good, positive exploration of the issue, though, for folks to take from it what they will!!
Maple seems to give more definition on the treble frequencies. Whereas rosewood gives more definition on the lower frequencies. Maple seems to make the overall sound "blend" more and has a bit more dimension to it. Rosewood is a bit "cleaner" and more plain, in-your-face sounding.
@@airgliderz Its not about being better or worse. It's about the sound each player goes after. I, personally, prefer rosewood. The text I wrote intends on clarifying how I perceive each one in comparison, I don't bother saying which is best. That is a matter of taste. Listen to it again and read what I wrote, and you'll notice I'm not saying one is better than the other.
4 ปีที่แล้ว
@@airgliderz I personally don't like what maple does to the definition on the low frequencies. That is the reason I prefer rosewood. But it is undeniable that maple's more sparkly on the treble spectrum. I wish I could have both :D
Thumbs up. You did a lot of work switching necks and restringing to do this video for us. You're right, the differences are subtle and I was wrong 2/3 times. I do think the maple is ever so slightly more trebly, and the rosewood slightly smoother sounding. I agree with you however, it's the pick ups that make the biggest difference. Thx for this video sir.
It's psychological, you approach, handle, and attack the instrument differently as the imagery of either the maple, or rosewood fretboard impregnates your soul birthing tonal offspring. May music overpopulate the planet
bridge pickup.. 2nd guitar maple.. sounded a bit brighter. I still doubt there can be a difference. If there is a difference its because the necks are physically not the same.. different nut, different action, stretching of the strings when you changed the necks...
I think they sound the same but the playing is slightly different between the 2. What I know for sure is that guitar looks killer with a rosewood neck!
Very interesting! I voted with the majority on each one apparently, and was only right on 2/3. I agree that it's all a matter of preferring how each one plays. I for one love heavily lacquered maple necks. String bends are so buttery and smooth on a nice glossy maple fingerboard. Mm mm.
So many TH-camrs do tone demo's without ever just playing clean through an amp. I just don't understand why - so many differences and nuances get lost when you add some drive or, god forbid, high gain distortion. Then why do a tone demo in the first place?
@stkbkr1, hey man rosewood is no good because it looks 'dirty'. A maple fretboard is a clean looking honest guitar and people can see your fingers when you play. You have nothing to hide and I've tried both over the years, maple is the best!!
Oh at 54 I've tried um all and ever so often find one that feels much more comfortable than others .... So comfort before tone . there are so many variables on feel and action I've never really considered the fractional possible tone difference......theres a knob for that... Come on there electric ...
While everyone is busy looking for difference....
I'm gonna appreciate ur effort for changing neck and then tuning it again on guitar...which as a guitarist I know how hectic is....Thanks man....
Changing the neck on a tele is not hard at all. Maybe its a little "hectic" your first time changing a neck, but Darrell could probably to it with his eyes closed.
How is changing a guitar neck... hectic...?
Bruuh it's 4 screws and a little adjustment for the axion
Great point.. that's why we're all here because he takes the time
This man was doing god’s work.
The rosewood sounded rosey and the maple sounded mapley.
Yes... yes it does
I'm craving pancake now 😂
😂😂😂
also, the rosewood sounded woody
🤣🤣
All I know is that a guitar with a neck sounds better than a guitar without a neck. 😜
+jefflg1967 hahaha!
You just made my day.
Placebo effect man...it's all in your head!!
Well, you clearly haven't heard me play. You'll be voting no neck ,,, trust me.
Now I want to see a guitar that goes straight from the body to the headstock, no neck in between XD
The maple sounds more yellow with semi-sweet rectangular square berries, while the rosewood sounds more like octagonal dark green in a crispy cube of a mellow platonic triangular spice
Wtf
Whatever you're on, I want some.
sandwichdude97
It's a joke...
my yellow in this case is not so mellow
@@ataraxia4526 you're quite bold
Definitely best to use headphones or a good set of speakers for this one!
+Darrell Braun Guitar
I have quite good studio speakers, and i clearly hear the difference.
Furthermore I really like your videos, keep up the good work! Yet, you should try to avoid the overdrive of the high frequencies. There is definetly a strong saturation and it is cracking quite strong. E.g. check 4:16.
Nevertheless nice comparison!
+Erdbeer Käse Thanks! Sorry about the clipping :(
I did but I still coudn't tell!
I didn't and I could tell...and I'm not fussy or sensitive about tone and stuff...
And, again I can hear some distortion in video, with Sennheiser + creative audigy 2 platium.
As a luthier I appreciate videos like this. The guitar industry has perpetuated so much BS and snake oil for so many years. They are pushing a product, and will try to make money in any way shape or form.
ok
Johannes Gutenberg yup, that’s called capitalism😂😂😂 everyone wants money😎👍
Well, one day a was reading a Guitar World (I think) that had an interview of Leo Fender. One part got to the neck wood decisions.....
Leo said that he was watching television one evening. A guitar player was playing a Stratocaster with a maple top neck. It was chewed up from digging in. Leo thought it looked awful, so he really began to push rosewood topped necks because they looked better on television.
Leo was more concerned with looks.
It’s not capitalism that’s behind this. To real expert there’s surely a slight difference and a niche for it. The problem is a lot of guitar “experts” are basement dwellers hoping to look sophisticated.
Highs are brighter on maple, crisper as well. More dirt and a fuller tone on rosewood. Every weapon has its application, every tool as well..
Same with a strat
Anyone who places an AT-AT in the guitar room obviously knows his stuff.
I play guitar and have a Lego AT-AT in my room!
80% pick-ups.
10% strings.
10% multiple factors including wood.
But cables, picks, and amps / pedals make a bigger difference than wood type.
There is definitely a player feel difference with maple versus rosewood. Which, for certain music styles and amp settings it changes how the player responds to that feel, and ultimately what he/she is hearing from the speaker.
We're forgetting the Players hands/fingers. That's really more like 65% right there.
10 percent luck...
pickssssss ?????
@@rikardocarvalho plastic and wooden pick make a warmer sound compared to metal ones
It's all about the electronics. I heard a guy play a shovel that sounded amazing...
Great amplifier sounds great, no matter if the guitar is just middle-of-the-road, plain okay.
I think I know that guy and he also *kills* it on oil cans, jerry cans and cigar boxes.
was that at one of meth parties?
It's all about the hands, check out pride and joy on the hello kiddy guitar...
Yeah justin johnson is a beast
I swear people say it sounds different because they clicked on the video already believing it would sound different. They are so identical that any difference you might hear could be as minute as the fretwork from neck to neck.
Eyes closed, and several tries. Zero difference. When I knew there were different fingerboards, I could make myself hear the difference. The best comparison. Time consuming, but the best way to test it out. Thanks for the effort.
Its more about the feel than the tone. Maple is smoother and more slippery, especially when sweating onstage. Rosewood is more raw, unfinished but also resists more bending strings. You need to oil rosewood and treat it to keep it in peak condition. Maple you just have to keep clean occasionally. I have both and prefer my Clapton strat with a maple neck.
You mean squier bullet with maple neck?
I happened to be at guitar center today test driving some guitars. Couldn't have said it better. I like to play more blues style like BB and Buddy. My favorite was the telecaster with the maple neck. Fingers glide easy and bends have little resistance. The rosewood is more grabby. If I ever play live. Like a bar gig I doubt any customer is going to notice the difference in tone between the two.
Yeah, I agree
Interesting information!
Thank you for this video. I worked in audio algorithm development and acoustics for many years. One issue with these kinds of listening tests is that often our expectations play into perceptions. To get around this, there are a number of listening protocols that are used. One is called the ABX test. In this test there are two audio samples, A and B which do not change. X randomly switches between being A and B. The user is instructed to determine if X is A or B for each trial. At the end of the test (typically 16 trials), a confidence score is given indicating the probability that the listener was guessing. It is an incredibly sensitive test that can reveal if even the subtlest details are audible.
I have never maintained that the two types of fingerboard sound different. But they feel different, and THAT is everything.
Well put. The necks are very different, but it is a feel and aesthetics thing more than a tone thing.
Yeah I agree, tbh I never cared what tone rosewood offered. I simply fell in love with strats that had rosewood frets cause 1. Strats sound godly, look godly and 2. Rosewood on a strat makes it look godlier.
But coming from playing my own strat and the one at school, aka rosewood vs maple, the feeling was very different. In fact I absolutely hate the feel of maple fretboard. Rosewood feels much more smooth and right. Maple feels like it's hollow and just wrong. But that's my opinion
Rosewood is slipperier? That's what I think.
It's better if you want your fingers sliding, but if you don't, maple may be better.
Yea. After you add distortion and effects any difference in sound of the wood is negated. But how it feels is what's important, and they def feel different
@@LeglessWonder To some degree that's true but you're not really going to make a Danelectro sound like a Les Paul just by putting it through distortion, and definitely not with less-destructive effects like chorus or flange.
2:12 Maple; 2:39 Rosewood
3:47 Maple; 4:06 Rosewood
5:12 Maple; 5:34 Rosewood
Bind test:
3:12 Guitar 1; 3:28 Guitar 2
4:30 Guitar 1; 4:48
👍👍👍
The maple has a faster decay, especially in the lows, making it sound clearer after the attack. The rosewood sounds louder and warmer and fuller after the attack because the lows don't decay as fast. The more pristine sound of the maple come from the lower quickly leaving room for the top-end to shine.
That’s exactly the way i heard it as well.
At first read, I cried BS. Then I went back to listen and s/he's right.
Thank you my good sir
lmfao
I definitely hear a difference. It’s mostly in the high end. I find the maple neck brighter and certainly that the rosewood is smoother and warmer.
If you would like to check out my tonewood comparison between Alder and Basswood Strats, you can check it out here:
th-cam.com/video/YILmjHtK0UI/w-d-xo.html
You do a lot of work to present these videos and it clearly shows. In my own little world of making music with my guitar I always come away watching, feeling a little bit smarter. I just subscribed. Thank you for your efforts. Keep up the great work!
I can hear the rosewood as being warmer less trebly, but surprised by how close they sounded to each other. Thanks eye opening.
I can hear a difference, though not too massive. I think I prefer Maple in almost all of these tests. But it depends on the style of playing, genre, etc.
Was getting some great Baroness vibes from the earlier tests, really enjoyed it.
I like the looks of a maple fingerboard and also the feel.I do not think there is a tone difference between the 2
But maple wears out right?
Solid wood body guitars age beautifully and sound better overtime unlike laminated guitar bodies because the wood fibres will in time VIBRATE sympathetically with the vibrating strings. In multi-laminate guitar fingerboards/bodies the wood fibres cannot align easily with the sound waves and are broken up by the glued interfaces. Hence laminate cheap chipboard guitars do not improve with age. Solid wood will always be more sonorous and carry better sustain than laminate guitars. Try this! Put a vibrating tuning fork on a solid body guitar compared to a laminate body guitar, the difference in sustain is markedly noticeable👏 Even more marked on cheap laminate classical guitars compared to solid wood tops there is a huge difference in tonal and dynamic range at all frequencies.
@@trevorsaunar3158 tony iommi laminated his fingerboard
Mmmmm Mapel
@@trevorsaunar3158 I think if you played so much that you wear down your fretboard, you can just get a new neck every decade. Plus if you wanted to, you could probably refinish (ie; re-laquer/varnish) the fretboard when you start wearing through it to the wood.
Clapton said it was the feel made the difference
There is some truth to this though, especially if the maple one has a finish on the fretboard while the rosewood is just plain naked wood.
no,actually there isn't any difference or if there is it is so subtle that you couldn't tell the difference without expensive calibration and comparison instruments.
+ trillriff-axegrinder
Why do people who don't believe in "tone woods" always talk about comparisons using elaborate testing gear? - the only relevant thing is whether the woods sound different to your own ears.
+trillriff-axegrinder Fingers are pretty expensive, and you can calibrate things with them, which is probably why a finished maple fretboard feels different then rosewood and people have a preference.
agree. The feel to the player for me matters.
I like maple because my ears can't tell much of a difference and I love the way maple ages. It just gets a cool mojo to it on the fretboard.
There are subtle differences. You would never hear it in a mix.
Randy Lott
You’re right. In a mix, the difference would be a lot more difficult to pick out.
When choosing a certain neck, when all choices are types of wood, it isn’t sound you should be using to determine which to get, but feel. Maple is much smoother, and easier to play, for me anyway. Plus, much of the vibration through the neck is being muffled by your hand anyway.
I honestly never knew there was supposed to be a difference in tone between the two. I always just thought it was about feel and playability. I’ve always preceded maple because it always feels better to me.
I preferred the Maple... go figure! I've always liked Rosewood Fretboards both for their sound and looks however, after watching your comparison... I think I've found a new appreciation for the one Maple on my Mexican Strat. Love your Video's, Lots of useful and unbiased information in a fun and easy to follow format. You're a Natural at this... Good on you!
Solid maple has always been better.
The rosewood is warm and creamy. The maple is bright and shiny. I prefer the look of maple but I play rosewood.
But, for all of the guitar manufacturer snobs who sell you guitars, they will say that they used a Rosewood fingerboard because it is BRIGHTER than Maple. So, you are simply hearing with your eyes. Thinking that a brighter color sounds brighter and that a darker color sounds darker. This mistake happens every time that someone looks at the color of the fingerboard. So, your eyes and ears lie to you. Simple as that. It's not just you, it's most people that see dark sound etc.
You looked it up......lol, so, wherever you looked it up at was incorrect. Just trying to help you out.
You have the ultimate collection of “vs.” videos. Every comparison I search, you have a video for it, thanks man.
+John C No problem ☺
I'm glad you're enjoying the channel!
That was an interesting comparison. I've always been a rosewood player, because of the feel and the sound. I guessed correctly everytime whenever I heard rosewood. :D To me it sounds different to Maple, a bit fuller. I can't really explain it, except say that maple has a twangier sound and whenever I play on it I feel as it my fingers just slide off the neck. Yuck.
Thanks for the video!
Wow, I'm really surprised! Even though the difference in tone is minor, I've noticed it. I loved the rosewood neck tone, it sounds a bit warmer and more well balanced than that of the maple one. But as for how do they look, to my mind, a mapple neck guitar looks more genuine. So, now I've got a dilemma between a perfect tone and a prefect look 😬
Exactly what I thought too
You probably noticed the difference in playing, not the difference in fingerboard material.
Rosewood is my favorite guitar wood 😌
Rosewood is a softer wood, i believe, and, i have 2 guitars with rosewood, where the wood is quite worn. Or, maybe, i play those guitars more?
As far as I know, the fingerboard material is a matter of preference for feel
Apparently not, listened to lots of guitars, it affects the sound as well, sometimes TH-camrs even ruin their pick up comparison videos because of it, Rosewood is more bluesy and deeper-warmer where maple can be more country-ish and bright-direct sounding, both work for metal :P.
I feel the same. Both my fingers and eyes prefer maple
Well you should watch this video instead of leaving a comment first.
Now, back again 5 years later...Darrell, thanks again for this excellent comparison!
I literally only care about the fretboard wood for the looks (and usually i like maple better)
I remember watching a Trent Reznor interview where he talks about how Atticus Ross taught him the benefits of rearranging the studio. Somehow, even though the instruments were the same with the same sounds, the different aesthetic differences or arrangements of the instruments would change their approaches to those instrument. I think this is probably what people experience when they talk about maple vs rosewood, etc.
Makes sense, you're dealing with the human psyche after all. Subtle changes alter your subconscious processing.
Exactly. The sound is the same, but your approach to playing will be slightly different.
Wow, the differences are almost nothing. I plugged in to the headphones, and did the whole thing blind. I guessed right most of the time, but I had to hear both of them.
If he just played one, on a black screen, and asked whether it was a maple or rose, I couldn't pick it out. I don't think anyone could, other than 50/50 guessing.
That's right.
Loved the video and I loved the comments even more. There is a slight difference in tone between maple and rosewood fingerboards, there is no doubt.. Some of it is caused by the wood directly, but I believe its more because we play them both differently. They both have different surface textures, which offer different resistances to our fingers.. So its logical that we play em differently to play same notes. I have to work harder to bend notes on rosewood fingerboard, thus bends are more aggressive... And that I am sure affects tone.
I’ve had rosewood neck guitars for the last 20 years and just picked up one with a maple neck. I thought the PUPs made the difference but my maple neck guitar does sound brighter!
I worked for Fender from 1972 - 1999 (Luthier, Floor Super, Prod Mgr, Off-shore Prod Mgr). I was also a studio musician during that time. I have both Rosewood and Maple in my extensive collection of Strats and Tele's from the 1950's thru 2000 and while I love both my ALWAYS go to is ALWAYS a Maple neck/board Tele and Strat. Reason? You can always diminish the brightness and note clarity of a Maple neck with your amp (or distortion) or "the board" you are recording thru, BUT, you can't add that Maple brightness back when the guitar has a Rosewood or Ebony board. Period! BTW, my favorite studio Gibson guitar is my 1972 L6S that has a one-piece maple neck and maple body and 7-selection rotary selector switch like a ES-335 "Lucille" model
Vint Guitarz I disagree with you that amp, or any other kind of, tone controls can compensate the very subtle differences between fingerboard material. The differences are much more substantial than frequency response, which is all that tone controls can affect. The volume envelope of every note is noticeably different on a maple fingerboard. That has nothing to do with tone.
Vint Guitarz hmm... that’s a great point. Thank you for diminishing my regret for having a maple fretboard on my strat. After this video my wheels were turning, but your point makes sense. I pretty much always roll down the treble knob as most strat players do
I have an American Strat HSS that shipped and still has a RW fretboard. I also an EVH Wolfgang with Maple and a newer one that has Ebony. I realise that this comparison is not apples to apples, but... I have never loved the RW in my mind it does not have the bite during aggressive playing that the Maple does. In my findings, especially when used on a pure Rock machine like an EVH Wolfgang special with Ebony FB, the Ebony is the best materrial for Rock and Metal. You mentioned that you equate Ebony with Rosewood. In you opinion; why is Eddie Van Halen and a large percentage of Pro gigging Metal players have made the switch to Ebony? Cheers!
@@danrebeiz4598 you should regret
Very well said
3:47 I was like oh yeah that's shape of my heart but it wasn't
thought it was lucid dreams
@@sethaleman6033 you mean shape of my heart
Same. I was like that's the shape of my lucid dreams
I had the same thought, but with the first riff being yellow ledbetter but not really
One thing I absolutely hate about maple boards is how sticky they get from sweaty fingers. Rosewood soaks it up, and is still smooth.
You're right dude.😀
cleaning maple is much less work. A quick wipe with cleaner and you're good. Cleaning rosewood means getting out all that sweat and finger cheese thats in the wood, which is more work. Then you have to oil it after you clean it so it doesn't dry out.
This is not a big deal with "satin" finish maple necks/fretboards. But when it is "vintage lacquer"... Not great.
The difference was so subtle it's not worth arguing about, now the way it looks and feels is different. I have maple on my Strat and I love it. But I love the feel of ebony the best.
Extremely late to the party, but I was surprised that, to my ears, the maple bass notes sounded better every time. More resonant. I expected the opposite.
There's quite a noticeable difference between them: the maple is brighter, the bass and treble stand out and it sounds clearer; the rosewood highlights the mids more and the sound is a bit darker and more pasty with less definition when you play multiple strings together. I like maple more, at least on that guitar.
@DISGRUNTLED DEWEY wdym?
They sound the same to me. It’s just the variance in play is what you might be hearing
@DISGRUNTLED DEWEY You guys are deaf...
Very interesting. I agree with your summation, but a fly landing on the tone knob would make more difference to the sound in my opinion. Thanks for your video
No it wouldn't. Thats like saying you can record two different peoples voices and roll off the treble on the EQ in a mix later and they would sound like the same person. There's way more to the tone of a guitar than just EQ.
The only difference is in my imagination.
agreed, it borders imagination, he could fool us and tell us it was always the same guitar and I would not second guess it.
May be in quality of elaboration during production, but not in sound, IMO. The influence of neck wood is rather weak, other factors are stronger, the strongest is that of pick-ups (here the same).
Yep, physics of sound waves prove the wood's got nothing to do with tone (save sustain). But hey, let's let them take some more designer drugs so they can "hear the wood".
Ha haaaaaaaaa!
+antonius augustus go back to school to study physics,as a audio engineer i can give a explanation of how wood affect tone,but first your studies please ;D
The maple sounded noticeably nicer to my ear, I was surprised there was so much difference. However, I can't stand the feel of a maple fingerboard so I'm a rosewood fan.
Kudos for taking the time to swap out necks, thus forestalling any debate regarding differences in instruments.
It's funny, go to any guitar forum, and you can find endless debate regarding various woods and their _vast_ effect on tone, whether they be on fingerboards, bodies, or even just the headstock cap.
I think most of those folks, though, would have to involve a luthier if it came to swapping necks. :)
And what most of them seem to leave out is the one and absolutely most important factor regarding tone: the player.
+Cornelius Sneed Well said!!
Damn right. A poor workman blames his tools.
As a bass player, I worked with a great guitar player for many years. He had a '58 Strat body, with an early-sixties Tele neck on it. It looked a bit weird, but sounded wonderful. And as things go, after you got used to Pat with that guitar, it just looked like Pat.
Unfortunately, one night he got hustled by one of those "You sounded great! Here, let me give you a hand carrying your gear out." guys. And before he had a chance to notice, the old Strat was gone.
He wound up buying a Squier Tele as a temporary replacement. And of course he noticed a difference, but I think that difference was mostly in feel, and in his head. I'd stood next to him for years on stage, and to me he sounded pretty much exactly the same. Blindfold me and I would not have noticed any difference at all.
Another example is a guitar player (named Ron) who used to play around here in Top 40 bands in the early eighties. He had that slithery, legato Holdsworth style, and his tone, sustain, and all that stuff were amazing. And the amp he played through was an old Fender Bassman head, of which the bottom half of the cabinet had been cut away. He set it upside-down on his speaker cab, and there it sat, with all its guts exposed and sticking up. :)
All the local guitar players flocked to listen to him, and once he admitted he had modded his Bassman, many of them ran right out and bought Fender amps and begged him to hotrod them. He did so for most of them, reluctantly.
And I was present when one of those guitar players tried out his newly modded amp for the first time. And, boy, was he disappointed. He sounded nothing like Ron! So he called Ron up, and Ron came over. He strapped on my buddy's guitar and played through my buddy's new amp. And suddenly, there was that Ron sound all the guys were after but couldn't get.
Once you develop your own sound, you're pretty much going to sound like you, and all the gear mods or replacements are probably not going to make you sound like anyone else. :)
In that vein, the thing I often find is that newer players often go in search of that "perfect tone" without actually learning to play first. I think this is why articles that list all the gear of "guitar gods," even down to their picks and cables are so popular.
New players often seem to think that if they can just get all the same gear, they will sound just like their heroes. This, to me, would be rather sad if it were true, because what it says is the player makes no difference whatsoever. Play on the same plank, with the same wires, through the same signal modifiers and amplification, and you can't help but sound a certain way, whether you are a rank beginner or a seasoned pro.
Fortunately this is not at all the case, but the mythology persists, and drives the sales of lots of gear.
+Cornelius Sneed Yup, it's all about selling gear. Practising is hard work - buying a new pedal is easy!
i love maple because its one piece and its looks better than the rosewood.
I agree but rosewood doesn' t get dirty as easily. Or show it as quickly as rosewood. I think that is why most guitars manufacters us rosewood for their products. All my Fenders have maple fretboard. I just think they look more traditional. My Opinoin.
955rocket i couldn't hear A LOT of difference between woods, but I want your opinion guys on the look, I'm gonna buy a modern player Jag in crimson red body and basing only in looks, should I go with all maple or maple/rosewood? I'm more prone to the maple but I want your opinions :)
Your guitar, go with whatever you want. I think some guitars look better with a maple fretboard others rosewood. Personally for dark reds I like rosewood though seeing as you asked, although colour of the pickguard can sway me, it really is dependent on the general look of the guitar.
Nick Hartley I just picked the body because it's cheap and all mahogany, it's a modern player Jaguar in red. It's missing the p90s and for me only in looks I'm torn with the colors, also it hasn't got a pickguard it's all plain wood
Denis Ho you are incorrect
The BIGGEST difference was caused by the doughnuts I was eating when I watched this video! One was a jelly doughnut and the other was a plain, no frosting or other decoration doughnut. I found myself deciding that I liked the jelly doughnut better, and went to get another jelly doughnut! So I pretty much missed most of the video! THAT was unfortunate!
Can I just say: interesting comparison - but sublime playing too.
+David Franks Thanks David! ☺
AGREED!!! Sometimes, I think all the difference is in the fingers! We focus too much on the gear.
ok Jimi thanks
Wow I was wrong all the way even after playing three times. You made a very convincing comparison for me at least that the difference is so subtle that I have to agree that it would be visual preference now for me and the feel. Thank you for this "Outstanding" comparison. The fact that you used the same body and hardware really was important. I'm assuming the amp settings and amp itself were also the same.
For the comparisons, got the "neck" and "bridge" positions correct and felt fairly confident when choosing my answers for them. The middle position I got incorrect and found it more difficult to choose an answer. Anyone else had a similar experience?
Just about to enter the electric world and this comparison changed my perception for sure. I was pretty dead set on Rosewood (100% for looks), but for "this comparison" at least, I much preferred the Maple, especially in the neck position.
Great comparison video!
Two years later, and the debate is still going strong.
Same I got the middle pickup wrong. I’ve owned two telecasters. One with rosewood the other with maple. I prefer maple for sure but I almost never use the middle pickup.
I like maple for cleans. It resonates in my chest in a way that makes me smile and pleases me.
Love that riff you're doing at the beginning. Way cool.
Ok,..I’ll admit I was stumped even though I’ve played a Tele preferably all my life.
But to my experience,...there IS a slight in tone with the Maple 🍁 being a bit brighter sounding...but I feel that’s only the Neck or Bridge only tones...both Neck/Fingerboards seem to sound even in the middle position to me.
As for “feel” & aesthetics it’s a matter of taste I guess.
Nice comparison done though,..got the Blind Test totally wrong!!..🤭
I clearly hear the diffrence between those two necks! Rosewood sounds darker than maple and more round. Maple sounds like a bite in the ass! Sick and bright! I have 2 teles and i changed on one of mine neck with maple fingerboard to stratocaster japanese '84 neck with another radius and rosewood fingerboard, and my tele became almost like a gibson in neck position! Maybe it's only because it has humbucker pickups. But on other tele i use maple with single coils and that's a tele sound it has to be! Greetings from Russia. Hope my english good enough :) And again thanks for the video. Blind test was funny.
Размышления Музыканта oh thank god someone else heard it too. I was about to comment that most of the people on here must tone deaf not to hear it. There is a definite difference between the two. And yes, that maple is piercingly bright. That’s why the country players love these things.
The difference is almost unnoticeable to my ear. I always preferred the feel and look of maple on a Fender. Never really liked the look of rosewood on Fenders, much in the same way maple looks odd on a Gibson.
i do like the maple but hardly noticeable. But before I watched this video I liked maple waaay more for its brightness and clarity. damn you and your accurate comparisons defunkting my maple neck arrogance.
+jess d 😄 I do what I can :)
Congrats Darrell ! Your videos are amazing, now I am sure what guitar I am going to buy!
+Luiz Carlos Souza Awesome!
I'm glad the videos are helpful 😀
Darrell Braun Guitar do you have instagram ? Here in Brazil I am sharing your videos but i dont have you official hash tag!!!
i am writing #darrellbraun there.
+Luiz Carlos Souza Thanks for sharing!
I'm just on Facebook (DarellBraunGuitar) and here on TH-cam :)
+Darrell Braun Guitar what was that first song you played
I agree about the “nasally” and increased definition on single notes maybe, of rosewood. I would like to see the frequency graph, because it seems to be bumping up certain frequencies that remind me of old portable transistor radios. I hate to say I prefer maple, due to the fact that one is solid wood, and the other is a fretboard. We need the solid vs solid, comparison. It’s a good video though.
Having been in home electronics for over 20 years, specifically in high-end audio equipment, I have found that discerning small differences in sound is a learned skill. To a casual listener, the difference between a $100 speaker, a $1,000 speaker, and a $10,000 speaker are not apparent. Also, the general public listens to the music, not the instrument. If Eric Clapton played "Layla" on a plywood guitar, most people would enjoy it just the same. If you like the look or feel of one wood over the other, buy it. Unless you're a very experienced musician, you probably won't notice a sound difference.
also, those high vs low end differences are not necessarily good vs bad, but rather often just..well differences
Nope just snake oil, only total blind testing proves you wrong.
Ah, beautiful clarity ... nicely done, thank you! I was totally convinced that I could hear it clearly in the blind test ... and got it totally wrong
The difference is tiny, I found I could hear it most in the held more sustained notes, the rosewood sounded a fraction warmer. But man these video's are busting preconceptions!
Barely noticeable and I was surprised that although I like a warm tone, I liked the more defined sound of the maple better.
dreddjenkins your not wrong, there are people who do have ears that finely tuned that it's a big noticeable difference. But for the rest of us....
I doubt it. I have 2 G&L ASAT Specials from roughly the same time period. Once is a Special Deluxe and has a mahogany body and a maple top. The other has a swamp ash body. Otherwise, they're essentially identical. You can't tell the difference side by side.
All the differences between guitar parts are tiny, my boi.
The choice of wood in the neck does not affect the sound, as this video proves. The choice of wood in the body also does not affect the sound of an electric guitar. Only the pickups, and their adjustment affect the sound of an electric guitar, assuming the strings and all other adjustments are a constant.
I was expecting the maple to sound brighter but it was the other way around. however, I've previously noticed that strings can make a big difference so there may be slight difference due to that.
+CALVIN LEWIS I used the same set of stings for both instruments :)
CALVIN LEWIS I have a lot of guitar that has rosewood and I never expected this. That the maple would sound more warm than rosewood.
shockingly i have heard a comparison of two identical guitars
using the same electronics,one made entirely of maple the other
mahogany and again the maple guitar sounded warmer and smoother,
WTF? i thought maple was supposed to add brightness?
elevenAD exactly. Kinda weird to hear it sound like this. Hahah
CALVIN LEWIS I'm sure some tone was lost in the strings when the neck was changed.
I love your down-to-earth approach to tone and the tropes that go with it.
To be fair both maple and rosewood are pretty much equally hard woods so big part of the tone difference is due to the fact that maple is covered with hard lacquer and the rosewood is just bare wood. And even still it's not really a big enough difference to sway you either way sound-wise in my opinion. Just get what looks the best to you.
From my experience I agree. The feel and look are a more significant difference then tone.
i agree with this too
I dyed my maple fretboard darker to look like ebony, because i can't stand the color and look of maple on a guitar, looks like construction wood
I love the dark color of ebony but I don't care for its fragility/susceptibility to temperature changes, or the high maintenance it requires having to oil it all the time so it doesn't crack. So I just "ebonized" my maple fretboard, it worked pretty good
Overall rosewood is my favorite and the color looks amazing to me
Siento una gran diferencia entre un mastil y otro . El arce suena más brillante y chillón y el palo de rosa suena con más cuerpo y más graves. Hay mucha diferencia entre una y otra
@@luismudry yo también siento un poco de diferencia pero sí me parece que depende más de que uno tenga poliuretano encima y el otro esté natural, o te refieres a ambos al natural?
[Spoilers ahead! Don't read until you've watched the video!!]
Wow I got the middle section wrong and the bridge section wrong. I thought the the two were in reverse, Maple/rosewood and maple/rosewood. Though I had to admit the last one was really hard for me!
I always assumed that tonewood was a joke, but I can hear the difference! Thanks for the information!
+Gabriel Azzopardi 👍😀
Wow! I can definitely hear the difference! I’d been torn between a maple neck and a rosewood color nice I’m able to afford a Telecaster! The maple had more of that classic jangle to me. Great video! Thanks!
DISGRUNTLED DEWEY ...some people naturally have a keener sense of tone, pitch and different auditory nuances.
I went into this video being biased towards the rosewood but I actually think the maple has a clearer tone and is a bit more saturated
I agree. The maple sounds like it has more note separation. It's funny, I have always played rosewood necks, and also do a lot of distortion. Think the maple may handle the dirty tones a wee bit better.
@@norikomoser try a maple Tele you'll love it👍
It was less mellow. But I actually disliked that kek
Awesome video comparison, but remember guys, while there is a slight audible difference, it could be attributed to the neck wood itself as well. Every piece of timber sounds different, even in the same species.
Tone is about 80% player, 10% amp, 5% scale length, 4% strings, 1% wood in my opinion.
I would put scale length at a close second to player, ahead of the others, but basically I agree with you. At least you realize that the player is far more important than the gear. :)
Also, an instrument's tone, and even its perceived and expected tone, can influence the way someone plays it. So, really, the only way to do these tests accurately would be to blindfold the player as well.
Cornelius Sneed Perceived tone does have an effect on mentality and playing style, never thought of that though, but certainly does! I agree, scale length can make a huge difference, but with proper amp/electronic settings, it can be reduced to a negligible difference as well, unless playing clean.
+ Dan L
"Every piece of timber sounds different, even in the same species"
Exactly right - which is why you can go into a Guitar Center and try every one of a new batch of supposedly identical Strats or Teles they've just got in and they'll all sound slightly different, and sometimes one will stand out as sounding head and shoulders above the others.
britvox95z Most often the difference between identical Strats in a store is setup, not sound.
+ Cornelius Sneed
I used Guitar Center as a example, but I can guarantee you'd find the same thing in a store that has all their guitars set up before putting them on the sales floor.
FYI, Jack Person (ex Allman Brothers) said he tried all the Strats in a store before walking out with a Squier Bullet. He said it had such a natural resonance unplugged that he just just knew it would sound great. (There are videos of him playing that same guitar on youtube).
Thanks brother for all the cool vids. You are a myth buster....
+Faz Poarag No problem! In glad you like the channel :)
The solid comparison i was looking for. I own both on two strats but they are slightly different guitars, different pups. Here we realize there is actually no tone difference with rosewood or mapple fretboard, only a feeling difference under the fingers (which is, yes, a lot). Brings me back to a sort of "play more, wonder less" about guitars...
I don't think the tonal differences are big enough to make me choose RW or Maple. More important is the feel under the fingers. And a bigger diff here is the amount and type of lacquering you get on some maple necks. You make great vids, BTW.
I totally agree, some rosewood necks feel dry to me, they tend to bite (even if only a little), whenever i play a maple, its like my fingers tend to glide with the only resistence being my beginner to intermediate ability! Have love, do love and will always love the finish on a maple.
very subtle difference but i love maple looks in fender
One of the best 'comparison' videos I've seen as you eliminated as many variables as possible. We've all seen videos of someone using two different guitars for comparisons like this. As others have posted, I think the eyes lead the ears in this case. First of all, I could rarely hear a difference and when I could, I had the two necks reversed! Generally, guitars that have maple necks are quite different from guitars with rosewood necks. My Gibson Les Paul (rosewood) sounds different from my Fender Telecaster (maple); but the pickups are, obviously different. Yeah, get what looks and feels good to you!
2020....youve come a long way baby!....because your good at what you do!...another blast from the past.....both sound the same to me!
I vote for maple 🍁
Not only for the sound but the feel. Just can’t stand rosewood.
I feel maple is lighter brighter colder and firmer which feels good 😌
Thank you! Great job 👏
Good answer, too bad it’s wrong.
It actually does make a difference. Thanks so much for this time consuming test. Cheers mate 😊
It is, in fact, fun to hear these. But first, this was about fretboards, not necks. Both necks were maple, but the fbs were the different feature. And I still think you have to have a theory how that is even possible. The neck is anchored to the body through the maple wood only, not the fretboard. The string is isolated atop a metal fret on one end and the metal bridge on the other, and the bridge is anchored to the body wood. The fretboard is isolated from the neck by a layer of glue. Anyway there's also a potentially more significant factor that those two specific necks were 1-2 years apart in age (based on serial numbers). So any number of factors could come into play that are more significant than the fretboard material. Good, positive exploration of the issue, though, for folks to take from it what they will!!
I like how rosewood sounds with the bridge pickup and how it feels on my fingers but I like how maple sounds on middle and neck pickups.
Fair comparison......Maple sound bit bright and clear........Rosewood bit dark +bass....
Maple- solo
Rosewood - band
excellent imagination. keep it up!
Maple seems to give more definition on the treble frequencies.
Whereas rosewood gives more definition on the lower frequencies.
Maple seems to make the overall sound "blend" more and has a bit more dimension to it.
Rosewood is a bit "cleaner" and more plain, in-your-face sounding.
P. B. Nope, pure snake oil bull crap. It only "sounds" better because you can see with your eyes it's maple...
preach
Pure bull, pure snake oil. Zero evidence.
@@airgliderz Its not about being better or worse. It's about the sound each player goes after. I, personally, prefer rosewood. The text I wrote intends on clarifying how I perceive each one in comparison, I don't bother saying which is best. That is a matter of taste.
Listen to it again and read what I wrote, and you'll notice I'm not saying one is better than the other.
@@airgliderz I personally don't like what maple does to the definition on the low frequencies. That is the reason I prefer rosewood.
But it is undeniable that maple's more sparkly on the treble spectrum.
I wish I could have both :D
Sounds like rosewood is a tiny bit warmer, and any differences in how the attack sounds can be put on the player's hands.
Or in the fact that the rosewood was distinctly more open-sounding in the mids and that would also account for a clearer attack.
Thumbs up. You did a lot of work switching necks and restringing to do this video for us. You're right, the differences are subtle and I was wrong 2/3 times. I do think the maple is ever so slightly more trebly, and the rosewood slightly smoother sounding. I agree with you however, it's the pick ups that make the biggest difference. Thx for this video sir.
maples brighter, rosewood darker litterallyy
I have always seen it this way my friend
It's psychological, you approach, handle, and attack the instrument differently as the imagery of either the maple, or rosewood fretboard impregnates your soul birthing tonal offspring. May music overpopulate the planet
The clip first played- "lay my burdens" intro by disciple. Love your taste of music dude.
+Eben Aaron 😀👍👍👍
Thanks , I really liked that piece, I wondered what it was
that telecaster is like a mirror wow.
What a great video. Surprised I preferred the maple and the difference was very noticeable.
bridge pickup.. 2nd guitar maple.. sounded a bit brighter. I still doubt there can be a difference. If there is a difference its because the necks are physically not the same.. different nut, different action, stretching of the strings when you changed the necks...
I think they sound the same but the playing is slightly different between the 2. What I know for sure is that guitar looks killer with a rosewood neck!
Maple has a trebly harshness that i really like
Very interesting! I voted with the majority on each one apparently, and was only right on 2/3. I agree that it's all a matter of preferring how each one plays. I for one love heavily lacquered maple necks. String bends are so buttery and smooth on a nice glossy maple fingerboard. Mm mm.
OK. So, ANYTIME you are trying to do a tone or sound comparison, there should be NO effects in the signal chain! Especially, especially distortion.
So many TH-camrs do tone demo's without ever just playing clean through an amp. I just don't understand why - so many differences and nuances get lost when you add some drive or, god forbid, high gain distortion. Then why do a tone demo in the first place?
Especially when you are looking at the difference between $200 necks and $600 necks. One and two piece necks, etc...
You can't tell the tone difference of fretboard wood through an amp. Now, if this were a test with acoustic guitars, that's a different story.
You just don't see any decent acoustics with maple fingerboards though, do you?
Great production, thanks!!! Rock on!!! I prefer rosewood, like you said at the beginning it has a warmer tone. Rock on!!!
@stkbkr1, hey man rosewood is no good because it looks 'dirty'. A maple fretboard is a clean looking honest guitar and people can see your fingers when you play. You have nothing to hide and I've tried both over the years, maple is the best!!
Battosai Jenkins i like the way rosewood sounds but love the way maple looks
The notes have more body, are warm and brighter IMO
Great video, and very very nice the idea of the blind poll! Thumbs and big toes up :-)
Oh at 54 I've tried um all and ever so often find one that feels much more comfortable than others .... So comfort before tone . there are so many variables on feel and action I've never really considered the fractional possible tone difference......theres a knob for that... Come on there electric ...