The first couple minutes are just our tube amplifier with the Strymon Flint pedal for a spring reverb sound. Then when you see the silver mic you hear both microphone and DI with no amplifier.
I custom order the sets from strings by mail. But you can also buy D’addario’s set of Chromes for a 7-string guitar and not use the 11 gauge high E string.
Beautiful guitar! Any chance you could provide details on the rubber you are using? I’ve made one of these using a flat piece but the cylinder sounds great
Hello and thanks for the compliment! It’s 1/4” rubber cord and we notch them with the same files that we use on the bone nut. This keeps the strings surrounded by rubber on three sides while also holding their spacing unlike the other more common designs. The chord is then glued into a matching groove on a piece of ebony.
Sounds like nothing I've heard before. Amazing
Thanks so much for your nice words!
Where is the distortion coming from?
Love your work! :)
Thanks so much! For most of our videos, the drive comes from the natural break-up in our 5-watt amp.
Sounds Deferent and neat deep Basie
Thank you, that's exactly what we were going for!
How is this recorded? Just the pickup through an amp? Or micd too? Sounds great
The first couple minutes are just our tube amplifier with the Strymon Flint pedal for a spring reverb sound. Then when you see the silver mic you hear both microphone and DI with no amplifier.
What kind of strings do you use for this? Hard to find baritone flat wounds near me
I custom order the sets from strings by mail. But you can also buy D’addario’s set of Chromes for a 7-string guitar and not use the 11 gauge high E string.
@@MoodGuitars great thanks! Which set do you order?
Beautiful guitar! Any chance you could provide details on the rubber you are using? I’ve made one of these using a flat piece but the cylinder sounds great
Hello and thanks for the compliment! It’s 1/4” rubber cord and we notch them with the same files that we use on the bone nut. This keeps the strings surrounded by rubber on three sides while also holding their spacing unlike the other more common designs. The chord is then glued into a matching groove on a piece of ebony.
@@MoodGuitars thanks for the info!