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Pros and Cons of Multiscale Guitars | Fanned Frets | Extended Range and 7 or 8 String Guitar 1 год назад


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Pros and Cons of Multiscale Guitars | Fanned Frets | Extended Range and 7 or 8 String Guitar

Multiscale / fanned frets for electric guitar. A discussion around the pros and cons of a varying scale length on a guitar, which is usually built into an extended range guitar i.e. a 7 string or 8 string. Stay tuned for the demonstration of playing a multiscale 8 string at the end of the video! Larada review:    • Abasi Concepts Larada Master Series 8...   ---------- Subscribe: https://www.youtube.com/c/HighZ?sub_c... Twitter:   / highzproduction   Instagram:   / nos_corvidae   Tiktok:   / highzproductions   ---------- 00:00 Intro 00:09 Guitar is Abasi Concepts Larada Master Series 8 Pros 00:19 Longer scale length on bass side for tension, shorter on treble 00:45 More tension on low strings advantages 01:09 Some might find the look cool 01:25 Treble side is a standard scale length for playability 01:48 String sets more readily available Cons 02:10 Can use a pitch shifter on a more standard guitar to achieve easy low notes 02:32 Fret angle makes it hard to see what you’re playing 03:24 Bass side lower frets harder to play 03:33 Bridge angle requires you to change your playing technique completely 03:51 Pickup angle can interfere with picking The Verdict 04:05 Would I recommend it + alternatives 04:39 Try any multiscale before buying one to see if the difficult is worth it 05:17 Would I buy another multiscale? 05:27 Outro Demonstration 05:42 Low end tension on 8th string 05:46 Easy bend on high string 05:51 More low string demonstration 05:58 Split coil bridge + longer low string scale length for modern metal sound 06:16 Easy high string leads with bends and stable low string chug 06:33 Open low string into chugs plus harmonized high string lead 06:44 Cleans don’t sound too brittle even with DI mixed in 07:11 More low string fun and intro reprise 07:32 Tapping across multiple strings is harder with angled frets but not so bad across 2 07:48 Cat outro The multiscale has a striking and exotic appearance. One benefit is greater tension where you need it, on the lower strings, while maintaining a reasonable scale length on the treble side to preserve tone and ease of playability. The spirit behind this design is to increase tension for low tunings while keeping the scale length at a playable measurement for the treble strings. In theory this gives the best of both works for modern metal downtuning while enabling easy lead work. In practice the varying angle of the frets makes it difficult to play and difficult to see what one is playing, especially in live show situations. Overall I’d recommend trying any multiscale guitar before buying a specific one. They seem good in theory but they feel like an entirely different instrument when playing one. It can take a lot of getting used to and the difficulty might not be worth it if you already have a solution that works well enough. For example, instead of buying a multiscale instrument for a separate extreme low tuning, use a pitch shifter to tune down several steps with your existing guitar. Would I recommend one? I like mine but can’t recommend one based on the drawbacks noted in this description and in the video. Ultimately it’s up to you, and if you get one, cane make it work, and are happy with it, power to you!

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