That is gorgoes muddslide! It looks a bit smaller bodied than the typical deadnaught which is great. My go too acoustic these days is a little parlor guitar, actually one of those cheap little gretsch americanas. It needed some fret work, a new nut and a full set up but it plays and sounds great. I like the bite smaller bodied acoustics have.
Still I'd love a big bassy gretsch like in the OP. |
Thanks!
Yeah, I neglected to mention it's basically parlor-sized. Bigger than a lot of parlors, maybe more like an 00 or something.
I'm no expert on acoustic body styles, although I've never been a big drednaught fan for some reason.
I've played and owned a lot of larger-bodied acoustics that I really enjoyed--jumbos and such--but I prefer the feel and, typically, the sound/projection from smalle bodies.
Years back I read some scientific paper of acoustic guitar-related phenomena that was inclusive of some pretty serious aural testing between sizes, wood types, etc. of guitars and the findings essentially showed that smaller bodied acoustics in general were louder, more sonically balanced (between lows-mid-highs) and projected better than larger sizes.
This was attributed to larger sized acoustics having the sound vibrations remain inside the body of the instrument knocking around longer and losing some of the intrinsic tonal qualities, etc. whereas in smaller guitars the sound was pushed out of the soundhole quicker.
I certainly don't claim this couldn't be found to be bullshit, but in my experience it does seem pretty accurate an assessment.
I don't want to sell my music. I'd like to give it away because where I got it, you didn't have to pay for it. -Captain Beefheart (Don Van Vliet)