Jump to content
Gibson Brands Forums

EuroAussie

All Access
  • Posts

    7,456
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    7

Posts posted by EuroAussie

  1. On 9/22/2020 at 1:31 AM, olie said:

    Call me old fashioned but that red burst to me is quintessential "Hummingbird". You can't mistake it for anything else.

     

    Old fashioned.

    • Sad 1
  2. There's something special and pure about the natural Hummingbird, unlike her tarty, attention seeking burst' sister.

    Will look amazing in 10-15 years when that top darkens and a few decent dings get into that wood.

    Glad you got her with the Tulip tuners, for me its Tulips or nothing on a Hummingbird, like the J-200.

    • Confused 1
  3. Its a challenging guitar to play and the tone is specific, not to everyone's liking.  The slope shouldered rosewood long scale designed is quite a challenge to harness, it really a has a lot under the bonnet. This is turn makes it a challenging strummer, best suited to hybrid strumming, but excels at single note flatpicking and fingerpicking. As Jinder mentioed, this power and volume clashes with the male voice, i had the same experinece when i owned mine.

    Also, the tone is somewhat rustic, a bit rough n ragged, especially compared to the smoother J-45.

    Id say those two things ,and simply less marketing, exposur had an impact on the AJ. Simply not as appealing to a broad audience, but more a tighter segment, which in turn impacts sales big time.

     

  4. Lars, its highly inconsistent. In that sometimes you nail the phrasing, pitch and melody, and other times its hopelessly off.  But what Im noticing is you seem to sound at your best when you attack the notes / phrases with some strength.  And i think alos think about the how you phrase the words, sometimes the melody, words and phrasing just dont get at all, other times its spot on. 

    So i would suggest try to attack the vocals a bit, just a bit, let out the feeling, think about the phrasing so it comes out naturally rather than trying to make it fit. It might mean writing different words to fit the melody / phrase.

  5. On 7/17/2020 at 2:02 PM, MissouriPicker said:

    Nice version of “Hurt.”  Good vibe with the bird and your vocal.

     

    Thanks a lot Larry, it was a long, long time ago, good to hear from ya ..

    Just on the topic, i recall this specific video is what fired up my desire for the Hummingbird orginally, some 12 yeras ago or so.  Dunno exactly what i love about this clip, but its a mix of that rocky mid range sound , the nectar dripping on those single note lines and that cut through in the rhythm ... or maybe just the shitty qualty video that kinda gave that tone .. but anyways, i find it captures that Humminbird blend of laid back folkiness and rock grit.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DpDueO5bxqU

     

  6. On 7/15/2020 at 6:54 AM, E-minor7 said:

    PB and ALD323 - I hope EA and not least father_of_pearl would chime in here. They're are both experts and could guide you further. 

     

    The Hummingbird nectar glaze ... saturate, saturated mids, warm, spaghetti like bass, thick trebles, slightly blunted ... thats how i would describe.

    I reckon this vid I recorded, jeez, 8 years ago now captures that HB tone i describe above rather well.

    I reckon strings have as much to do with getting that tone out as much as picks. Preferably well worn strings, PB's. In terms of pick, always used a Gibson mid, but recently found I like the tone of my Bird TV with a thick 1.0mm pick ... but i might try Em7's suggestion to try the light 0.50mm ..

    Quote

     

     

  7. 22 hours ago, j45nick said:

    To my ear, despite the mediocre recording, that sounds just like a ceramic-saddled early  'bird should sound.  Shades of the early Stones, etc.

    Like Em7 says, I'd like to hear it with mellowed-in strings, and maybe a fat "soft" pick like a Blue Chip or a Red Bear.

     

    Ive recently discovered how my HB TV sounds so much fuller and deeper with a thicker pick. Normally I play with a midium thicked pick around .75mm, but my Bird really responds positively with a 1.33mm pick. Fuller, richer, both strummed and when picked individually.  It makes sense as the guitar has that fundamentally flatish tone, and a good, hard pick with some bite can really bring that tone and volume out.

  8. On 4/25/2020 at 11:56 AM, uncle fester said:

    my issue with my roadies is they sometimes forget to separate all the colors of the m&ms in my dressing room before I get there.  throws off the karma of the whole night.

    oh i hate it when they do that !

  9. On 4/4/2020 at 4:34 PM, Razorpig said:

    I've got a beautiful Custom Shop SJ-200, which is my favorite guitar, until I play my new Doves in Flight.......then that is my favorite.....until I play the SJ again.  I also have a Jumbo Martin, a J-40, which I like allot, and when I play it I really miss it, appreciate it, glad I played it, but it never feels like the SJ or Doves in Flight.  Not even close.  Right now I'm in my Dove's phase, but I'll probably pick up the SJ in a day or two and go WOW!  I did read one comment about the scale length being the same, and he's right, so that aspect feels the same, however, the neck is completely different, and if you've been playing an SJ, or a big dreadnought, the Dove will feel very different.  My SJ is a Custom, but is still Maple, just like the Dove, but with the box being different sizes, I can hear a difference.  I almost went with a Hummingbird for different wood and a scale length the same as a Les Paul which is the easiest guitar to play, but wanted the DinF for lots of reasons, and I'm more than happy.  Go find one and play it, compare it with a Hummingbird, which is my next Acoustic........good luck.450408350_GibsonswithMartin3.thumb.jpg.3a31f62a12e753fc38601b68c7b54da6.jpg

     

    Know what you mean ... I have a J-150, Dove and J-40 and they get most airtime in that order ...with the J-40 quite a bit down behind the other two. Although the Martin Jumbo has a very unique voice, incredible depth and tone sustain, but just not as fun and versatile as the maple big birds.

    Im right now moving and was wondering if I only had to take three guitars with me it would be the J-150, Dove and Southern Jumbo.  And it had to be just one guitar Id be pretty satisfied just with the J-150.

     

  10. so you finally got the J-200 you always coveted mate ?  I remember you talking about owning one years ago on the AGF .. well done matey !

    As a side note i would ignore what the pricing says now. give it a month or two, wait till we go into a deep recession. its gonna be nasty but one upside is that guitar prices will drop drastically, in particular the used ones.

  11. Thanks for listening guys.  Its a pretty sloppy  job listening to it a bit later, timing not quite right but I got into the mood and thought, why not ?

    Yes, the Dove is a beast, it has a grittier, rockier tone compared to the maple super jumbo which is more lush, balanced.

    Both are amazing. Along with the Southern Jumbo  its the three Gibsons in my stable that get 90% of air time.

×
×
  • Create New...