Rick Turner wrote:Ahh, another time travel portal to the past! Top photo at at the infamous Chicken Ranch (I can't tell if that's Frank Fuller or Ron...that was Frank's bench to the guy's immediate right; mine to the right of that), lower left photo taken in the back electronics lab section of 60 Brady St., lower right being the Pretzel guitar with it's final pickups/electronics setup.
Note my comments re. strings in the article. I have gotten to participate in the design of one type of bass string set...what are now sold as the Thomastik-Infeld acoustic bass strings and that I use on my Renaissance instruments. They're like oversized classical guitar strings...nylon core with bronze windings. What I'd love to be able to design is a transitional string that more smoothly bridges the voicing gap between wound and unwound guitar strings whether they're nickel, stainless, or bronze wound. Particularly with electric strings, the difference between a wound D and plain G is horrible; wound G to unwound B on acoustic sets.
Just to add a completely shameless plug for Rick and the Ren instruments....
I continue to be absolutely flattened by my Ren 6 (bass). It is hands down the most unbelievable fretless I have ever played. The neck is amazing, he quality of workmanship is outstanding The sound and tone is transparent, woody, growly while still maintaining a unique warmth and depth.
The strings are unique as well. They take a bit of getting used to as they feel like much less tension that standard strings. But, once the initial squirrely-ness is over, they too are wonderful.