Submitted by auriplane on Fri, 07/30/2010 - 23:45.
Just a nitpick--"scale" refers to width, not length. Full-scale classical and steel-string guitars both have a 25.6 inch scale, and therefore have the same fret spacing. Other stuff varies (action / girth / width / radius / hair color / flavor).
pkunk?
pkunk?
What?
What?
You started it.
You started it.
What?
What?
(No subject)
(No subject)
Pretty good. Some parts
Pretty good. Some parts sounded a bit rushed though.
Friends of the pag?
Parhelion said Friends of the
Parhelion said
Parhelion=Pedroz?
No, I'm not. I'm just trying
No, I'm not. I'm just trying to perpetuate memes that originate at this site.
Does that mean I can get you
Does that mean I can get you to start posting about snails?
Perhaps I can try.
Perhaps I can try.
How big are the frets on a
How big are the frets on a classical guitar compared to a steel string, cause dammit that " hand over neck " part is destroying my hand...
muahahahahahaha my work here
muahahahahahaha my work here is done.
They're not a different
They're not a different length, merely a different scale; wider width area.
Just a nitpick--"scale"
Just a nitpick--"scale" refers to width, not length. Full-scale classical and steel-string guitars both have a 25.6 inch scale, and therefore have the same fret spacing. Other stuff varies (action / girth / width / radius / hair color / flavor).
I hear girth is more
I hear girth is more important than length anyway.
I thought it was pretty good,
I thought it was pretty good, well done. A little more practice to fix the hesitations and I think you'll be golden.
Thanks, i'm waiting to hear
Thanks, i'm waiting to hear your performance too :)
Cool...thanks for the insight
Cool...thanks for the insight and causing me many feelings of ineptitude...
np!
np!