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Hi all,
I'm interested in adding a round-necked resonator to my world. I'd like to learn a bit of slide, but I also just really like the sound. I often play with 2 other acoustic guitarists, and I get lost abit in what we're doing. I'd like something different and cool to add to the sound. I typically play cords up the neck, 3-4 note voicings to accompany the cowboy cords that others are playing. I also play some lead.
I know I need to go play a bunch, but having played wooden and metal ones, I prefer the metal ones for their distinctiveness.
So what should I care about? What price range am I looking at for a solid resonator? I'm not interested in spending the earth but anything in 3 digits I'm ok with. What about on-board pickups? I also heard that some cheaper resonators are impossible/very hard to adjust intonation etc. Is that the case and if so how do I verify that mine can be adjusted?
Any other tips welcome.
Thanks
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Biscuit bridge single cone - patterned after the National Duolian and Triolian - think Son House, Mark Knopfler, Bukka White,
Spider bridge single cone - patterned after the original Dobros. Think Jerry Douglas (yes he plays square neck but it's that same sweet nasal bluegrass tone)
Tricone - three small cones driven by a T-shaped bridge. Think Bob Brozman, Tampa Red.
If it's a biscuit bridge single cone, be it metal or wooden bodied (they sound more similar than you might think) there is nothing better out there under a grand than Michael Messer guitars. I have owned two vintage National guitars (a 32 Triolian and a 33 Style O) and played dozens more, and frankly I wouldn't back myself to pick between an old Nat and a Messer in a blind test (listening, not playing mind....)
For spider cone, Gold Tone Paul Beard probably represents the best value
For tricones, I've never heard a cheap one that sounded close to a good one.....if that's where you're taste lies you should think about upping your budget and finding a National Resophonic.
Caveat: my points of reference are the original instruments. There are lots of people who have cheap or somehow not "properly" made or designed resos who love them, so let your ears decide.
I've played the Square neck Bobtail version which was great but I wanted a round neck.
I suspect you can get them second hand for around £350. This one cost me £200 £300. I'll report back.
Edit, typo. £300!!
http://www.buskerguitars.co.uk/
I still have a Harley Benton wooden body "HARLEY BENTON CUSTOM LINE CLR-SQUARE VS" that is very good, was only £130 new, but had to return it 3 times because the bridge was badly built, they made one in the end I think.
I think they then stopped selling that model, due to supplier issues
if you intend to play slide, I'd have a look at their current models
Another tip is that cones break in, a tonerite or placing near a speaker will accelerate this
I loved the sound & playability of the guitar.
Two things I would mention incase you haven't played one before:
Mine was heavy. To be expected with a metal guitar, but I didn't hang it on my usual wall hangers for fear of generating one of those 1970s serving hatches between my sofa & kitchen!
Resonators are LOUD. Again, considering the design this should not be a surprise, but if you live in a flat/have small children/irritable neighbors it's worth considering.
I sold mine after waking my (then a baby) daughter once too often!
Metal bodies vs wooden body. On the ones I've played side-by-side, at the cheaper end of things, I'd agree with the comment that the resonator cone makes more of a difference to the sound than the body material. At the cheaper end (below £1k) of the market. I never got to play expensive (£2.5k) models side-by-side in the same way. Places I visited didn't stock a huge range of expensive resonators, just the less expensive models.
Curiously, some resonators sounded more like standard flat top acoustics - the Gretsch range (IIRC) was like that.
Intonation. It's like any other acoustic - it's just a bridge (or two) sitting in a fixed place. I found lots of cheaper resonators that had dreadful intonation in the shop and a very high action. It might just be factory/retail laziness because we're all expected to play slide, but...
One of the brands that Hobgoblin stocks had 14-fret necks which could have come off an electric (incl. glossy varnish, etc.) and I didn't like those. Their own brand range was dreadful in playability and sound. Hobgoblin in Southampton doesn't believe in changing strings on demonstration guitars when they go dead and almost rusty - which doesn't help.
I played some great metal-bodied Nationals priced way outside my budget and never found the same sound in a cheaper guitar, so I stopped looking at metal bodies.
I also found I preferred the sound of Spider bridge single cone on a wooden body to anything else. That's all personal, of course.
In the end, I bought this one. Decent finish and build. Sounds nice and wasn't too expensive. This "Deluxe" is a much better guitar than my neighbours "Standard". I wouldn't have bought one of those.
ngd-nuthin-but-a-hound-dog
I realised that (for me) it didn't matter if I bought the perfect resonator as long as I bought something I would enjoy playing which sounded decent. This is still making me happy. The pickup fitted to it sounds awful, though - but that's something I don't care about. However, if I ever found a spare couple of grand, I'd be very tempted by a Beard (not the same thing as Gold Tone Paul Beard)
I had a Regal for a while, think it was an RD-40, about £400 ish. I upgraded the cone. I sold it after a few years for my next guitar fad, but it sounded nice. I did a few recordings of it, the one below should give you an idea. It is a Wooden bodied dobro type guitar.