String squeal. Squeaking. Left-hand noise. Fingering noise. Fretting squeal. Whatever name you give it, how do you control it?
Left-hand technique helps. By worrying less about the notes you are playing and more about the way you are moving between them, you can dramatically reduce it. But it is one more distraction from the task of hitting the notes you want in the way you want, an extra complexity in the already-complex task of playing a guitar to the best of your ability.
Whole-of-string coatings (Elixir Polyweb and Nanoweb, possibly one or two other makes) help a lot. With these the entire string is dipped in the coating after manufacture. But they feel soapy and the sound quality suffers.
Winding-only coatings (where the winding wire is coated first and then wound onto the core - this is the normal way of making a coated string) vary a lot. A few makes help almost as much as Elixirs do. With some, the coating seems to make little or no difference, and with the majority, it has a small but noticeable benefit.
String lubricants help, but only a little. A liberal coating of GHS Fast Fret reduces squeal on new strings by .. oh ... maybe 20%. Not much but worth having. Is it worth repeating the application? If so, how often? There are other brands of string lubricant, are they all the same? Which ones are best?
Different guitars have different mounts of squeal. It is worst with very responsive instruments with a lot of natural top end. My luthier-built Mineur is a bugger for it. My baritone, not so much, others in between.
The texture of the winding certainly has an effect. A rough-feeling, scratchy string generally squeals like a stuck pig. Some surfaces seem to be extra-grippy and create more squeal - examples include Optima gold-coated (a bit more than, say, phosphor bronze) and Pyramid silver-coated (a lot more).
The size of the winding seems to have an effect too. Coarse windings apparently have more squeal, fine-pitched windings less. Newtone strings, for example, have a lovely smooth, almost slinky feel because of their surface finish, and they have very little squeal. Ernie Ball Earthwoods have a very coarse finish, and they are super-squealers.
Polishing the strings reduces squeal. If you take a foam rubber nail buffer (buy one from the chemist for some spare change) and spend a few minutes buffing the strings, it makes little or no difference to the sound (you are only polishing the top of the string, most of it stays rough), but significantly reduces the squeal. (I only ever did this once, with a set of Earthwoods. Must try it again.)
OK, so that is everything I know about left-hand squeal. What else is there to learn about it?
0 LOL 0 Wow! 0 Wisdom · Share on Twitter
Comments
Not that I'm claiming any wonderful outcomes personally when I play other types of guitar. My steel string playing can sometimes be full of seagull noises, and I can't get the right rhythm into the music without sliding to the next note (etc.) which unavoidably produces it.
Different music benefits from using different hand positions (dropped wrist vs thumb over) and using different fretting points (tip vs pad) on the fingertips. But it's not something many of us think about or even notice in our own playing. But sometimes it wouldn't hurt... :-)
Mate, I'd say don't worry about it. Hit that note, get that chord down clean and that's all that matters.
Sure, I hear it when I'm gigging but no-one seems bothered about it. If *they're* happy, *I'm* happy, right?
I'm getting some good tips and insights from this thread. Good work, Fretboard people.
PS,when I saw the title of the thread I thought you'd overheard one of my practice sessions!
I never seem to notice squeak until I have to work on a recording I've done.
I use Newtones exclusively, IIRC Ernie Balls and Rotosound were the worst for squeak.
Jokes aside, there is no quality difference between Elixir and Martin, both are excellent strings in their own different ways. But for value, if you like the Martins, look out for Darco. These are the exact same strings from the same factory in a plainer package, and you'll save a pound or two a set.
EDIT: I must try some Newtone acoustic strings, I like their electric strings. Usually I just use Pyramid, since they're pretty nice and usually pretty good value on Thomann.
I usually use D’Addario or Newtone phosphor bronze, if it matters.
"Take these three items, some WD-40, a vise grip, and a roll of duct tape. Any man worth his salt can fix almost any problem with this stuff alone." - Walt Kowalski
"Just because I don't care, doesn't mean I don't understand." - Homer Simpson
"Take these three items, some WD-40, a vise grip, and a roll of duct tape. Any man worth his salt can fix almost any problem with this stuff alone." - Walt Kowalski
"Just because I don't care, doesn't mean I don't understand." - Homer Simpson
I'd used Martin's for forever, but my Furch came with Elixir. When I killed them, I swapped in Martin's and it sounded shit. Utterly shit. Bought a set of Elixir and harmony was restored.
So I popped Elixir's on my Takamine. It sounded shit, and went straight back to Martin's.
I last changed my Elixir's maybe a year ago. I've played the guitar most days, and have been doing two or three open mics a week for the last few months as well. I'm going to change them again this week, because I've got a couple of proper gigs coming up on the bank holiday, but I don't really need to. They do last.