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Canarywood Tone


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Just a guess , but I imagine the tone has more to do with how many feathers that tree had.............

( i know I'm no help )

I was thinking more towards a tweet than a chirp! But i could be wrong.

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Anyone have more than an educated guess about it's tone? Because of the tight grain and weight, my gut says it'd be more bright than warm. I'm wanting to use it for a neck, paired up with a chambered walnut body.

Used as a neck, it will sound much like rock maple. I swapped the original (badly cracked) rock maple neck on a Strat for one I made from canary wood, and there was no distinguishable difference in the tone.

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Anyone have more than an educated guess about it's tone? Because of the tight grain and weight, my gut says it'd be more bright than warm. I'm wanting to use it for a neck, paired up with a chambered walnut body.

Used as a neck, it will sound much like rock maple. I swapped the original (badly cracked) rock maple neck on a Strat for one I made from canary wood, and there was no distinguishable difference in the tone.

That what I suspected. Thanks!

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