Flat wound strings....Question..
Moderators: rickenbrother, ajish4
Flat wound strings....Question..
TI makes great upright strings. TI's flats are brighter for a few months then die down and you can get some proper thump out of them. I prefer Pyramids (Tetrahedrons, haha!) to them. TI's are too light for me although I have them on several basses and use them on my upright. Fenders are decent strings but Pyramids kill them in the tone department to me, much more complex tone from Pyramids. They are the closest sounding flats I've found so far to that great old 60's sound you hear on a million records and they keep the same tone as right out of the box almost forever. I've never had a problem with fender flat wound E strings and I used them a lot in the past, bought many sets. I also like light GHS bright flats after they calm down, very nice for bending notes which Tetras aren't.
I blurted: That picture puts me in the mood to play some Renaissance.
Tim replied: That's an amusing thought! What makes you say that?
Reminds me of being in a band with a female singer in which we played some Renaissance. The Espresso sign made the place have a cool vibe for that kind of music. It has been ages since I've been in a band, just seemed kinda cozy in that pic. On a less cerebral note, I saw the singer's eyes closed in the pic, and coupled with the Espresso sign I was gonna link the two. I opted for the Renaissance comment.
Tim replied: That's an amusing thought! What makes you say that?
Reminds me of being in a band with a female singer in which we played some Renaissance. The Espresso sign made the place have a cool vibe for that kind of music. It has been ages since I've been in a band, just seemed kinda cozy in that pic. On a less cerebral note, I saw the singer's eyes closed in the pic, and coupled with the Espresso sign I was gonna link the two. I opted for the Renaissance comment.

If it ain't broke, break it, then fix it.

