Post by vastopol on Jul 21, 2022 17:31:23 GMT
Oh sorry for the mess; thanks to have tried to make these link working...seems like I'm dumb with other things too, not only with mathematics....
(I've tried to find safer links, hope it works now).
Wow; Mitchfit, seeing Mariachis in your childhood sahll be a great experience, you're very lucky !
Well, I'am not speaking of power, volume, or bigger bass response due to the "magic formula".
That's exactely most resonator enthousiast tend to missunderstand, by comparing old Natioanls, and most of the modern resonators.
The size and design of the old Nationals aren't that big, but these precise measurements are choosen to enhance certain subtle frequencies.
The focus is not on pure power, but on what we can call "musicality".
Some of us may had a chance to sing in front of an dismantled National, it's a strange experience to hear how certain notes are ringing in the body.
Too bad, that my english is limited, and my understanding of the concept too...i'm struggling to explain...
It's somewhat magical that you can feel, and listen too, but these weel preserved instruments are scarce, and none of us got same sensibilty, same ears.
When you play on an old National, in good condition, and ideal set up, you may feel like everything flows, like if the instrument tells you wich other note you have to play, hard to explain but i'm sure some of us know what i'm talking about.
For me it's not posh babbling, it's just due to the harmony between each resonances.
My friend he's very involved in medieval music, and wrote two books about this subject, he's a proffessionnal piano tuner and runs a music shop, now retired; he knows what he's talking about.
In fact any volume, box, or room can be tuned to have affinity with some frequencies by choosing his ideal size.
That's how they built cathedrals too.
Bigger doesn't means more bass or more power, specialy nowadays with motorised loud speakers and new technologies...maybe there's some similarity between MP3 and vinyl records?...
(I've tried to find safer links, hope it works now).
Wow; Mitchfit, seeing Mariachis in your childhood sahll be a great experience, you're very lucky !
Well, I'am not speaking of power, volume, or bigger bass response due to the "magic formula".
That's exactely most resonator enthousiast tend to missunderstand, by comparing old Natioanls, and most of the modern resonators.
The size and design of the old Nationals aren't that big, but these precise measurements are choosen to enhance certain subtle frequencies.
The focus is not on pure power, but on what we can call "musicality".
Some of us may had a chance to sing in front of an dismantled National, it's a strange experience to hear how certain notes are ringing in the body.
Too bad, that my english is limited, and my understanding of the concept too...i'm struggling to explain...
It's somewhat magical that you can feel, and listen too, but these weel preserved instruments are scarce, and none of us got same sensibilty, same ears.
When you play on an old National, in good condition, and ideal set up, you may feel like everything flows, like if the instrument tells you wich other note you have to play, hard to explain but i'm sure some of us know what i'm talking about.
For me it's not posh babbling, it's just due to the harmony between each resonances.
My friend he's very involved in medieval music, and wrote two books about this subject, he's a proffessionnal piano tuner and runs a music shop, now retired; he knows what he's talking about.
In fact any volume, box, or room can be tuned to have affinity with some frequencies by choosing his ideal size.
That's how they built cathedrals too.
Bigger doesn't means more bass or more power, specialy nowadays with motorised loud speakers and new technologies...maybe there's some similarity between MP3 and vinyl records?...