Postby TimR » Thu Sep 17, 2009 5:42 pm
I agree with Billy -the small frets, not just the original "speed frets" Semie used, but even the relatively small frets/ slim necks of the Hallmarks -take some getting used to. Before I recently aquired my Hallmark C-60, I was primarily playing a MIM '57 ri Strat. Not only bigger frets, but a 7 1/2" radius compared to the Hallmarks' 12" -it was a drastic change. I loved the feel and sound of the Hallmark right off, but I noticed, I was making a lot of mistakes -my playing was not as smooth as on the Strat. But now, after a couple of months, the Hallmark has become comfortable and smooth. When I go back to the Strat, it now seems uncomfortable and awkward.
Back in the 60's, those of us that discovered the Mosrites thought we had really found something cool. We didn't talk about the neck being skinny or the frets being low, we just said they have the fastest neck ever! But gradually, like Nokie and others, we all migrated back to the Fenders and Gibsons, and somewhere along the line we started saying the frets were too low & the necks were too skinny. If you were a rythm player and did a lot of bar chords up high on the neck (like Don Wilson), this was true. If you were a chicken pickin lead player like Nokie, it was not such an issue. But most of us "rockers" were actually blues players, and it seemed we needed something more substantial to hang on to, and bigger frets to bend against. Plus, how many blues players did you ever see play Mosrites? Admit it or not, we're all influenced by players we like. Then, after 30 or so years go by, and all of a sudden there's a Mosrite at a guitar show. You pick it up and, whoa -there's the same magic you felt in the 60's -something special, inspiring, unique -like the guitar became a whole new instrument all of a sudden. But you were having so much fun, you didn't notice that you were making a lot of mistakes you wouldn't have made on what you were used to. If you put it back and said, yeah, Mosrites are so cool! -but I can't afford one, and went on, the memory would be one way. If you had the bucks and actually bought it and took it home -after a day or two, you would begin to notice -hey, I keep screwing up, what's the matter with me? Eventually you would come around to blaming the skinny neck and small frets, and you would fondly hang that Mosrite on the wall so you could admire it's beauty, and go back to your Fenders and Gibsons. BUT -if you kept playing the Mosrite, no matter what -like I have recently done with my new Hallmark -somehow your playing would adapt, and it would smooth out. Yes, it takes some getting used to. Where most guys go wrong, though, is trying to put heavy strings on and treat it like a Jazzmaster. You've got to keep the light strings and develop a light touch. It's all a part of the mojo. You either get it, or you don't..........