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Twelve String Guitar




CW80/12]]
The strings are placed in ''courses'' of two strings each that are usually played together. The two strings in each -like quality an octave string makes in this position.

Some players, either in search of distinctive tone or for ease of playing, will remove some of the doubled strings. For example, removing the higher octave from the three bass courses simplifies playing running bass lines, but keeps the extra treble strings for the full strums.

The Tension placed on the instrument by the strings is great, and because of this, 12 string guitars have a reputation for warping after a few years of use. Some twelve-string guitars have non-traditional structural supports to prevent or postpone such a fate, at the expense of appearance and tone. Until recently, twelve-string guitars were nearly universally tuned lower than the traditional EADGBE, to reduce the Stresses on the instrument. Lead Belly famously used a low C-tuning, as did Beau on his Dandelion recordings.

Some performers prefer the richness of an open tuning due to its near-orchestral sound. For a very complex plucked-string sound, the 12-string can be set to standard tuning (or possibly an octave lower), then the top one and low two string pairs can be tuned to whole-tone intervals. The usual gamut of Guitar Tuning s are also available.

Many performers who play the twelve-string guitar use an ordinary six-string guitar as their primary instrument, switching to the twelve-string guitar for certain songs that seem to call for a brighter sound.

Because it is substantially more difficult to pluck individual strings on the twelve-string guitar, and almost impossible to bend notes tunefully, the instrument is rarely used for lead musical parts. It is primarily suited to a rhythm, accompaniment, or solo role, and is often used in Folk Song s and some popular music. Some Hard Rock and Progressive Rock musicians use Double-necked Guitars , which have both six-string and twelve-string components, allowing the guitarist easy transition between different sounds.

The greater number of strings complicates playing, particularly for the plucking (or picking) hand. The gap between the dual-string courses is usually narrower than that between the single-string courses of a conventional six-string guitar, so more precision is required with pick or fingertip when not simply strumming chords. The pairing of thin, easily broken octave strings with larger, stiffer bass strings presents difficulties to the player also, and only a very skilled player can reliably pluck single strings from within a course at any speed (notably the very high octave G string, which is the highest-pitched string on the instrument). Nevertheless, with practice, the twelve-string guitar is not unduly difficult to play. It is, however, generally used in a fairly restricted role which emphasises its strengths: rich ringing, full-bodied chords, and fast, rippling single plucked notes on the twinned strings.

Twelve-string guitars are made in both acoustic and electric form. However, it is the acoustic type that is most common. Use of twelve-string electric guitar almost appears to be cyclical: beginning with Blind Willie McTell in the '20s and '30s, Lead Belly in the '40s, and continuing with Bob Gibson in the '50s and early '60s, performers and Gibson acolytes such as Mike Pender of The Searchers and Roger McGuinn of The Byrds , brought it to the fore for a decade, until it fell out of favor and was largely limited to niche use by Progressive Rock ers in the 1970s. The instrument was revived in the 1980s by Alternative Rock ers such as Peter Buck of R.E.M. , Marty Willson-Piper of The Church , and Johnny Marr of The Smiths . During the 1990s, its popularity waned again, although it plays a key part in the sound of Indie Rock acts such as Low and The Decemberists . The most popular electric twelve-string model since the 1960s has been the Rickenbacker 360/12 , first popularized by George Harrison . Many Double-neck Guitars have a twelve-string neck, in order for guitarists to switch between tones during live performances, for example, when playing ' Stairway To Heaven ' or ' Hotel California .'


NOTED TWELVE-STRING PERFORMERS

Modulator 12 (top) and a Maton Magnetone TB36/12 (bottom); the latter is a copy of the Rickenbacker 360/12]]


Acoustic



Electric


Rickenbacker



Gibson EDS-1275



Other




Unconfirmed



SEE ALSO



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