1 YOUR “FEEL”
STARTS HERE.
Pick up two guitars that are otherwise
identically constructed—same neck profile, fretboard
radius, pickups and hardware, same type
and gauge of strings even—but
which are made to a 24.75" and
25.5" scale length respectively,
and you are likely to find yourself
playing a little differently on
each. That mere three-quarters of an
inch makes a surprising difference not only
in the feel of the strings under your fingertips,
their pliancy or apparent “elasticity,”
but in the way you finger lead runs
and voice chords, too. Such a variation in
feel is likely to have you subconsciously
altering your style, if only slightly.
2 IT SHAPES THE
FUNDAMENTAL
VOICE OF YOUR
GUITAR.
Whether your guitar is hardtail
or vibrato-loaded, set-neck or bolt-on,
humbucker or single-coil, its scale length
infl uences the character of its sound before
any other components even get to join
in the game. The scale, which basically
equates to the distance between the nut
and bridge saddles, determines where the
strings’ overtones or harmonics occur (and
how tightly packed they are), and therefore
literally determines the voice of the
guitar in the most fundamental way. The
greater spacing of harmonics on strings
that span a longer scale gives an impression
of greater chime and shimmer, and
yields a tighter low E. Alternately, strings
on a shorter scale instrument yield more
closely packed harmonics and increase
warmth, thickness, and “fur” in the tone.
3 NO, REALLY,
SCALE LENGTH
HAS A MAJOR
IMPACT ON TONE.
So much so that we need to
make this one a two-parter. When we
talk about the overtones affected by scale
length, we mean all the harmonic elements
that make up the sound of any note, not
just the harmonic nodes (or “natural harmonics”)
you play by lightly touching a
string above the 5th, 7th, or 12th fret.
Try playing one such harmonic on the
low-E string at the 5th fret, but instead of
just letting it ring, run your finger down
slowly from there while picking steadily,
still just touching the string lightly. Hear
all those harmonics popping out? These
occur all over your strings, and even when
you fret a note they chime in to make up
its more complex voice.
4 CHARACTERISTICS
OF SCALE
LENGTH CANNOT
BE TRICKED OR
CHEATED.
The inherent tonal character of different
scale lengths is the main reason that it’s
very difficult to “fake” one major maker’s
tone with the guitar of another. Since
Gibson largely uses the 24.75" (actually
closer to 24.6") and Fender 25.5", we tend
to associate these “sounds” with those
classic makers. Put a Strat-style pickup on
an SG, or coil-split an SG’s humbucker,
and it will sound like an SG with a single-
coil pickup, not anything very close
to a Fender Stratocaster. Other factors,
such as wood and hardware are at play,
of course, but the different scale lengths
in these guitars make it impossible to
ever quite get the shimmer, chime, and
fi rm low end of a Strat out of an SG, and
vice versa.
5 BUT IN SOME WAYS,
YOU KINDA, SORTA,
ALMOST CAN.
String tension and length
operate together to determine
harmonic content, as well as feel. If you
want to warm up a 25.5"-scale guitar, you
can try tuning down a half step, which
thickens up its overtones and makes it
sound a little closer to a 24.75"-scale
guitar. Dropping the tuning to Eb, as Jimi
Hendrix occasionally did, also softens
up the feel of the longer-scaled instrument
and makes it easier to play. Dropping
its tuning and changing to strings of
a heavier gauge, as Stevie Ray Vaughan
did, thickens up the tone while retaining
the tighter playing feel.