Thanks Eileen. I could have made them sound pretty good all the way through by sticking to the techniques which work best, but I thought it'd be best to show what they're really like, the pros and cons.
I can see these strings being very useful for some. Thanks Matt for always being on the lookout for unusual resources! The sound is really powerful! And for the rattle, well, some people made that their signature sound like Stu Hamm on Bass...
Very loud and quite a specialized sound. Played carefully I like them…. Like you, I don’t think this would be my everyday uke, but on a spare? Definite ‘maybe’. I’d like to hear them in duet with a tenor though that tenor might need a pickup just to be heard. 😉 I appreciate the unique videos you bring. Thanks Matt!
Quite a different real bass sound, probably agree with your summary that they provide a great alternative to a bass. Could be a fun try. Thanks for sharing
I’m sure that’s it. All my ukuleles (including low g tuning) have unwound strings so that’s what I’m used to. My baritone is a recent acquisition. Thanks again!
What if you'd keep the E and A string at the usual octave and then only put the G and C at the lower octave ? I mean G2 C3 E4 A4, instead of G2 C3 E3 A3
@Amir__MB it would be possible but I think they'd rattle. They are already prone to that on a baritone scale, so any shorter (and therefore lower tension) and I suspect you would have problems.
I don't know the gauges, but they seem a little thicker than that. Tie bridge, no. Saddle - yes to lower the action, but not because of these strings. Nut, a little wider.
No. A guitar A-string (now G) would be 7 semi-tones down from D(GBE) but on the scale length of a baritone would be 'floopy'. These strings must be thicker, like Irish (GDAE) strings have to be on a Tenor. banjo. That 'fifths' tuning is also an option on a baritone uke. TV
It isn't a different tuning, it is still GCEA. It's just that each note is an octave lower than usual. So your G will still be a G, just a deeper, lower G than normal. So if you played a C chord using these, and someone with a regular uke played their C chord, they'd still chime together, just yours would be like a bigger, deeper, lower version.
@@WorldofUkes thank you for answering me, but my baritone ukulele is D G B E though. That’s what is confusing me. I thought all baritone ukuleles were.
@christineminer2397 I see. Then yes, with yours the chords would be different. These would be even lower than yours, but would need you to work out the new chord names.
For those who wanna have a taste on how it sounds like, grab a classic guitar, tune half step down the D and G strings , put a capo on Third fret and ignore the two higher strings(B and E), or take them out....
Thanks for taking the time. And for being totally honest. I can’t quite make up my mind, I love a deep sound. You made them sound pretty good.
Thanks Eileen. I could have made them sound pretty good all the way through by sticking to the techniques which work best, but I thought it'd be best to show what they're really like, the pros and cons.
I can see these strings being very useful for some. Thanks Matt for always being on the lookout for unusual resources! The sound is really powerful! And for the rattle, well, some people made that their signature sound like Stu Hamm on Bass...
George Hinchliffe asked me to get some and I ended up ordering 20 sets out of curiosity!
Very loud and quite a specialized sound. Played carefully I like them…. Like you, I don’t think this would be my everyday uke, but on a spare? Definite ‘maybe’. I’d like to hear them in duet with a tenor though that tenor might need a pickup just to be heard. 😉
I appreciate the unique videos you bring. Thanks Matt!
Yes, I think to rehabilitate a cheap baritone perhaps, or get some use out of something in the collection that doesn't get much play.
Quite a different real bass sound, probably agree with your summary that they provide a great alternative to a bass. Could be a fun try. Thanks for sharing
I think fun yes, whether it'd be a permanent solution, I don't know - but certainly an interesting experiment.
Thank you for sharing. Interesting for sure but I struggle a bit with my baritone normal strings already.
Yes, can be tricky with wound strings to get used to them.
I’m sure that’s it. All my ukuleles (including low g tuning) have unwound strings so that’s what I’m used to. My baritone is a recent acquisition. Thanks again!
What if you'd keep the E and A string at the usual octave and then only put the G and C at the lower octave ?
I mean G2 C3 E4 A4, instead of G2 C3 E3 A3
Might be interesting, perhaps you could find a way to almost accompany yourself with a bass - while playing one instrument.
Interesting. I think they are made in East Los Angeles. I might give them a try.
They are, the shop looks great on the pictures I've seen.
Is it possible to fit those strings to a super tenor uke? Thanks
@Amir__MB it would be possible but I think they'd rattle. They are already prone to that on a baritone scale, so any shorter (and therefore lower tension) and I suspect you would have problems.
Is this the gauge of the middle 4 strings in a classical guitar set? Did you modify the tie bridge, saddle, or nut to accommodate the thicker strings?
I don't know the gauges, but they seem a little thicker than that. Tie bridge, no. Saddle - yes to lower the action, but not because of these strings. Nut, a little wider.
No. A guitar A-string (now G) would be 7 semi-tones down from D(GBE) but on the scale length of a baritone would be 'floopy'. These strings must be thicker, like Irish (GDAE) strings have to be on a Tenor. banjo. That 'fifths' tuning is also an option on a baritone uke. TV
I got a set of these from the US, do you stock them in the UK?
Thanks in advance!
@rp8564 yes, there's a link in the video description
Thanks, will get my next set from you!
I’m confused. How can you play the same chords with totally different tunings?
It isn't a different tuning, it is still GCEA. It's just that each note is an octave lower than usual. So your G will still be a G, just a deeper, lower G than normal. So if you played a C chord using these, and someone with a regular uke played their C chord, they'd still chime together, just yours would be like a bigger, deeper, lower version.
@@WorldofUkes thank you for answering me, but my baritone ukulele is D G B E though. That’s what is confusing me. I thought all baritone ukuleles were.
@christineminer2397 I see. Then yes, with yours the chords would be different. These would be even lower than yours, but would need you to work out the new chord names.
For those who wanna have a taste on how it sounds like, grab a classic guitar, tune half step down the D and G strings , put a capo on Third fret and ignore the two higher strings(B and E), or take them out....
Are they all wound strings Matt?
All but the A are wound Joyce.