Mike's Oud Forums
Not logged in [Login - Register]
Go To Bottom

Printable Version  
Author: Subject: New Pear Shaped Oud; Opinions??
pauldata
Oud Maniac
****




Posts: 64
Registered: 4-20-2007
Member Is Offline

Mood: No Mood

[*] posted on 8-23-2010 at 03:31 AM
New Pear Shaped Oud; Opinions??


Hi All,
I just purchased this pear shaped oud, but I will not receive it for another week or two. Any opinions based on these photos? (I think I will have to sand down the finish on the top, as it seems pretty thick. It also has a pickup installed, but I don't know what kind. Probably some kind of passive piezo)
PICS:



View user's profile View All Posts By User
Sazi
Oud Junkie
*****




Posts: 786
Registered: 9-17-2007
Location: Behind my oud
Member Is Offline

Mood: مبتهج ; ))

[*] posted on 8-23-2010 at 04:40 AM


Quote: Originally posted by pauldata  
Any opinions based on these photos? (I think I will have to sand down the finish on the top,...


And the rest!

I'd probably have a few plucks at it to see how it felt, then rip off the strings and hoe into that finish, it's bound to sound and feel a whole lot better for the effort.

I think it looks ok, but I reckon I'd have to velcro the thing to my leg to stop it escaping! lol;)




http://www.youtube.com/Sazi369

Music washes away from the soul the dust of everyday life.
View user's profile View All Posts By User
pauldata
Oud Maniac
****




Posts: 64
Registered: 4-20-2007
Member Is Offline

Mood: No Mood

[*] posted on 8-23-2010 at 09:08 AM


I'll probably just start with the top finish, I don't mind the thick finish on the bowl too much (unless it really muffles the sound, which I doubt). The top is another story... I also usually play with a strap (often standing), so I'm not too concerned with how it sits on the knee. I'm hoping it is overall shallower than my Sandi, which is too deep for me to play comfortably anymore because of severe arthritis. What I really want is one of the flat back hollow body thin ouds, with electronics onboard. I know it's not traditional, but I'm not really a traditional type player...
I think I read somwhere that these pear shape ouds were originally made for women and younger players, so I'm hoping it will be a bit more comfortable for me with all my physical handicap issues... (plus I think it looks neat and unusual)
Anyone have ideas as to where/when it was made? Looks Egyptian to me?
View user's profile View All Posts By User
alfaraby
Oud Junkie
*****




Posts: 796
Registered: 9-18-2009
Location: Holy Land
Member Is Offline

Mood: Cool

[*] posted on 8-23-2010 at 03:26 PM


One simple question : Why would anybody want to buy such an instrument ?
I'm asking because I don't know ! So why dear, why ?

It seems ver Egyptian to me : the woods, the paint, the design. Well, I am not sure .

Hope it worths it, both the money & the patience. Play it & tell us afterwards.

Good luck
Yours indeed
Alfaraby
View user's profile View All Posts By User
fernandraynaud
Oud Junkie
*****




Posts: 1865
Registered: 7-25-2009
Location: San Francisco, California
Member Is Offline

Mood: m'Oudy

[*] posted on 8-23-2010 at 05:08 PM


I would think he's looking for an inexpensive way to electrify the oud. Since a pickup largely takes the bowl out if the equation, it comes down to what gives you a comfortable and not too ugly device with a neck a pegbox and a bridge. I was even thinking of slicing off 2/3 of the bowl on my Oud Adani and gluing a flat back, but it hurts my heart to cut an oud.

I think this pear-shaped thing looks crude enough to have potential. Yummy dipped-in-varnish look! And you can play tennis with it!

Acoustic ouds with pickups work ok for quiet playing, but for playing loud, like i think Luttgutt said, either they can't hear you, or you're drowning in feedback.

I don't care for the skeleton frame ouds that do look like a toilet seat. If not for the cost I'd get a Nazarian 2000 or one of the fiberglass sukars. As it is I'm (seriously) considering this one below. Install a wide piezo on the bridge, cut into the side and mount a preamp with EQ, use an endpin 1/4" jack and a strap button on the other side. Total cost $300, and seems less ugly than a Maher WhatIsIt Saber? What do you think? Maybe glue a cardboard face to it, or add some "wings" so it looks like a normal oud?

http://www.yourworldinstruments.com/product-p/oud-11.htm

http://www.activemusician.com/item--MC.1314?ref=fg&ovchn=SCU&am...








View user's profile View All Posts By User
mrkmni
Oud Junkie
*****




Posts: 393
Registered: 12-9-2007
Location: Ottawa/Canada
Member Is Offline

Mood: No Mood

[*] posted on 8-23-2010 at 05:38 PM


My opinion honestly I dont like it. I expect that its sound is not good....
sorry you asked opinions...
regards,
View user's profile View All Posts By User
fernandraynaud
Oud Junkie
*****




Posts: 1865
Registered: 7-25-2009
Location: San Francisco, California
Member Is Offline

Mood: m'Oudy

[*] posted on 8-23-2010 at 06:44 PM


I did ask. I spoke to one of the guys who has them. He thought it sounded "surprisingly good". But in reality, it matters very little. I wouldn't play it without an amp except at night, when the family's sleeping. With a piezo held against the bridge by the string loops, even the soundboard contributes little to the sound, like on a solid-body instrument. I'm thus not too worried about its acoustics. Is it the appearance you dislike?

They say the pegs are ebony and the action is low. That's what matters to me. The looks, well, a little coffin seems better than a toilet seat? Stage costume should be Dracula's black cape?

They also make an 8 course, as a lute, with tied-on frets, easy to remove. I wonder if that could make an acceptable 7 or 8 course electric oud? I think the widest piezo I can find would only span 6. :(. And the neck looks too wide and one fret longer. Too bad.
View user's profile View All Posts By User
fernandraynaud
Oud Junkie
*****




Posts: 1865
Registered: 7-25-2009
Location: San Francisco, California
Member Is Offline

Mood: m'Oudy

[*] posted on 8-23-2010 at 07:30 PM


I KNOW why the pear-shaped oud is finished like that! It's so you can use it it any climate, even take it fishing and swim with it!
View user's profile View All Posts By User
alfaraby
Oud Junkie
*****




Posts: 796
Registered: 9-18-2009
Location: Holy Land
Member Is Offline

Mood: Cool

[*] posted on 8-23-2010 at 11:48 PM


It seems that more distinguished luthiers do make such ouds ! Scroll down the photos @ this link Abusaid uploaded about Luthier George Bitar :

http://oudgeorgesbitar.com/index_files/oud_type_En.htm

It really amazes me what makers are capable of ....

Nevertheless, no matter how it looks like, an oud should sound as one. I prefer a pear-shaped oud with sound warm deep mellow sound, over a "regular" oud that sounds like sh.. pardon !

Enjoy it anyway

Yours indeed
Alfaraby
View user's profile View All Posts By User
fernandraynaud
Oud Junkie
*****




Posts: 1865
Registered: 7-25-2009
Location: San Francisco, California
Member Is Offline

Mood: m'Oudy

[*] posted on 8-24-2010 at 12:28 AM


I do too. And the reason I haven't sliced my Adani is because, believe it or not, it sounds pretty good and has an excellent neck. I have other ouds that sound better, but the humble Adani sounds better than many others I have tried, including some quite expensive ones. I'm with you on a rich timbre.

As to the flat back, if you are playing electric the sound comes from the strings, and not the normal interaction of strings, soundboard and bowl. Then, if you know how to use Digital Signal Processing, it's shaped electronically into whatever you desire. If you are playing live and loud, the acoustic oud is not very practical, precisely because of its great resonance: it is very difficult to prevent feedback. Much easier to take the core sound of the strings and use signal processing to "recreate" the oud. It's not all that different. What the acoustic oud does by vibrating, and bouncing the sound wave inside the bowl, can happen very similarly with impulse response filters that are mathematical models of such a structure. The desired effect in practice is not necessarily to precisely emulate the acoustic instrument (though that is feasible, with more or less accuracy, depending on the engineer's skill), but rather to create sound appropriate to the music or that pleases the player. The electric oud is very important in introducing new audiences to this beautiful instrument. What Mehdi Haddab is doing in DuOud and Speed Caravan is good for the oud. Playing like they do, an acoustic oud couldn't work.
View user's profile View All Posts By User
Sazi
Oud Junkie
*****




Posts: 786
Registered: 9-17-2007
Location: Behind my oud
Member Is Offline

Mood: مبتهج ; ))

[*] posted on 8-24-2010 at 02:50 AM


Not sure if this is on topic, but it's relevant to the last post...

I suppose you know the program already Anthony, but others may be interested...

It is possible to record impulse responses of the various resonances in any oud and import them into SIR, a free impulse response vst, you could then either chop the back and use your own original body resonances, or sample a friend's < insert favorite oud make here> and listeners will think your Thawed Rapier toilet seat is a vintage piece of art, as you might say.;)




http://www.youtube.com/Sazi369

Music washes away from the soul the dust of everyday life.
View user's profile View All Posts By User
fernandraynaud
Oud Junkie
*****




Posts: 1865
Registered: 7-25-2009
Location: San Francisco, California
Member Is Offline

Mood: m'Oudy

[*] posted on 8-24-2010 at 04:37 AM


Your post is OUT OF PLACE!

1) Everybody knows that no computer program can do what a oud do.

2) That's Sawed Thwat toilet seat, NOT Thawed Rapier.

3) And what if you lose your backup FIR files? Can you glue the back back-on long enough to shoot more backup impulse files back again?

4) Can you take it fishing in the lake with you? What if there are piranas?

5) What if you move to Antarctica? Will the oud hold up? Will the penguins like Yabba Yabba Lah?


View user's profile View All Posts By User
fernandraynaud
Oud Junkie
*****




Posts: 1865
Registered: 7-25-2009
Location: San Francisco, California
Member Is Offline

Mood: m'Oudy

[*] posted on 8-24-2010 at 05:24 AM


Humidity has dropped from 40 to 20 % in the last 24 hrs, temp steady day and night near 80F. Wind zero. Strange. All the pegs in my Adani let go and will not hold. Is it the end of the world?
View user's profile View All Posts By User
Jonathan
Oud Junkie
*****




Posts: 1582
Registered: 7-27-2004
Location: Los Angeles
Member Is Offline

Mood: No Mood

[*] posted on 8-24-2010 at 11:05 AM


I've heard ouds with this shape, and they can sound quite nice.
I guess my concern with this instrument is that, from the pictures, it looks like the craftsmanship might be sub-par.
For example, it looks like there is glue around much of the perimeter of the central rose. My eyes might be deceiving me, but it looks like some of the purfling strips on the bowl are also coated with excessive glue.
These issues will have nothing to do with how your instrument sounds, but I always think that if the luthier isn't careful with the exposed areas of the oud that everybody sees, he might not be careful with the unseen areas, like the braces, where shoddy craftsmanship has a huge impact on sound quality.




View user's profile Visit user's homepage View All Posts By User

  Go To Top

Powered by XMB
XMB Forum Software © 2001-2011 The XMB Group