![]() Mine was much nicer with bone once the guitar had opened up after about 6-7 years. It may be time to put bone nut and saddle in. So you may wanna consider the saddle and nut material. Once it had a few years on it tho it began sounding too bright and at that point i tried bone again and it was great. I but bone in it at first but the tone was so dull i removed it and went back to the TUSQ. And it was rather bright and got brighter as it aged. I find that because new acoustics are usually quite dark sounding till they age and open up, the manufacturers tend to equip them with TUSQ or some other extremely bright material. You may also want to investigate the saddle and nut. they have the advantage of being the easiest string to find too, plus as cheap as anything. I went thru a number of strings, and i was amzed that i ended up with a string i always thought were very mediocre.d'adarrio ! I never liked those on most other acoustics, but they were perfect for the larrivee. the larrivee was too bright for those stings. Anyways, after i sold it to get a Larrivee i found the exact same problem with the pearce on my new guitar. Guess it just goes to show how much wood can vary. Funny.i had a J45 i bought new in about '6 or so, and pearce were what sounded good on it ! i felt it needed the extra brightness.
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