Well, Dan, there's that special tomato knot that defies comprehension standing between me and HIP in this case. Can you imagine doing that w/ those monster 1mm 1st and 2nd frets? Brrr.

I don't know if anyone answered the question on how often to change frets but I remember Jacob Herringmann saying he swapped them all out before concerts. A lot of work tho I'm sure it gets easier as time goes by. He uses singles as far as I've ever seen. But there is nothing quite as clean-sounding as a newly fretted instrument.

Grant Tomlinson taught that we should have a good cradle for the lute to work with changing frets and expect to take your time. Then he mentioned Jacob did it all sitting on the couch, lickety split. Me, I'm an all afternoon kinda guy.

Even new doubled frets at their best never quite sounded as clean as singles --just my opinion and I'm sure there are pros who really have it down. Personally, I think the extended surface absorbs the high frequencies. Same goes for old single frets.

Sean


On Feb 18, 2010, at 12:13 PM, Daniel Winheld wrote:

Do it twice!

HEY! It's the SINGLE frets that ain't HIP - look at that damn picture
again- (you know, the one with the boreless Oboe Muto) Is there any
known historical information about single frets? Maybe Mace mentioned
them? Don't want to make trouble- just askin'....

Dan

Honestly, it works though it doesn't seem HIP whatsoever. The
advantage being you only need to replace one half (always take off
the more worn fret and replace it w/ a new one on the bridge side).

Anyway, I've done the double fret experiment for a few years on my
main ax. It has worked, I've learned a few things but I'm ready to
come back to the single fret club.

Sean


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