Sascha Franck
Rock Star
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IMO, we try way to hard to declare some sort of binary truth about it and I don't think it works that way.
It pretty much defenitely doesn't work that way. I have seen, heard and played guitars made of very unlikely material combinations sounding pretty traditional (such as a Trussard steel Tele with a mahogany neck that just sounded like an excellent Tele) and other guitars that refused to sound like they possibly should do (such as my G&L Legacy that doesn't deliver any traditional Strat tones, regardless of the pickups used).
In addition, I sort of often found some acoustic properties to translate well into the amplified realm - just to almost instantly find another example of where things simply didn't translate well at all, sometimes even more like the opposite.
I already said so in my first post in this thread: I absolutely believe that wood matters, but more often than we may like it, the ways in which it matters are pretty unpredictable.
Apart from all that, yes, there seem to be some tried and trusted wood and construction combinations delivering more or less reliable results.