Yeah, after playing an all maple neck ive learned that the wood doesn't matter stuff is horseshit.
Yes.
Wood doesn’t matter………if you’re Glenn Fricker. For people that don’t always play with the gain on 11, it will matter.
Yes.
It's fascinating that folks would choose to believe something a pseudo-scientific internet person says in a video than the sensory input of their own ears.
If wood didn't matter and it was only the electronics, we would expect a hollow body electric guitar to sound the same as a solid body guitar with the same electronics. I think most of us would agree that a hollow body electric has characteristics that are different from a solid body electric.
A PRS Hollowbody is a true hollow body, and can be had with the same pickups and materials as a solid body PRS. They do NOT sound the same.
Anyone here think that even a semi-hollow 335 with PAFs sounds exactly like a Les Paul with the same pickups?
If wood didn't matter, maple neck/fretboard would sound the same as mahogany/rosewood. Most of us would agree that the two sound different. Most of us would agree that a Strat with a humbucker sounds different from a PRS McCarty with a humbucker.
We can predict that if we get a hollow body electric it's going to have a different ADSR envelope and different resonance from a solid body electric guitar.
In fact we can play thousands of guitars, and not find a hollow body electric that sounds the same as a solid body electric. We will also discover much more about the differences.
Same with other wood species that differ in less obvious details. It doesn't matter how many you play, certain characteristics will repeat themselves over and over.
This used to be accepted by players for many, many years (I've been playing since 1967). That it has become somehow controversial is puzzling, and I think it's because the internet has become a lot of folks' ear substitute.
Part of the problem is that people play with a lot more gain now. Here's what happens with high gain:
Amplifier gain that results in 'clipping' means that the top of the sine waveform is 'clipped off', turning it into something more like a square wave. The frequency response and harmonic series change.
That's also what a fuzz box does - it's a square wave generator. Most of us would agree that a fuzz box pretty much takes over the guitar's tone and alters it substantially.
An amp driven to clipping will also generate its own harmonics, as will an overdriven speaker. All this is part of what we think of as electric guitar tone. Thing is, the amp and speakers' harmonics are different from those of the guitar, and tend to overwhelm and mask whatever the guitar is doing. So the more distortion - the name 'distortion' pretty much tells you what you're hearing of the signal ain't the same - the less of the guitar we hear.
A pickup is also a microphonic device. If I get close to the pickups of my 1965 SG Special and speak, my voice will come through the amp. The pickups will in most cases reproduce some of the acoustic sound of the guitar. The microphonic nature of pickups contributes to what we hear as feedback, and this is why hollow body guitars tend to feed back more than solid body guitars.
Just my two cents.