To my way of thinking, even the idea of "dudness" is variable. A heavy, dense body is actually useful in high-gain situations, to project a particular range of frequencies - wide & flat, not centered around a specific resonant peak. I think the lighter and more resonant a body gets, the closer it is getting to a hollow body, and the more likely it is to have some unevenness in volume at differing, almost random frequencies. Genuine authentic vintage Fender basses are famous for having "dead spots" or uneven response, and that's not true of the double-trussed, walnut, maple & exotic wood 12-pounders.
My main #1 stage Tele guitar has a quite heavy swamp ash body and it's nowhere near the most acoustically-resonant solidbody I own - but it sounds great cranked, and I can control & shape the tone better with that than with a lighter guitar that adds so much of it's own character. I totally get the people who play maple & walnut & hippie sandwich guitars - good tone is mostly subtractive, and it's easier and more controllable & predictable to cut the highs from a dense guitar than trying to add highs to a squishy guitar that just ain't got 'em to start with. IF you know how, aluminum & plexiglas guitars can sound great, and I sure don't think they "breathe" much... :toothy12:
In about a million different ways, applying acoustic guitar standards to solidbody electrics is a recipe for mediocre tone.*
What I would watch for first and foremost in cheap bodies would be ones that are made from completely different batches of wood, with varying-density pieces all glued together at random. Of course this might be the part you can't see, which is why I wouldn't actually pursue buying cheap painted bodies at all myself. Tone is God in my collection, playability is his Queen & appearances are secondary. Having said that, any decent wood can be worked around, and any guitar that sounds different that what you expect may very well warp your playing into unexpected areas, always a good thing in my estimation. Though, many (most?) people want their guitars to do exactly the same thing, and I'm one of those weirdos who want my guitars to be as different-sounding from each other as possible, within the limits of decency.
* (For future reference, please tattoo this on your forehead, backwards so you can read it in the mirror when you're drunk.) :hello2:
My main #1 stage Tele guitar has a quite heavy swamp ash body and it's nowhere near the most acoustically-resonant solidbody I own - but it sounds great cranked, and I can control & shape the tone better with that than with a lighter guitar that adds so much of it's own character. I totally get the people who play maple & walnut & hippie sandwich guitars - good tone is mostly subtractive, and it's easier and more controllable & predictable to cut the highs from a dense guitar than trying to add highs to a squishy guitar that just ain't got 'em to start with. IF you know how, aluminum & plexiglas guitars can sound great, and I sure don't think they "breathe" much... :toothy12:
In about a million different ways, applying acoustic guitar standards to solidbody electrics is a recipe for mediocre tone.*
What I would watch for first and foremost in cheap bodies would be ones that are made from completely different batches of wood, with varying-density pieces all glued together at random. Of course this might be the part you can't see, which is why I wouldn't actually pursue buying cheap painted bodies at all myself. Tone is God in my collection, playability is his Queen & appearances are secondary. Having said that, any decent wood can be worked around, and any guitar that sounds different that what you expect may very well warp your playing into unexpected areas, always a good thing in my estimation. Though, many (most?) people want their guitars to do exactly the same thing, and I'm one of those weirdos who want my guitars to be as different-sounding from each other as possible, within the limits of decency.
* (For future reference, please tattoo this on your forehead, backwards so you can read it in the mirror when you're drunk.) :hello2: