String of double bass
Prior to the mid-20th century, double bass strings were usually made of gut, but since that time, steel strings have largely replaced gut strings, because steel strings hold their pitch better and yield more volume when played with the bow. Gut strings are also more vulnerable to changes of humidity and temperature, and they break much more easily than steel strings. Gut strings are nowadays mostly used by bassists who perform in baroque ensembles, rockabilly bands, traditional blues bands, and bluegrass bands Gut strings create the dark, “thumpy” sound heard on 1940s and 1950s recordings. The late Jeff Sarli, a blues upright bassist, stated that “starting in the 1950s, they began to reset the necks on basses for steel strings”, and double bass players switched from gut strings to steel strings. Rockabilly and bluegrass bassists also prefer gut because it is much easier to perform the “slapping” upright bass style with gut strings than with steel strings.
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