There are many bowyers building glass backed bows that will tell you that cores do not matter much.... Horse feathers is what i say.... The core materials are subject to tension and compression, and after thousands of arrows that core material can break down and cause a failure.
The most popular core materials for lam bows that have the best longevity is rock hard maple. Period... But bamboo has exceptional tension qualities. If you combine maple on the belly side with bamboo towards the back of the limb, you will find its a wonderful combination...
But you will have different bowyers swear by elm, yew, Zebra, and even clear vertical grain spruce. These are much softer core woods, and lighter in mass weight, and used successfully. The zebra wood has a bit of a brittle nature, but makes a quick bow. I've even used old growth douglas fir lams that held up well for many years, and produced some very high performance.
If you are into building a hot rod bow and going for performance, you can use hickory and paduke, and zebra wood combinations. Even Wenge is a high performance wood.... But... all these woods are very brittle, and the longevity isn't comparable to bamboo and rock hard maple.
They built a lot of carbon backed bows with foam cores years ago, and i built quite a few sets myself that held up well for a limited amount of time. But i believe those foam cores had compression issues over time, and a lot of them came apart delaminating on the belly side.
There's my .02 cents worth... Kirk