guitarcomet
Well-known member
Seems we nearly highjacked another member's thread talking about pickups,....I appoligize Nigel T. (hope you get your 1086 fixed or modded )
I had a few more things to say...
I'm not discounting active pickups. In fact my Jackson has some of the best active I've ever heard. (they have Jackson in script written on them but I doubt they are)
But active is best for certain things. More in your face, flat out, balls to the wall....a chicken caught in a tractor's nuts.
The classic (i.e. "appropriate") sound of an electric guitar (1950-1990) has been passive pickups and tube amps. This is just fact.
Achieving this tone is easier and more accurate with passive pickups. (and tube amps)
After 1985, active pickups became standard on some models and increased in popularity over the next decade. (new generation, new sound)
Still, some newer players prefer the vintage sound.
I do.
Now, these comments about Duncan has a "honk" and Dimarzio has a "sizzle"?
Shizelle manizzle, Honky! :lol:
Of course they do! It's their voice, their personality.
But some do sound quite different.
At one point I had 5 Les Pauls (1 Custom, 3 Standards and 1 Deluxe R.I.)
I played them all onstage through the same Fender Twin amp (along with several other guitars equipt with aftermarket pickups)
I found the hotter pickups best for harder stuff, but they didn't have the pure tone of say the SD SH-1 (59's I think they're called now) or the smoother Dimarzios.
Not saying the Screamin' Demon or DP-100 Super Distortion are bad pickups, but you lose tone as you gain distortion. Same as your amps do.
The Gibson humbucker made long ago just about nailed the "sweet spot".
Funny thing is, I don't use single coils much at all anymore. Too thin, doesn't cut through, wimpy. I haven't played a single coil onstage since '97. (the P-90 would be an exception)
I have a '91 PRS Custom 24 with original T + B pickups. It has the 5-way rotor switch and at poss. # 2 is sounds like a single coil. (only better) But I only use it for pretty stuff
I know it's apples and hand grenades, but..
Active is a must for acoustic guitar in live situations. I won't play one that isn't. Passive tone control is a joke when you're talking acoustic. my 2?
OH BTW, all those off the beaten path names Zander was throwing around, (guitarattack.com, Guitarforce Spitfire and Superstar)...very interesting!
I have heard of and used one Mighty Mite humbucker...25 years ago (it squealed), but I guess after 25 years they might have hit on something. :lol: (maybe epoxy?)
Keep taking Zander, I'm all ears! :wink:
I had a few more things to say...
I'm not discounting active pickups. In fact my Jackson has some of the best active I've ever heard. (they have Jackson in script written on them but I doubt they are)
But active is best for certain things. More in your face, flat out, balls to the wall....a chicken caught in a tractor's nuts.
The classic (i.e. "appropriate") sound of an electric guitar (1950-1990) has been passive pickups and tube amps. This is just fact.
Achieving this tone is easier and more accurate with passive pickups. (and tube amps)
After 1985, active pickups became standard on some models and increased in popularity over the next decade. (new generation, new sound)
Still, some newer players prefer the vintage sound.
I do.
Now, these comments about Duncan has a "honk" and Dimarzio has a "sizzle"?
Shizelle manizzle, Honky! :lol:
Of course they do! It's their voice, their personality.
But some do sound quite different.
At one point I had 5 Les Pauls (1 Custom, 3 Standards and 1 Deluxe R.I.)
I played them all onstage through the same Fender Twin amp (along with several other guitars equipt with aftermarket pickups)
I found the hotter pickups best for harder stuff, but they didn't have the pure tone of say the SD SH-1 (59's I think they're called now) or the smoother Dimarzios.
Not saying the Screamin' Demon or DP-100 Super Distortion are bad pickups, but you lose tone as you gain distortion. Same as your amps do.
The Gibson humbucker made long ago just about nailed the "sweet spot".
Funny thing is, I don't use single coils much at all anymore. Too thin, doesn't cut through, wimpy. I haven't played a single coil onstage since '97. (the P-90 would be an exception)
I have a '91 PRS Custom 24 with original T + B pickups. It has the 5-way rotor switch and at poss. # 2 is sounds like a single coil. (only better) But I only use it for pretty stuff
I know it's apples and hand grenades, but..
Active is a must for acoustic guitar in live situations. I won't play one that isn't. Passive tone control is a joke when you're talking acoustic. my 2?
OH BTW, all those off the beaten path names Zander was throwing around, (guitarattack.com, Guitarforce Spitfire and Superstar)...very interesting!
I have heard of and used one Mighty Mite humbucker...25 years ago (it squealed), but I guess after 25 years they might have hit on something. :lol: (maybe epoxy?)
Keep taking Zander, I'm all ears! :wink: