anyone got this in a guitar...hows it sound? i would imagine it would be pretty bright...is it worth it?
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screamin' demon pickup
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Have it and love it.
I can get a range of sound from it.
Metallica, yes country believe it or not, does classic Van Halen really well, sustains for days with a maple body, senstive to picking notes really stands out, absolute ease of piched and tapped harmonics, yes doing the horsey squeal is effortless,
Bright?
Granted everbodies ear is different and preference are issues, but this has always puzzled me abit.
Various people make the comment its a bright sounding pickup.
In part they are right, the sceamin demon can be a bright pickup.
Whats baffling to me, I quess they don't know how to turn or adjust their "treble, bass, mid and prescense" knobs to tweak the pickup to the desired sound. Maybe its me, I don't know.
Wood type?
I recommend maple or alder...won't go wrong with either when using the screamin demon.
I don't plan on giving mine up any where soon either.Peace, Love and Happieness and all that stuff...
"Anyone who tries to fling crap my way better have a really good crap flinger."
I personally do not care how it was built as long as it is a good playing/sounding instrument.
Yes, there's a bee in the pudding.
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It's a great pickup. I played a ESP with one in it( I didn't own it) and I liked it's versitility. I believe it was a George Lynch Guitar.
Duncan also makes a Distortion which is close but alittle different sounding.They both got crazy drive. I wouldn't call it brihgt, I would call it detailed.
It's a good pickup I suggest you have it professionally Installed and play it. If you like Heavy metal tone and need that something extra in your sound, this pickup maybe the ticket. If not try a Duncan Distortion, I like em both about the same.
Dan
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A Duncan Distortion has waaaay more output than a Screamin' Demon. The Demon is essentially a PAF style pickup with a bit more output and low end with attentuated highs...definitely not an inherently bright pickup which is why it works well with brighter sounding tone woods (maple, ash, alder). I have found that it is not such a good match for deeper sounding woods such as mahogany as it can sound dark and/or muddy.
If you have a soldering iron and an IQ higher than a houseplant, you shouldn't need to have it "professionally" installed...it ain't rocket science or brain surgery.
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My ash-body Jackson DR2 had a Screamin' Demon stock in the bridge position, and I could NOT get an acceptable metal tone out of it. I replaced it with a Full Shred and that guitar quickly became my #1 rhythm guitar in the studio. I then installed another Full Shred in my Soloist Pro, which is my main live guitar.
However, the Demon was not a turd by any means. I tried it in a basswood Dinky, and it sounded great! The basswood and ash guitars were worlds apart tonally, and the pickup came alive in basswood. I've had the same experience with the JB.
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Originally posted by InazoneThe basswood and ash guitars were worlds apart tonally, and the pickup came alive in basswood. I've had the same experience with the JB.
Different woods have different tone characteristics.
Matching the desired pickup with the right wood gives pleasing results.
Half the people I've encounter or tried to help with their "pickup quest" has either followed this piece of advice and been very happy with the end result. The idiots that didn't listen, well, their idiots.Peace, Love and Happieness and all that stuff...
"Anyone who tries to fling crap my way better have a really good crap flinger."
I personally do not care how it was built as long as it is a good playing/sounding instrument.
Yes, there's a bee in the pudding.
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