So I took Friday off, and finally got some time to crank my full set-up, which I haven't done in a while. Having recently gotten a couple of new axes, I decided to do some "A vs. B" comparisons of a few of my guitars. At the end, I was pretty surprised by the differences. A lot more pronounced than I would've expected...
The "Tone Monsters"
In terms of tone, there were three guitars that sounded flat out huge, and with a very "natural" tone and resonance.
My EVH was one. I know there are a lot of naysayers on basswood bodies, but I've been converted. Is it the greatest wood for long-term durability? Probably not, too soft for that. But it sure does sound fuckin' GREAT. Loud, open and very "natural" sounding tone. Lots of mids. I think the pickup deserves a lot of credit, too. Wished they would make it available for sale, actually. And it cleans up in a really amazing and unique way with just a little dialing back of the volume knob. This guitar also feels a little "loose" compared to some others, but I don't mean that in a bad way. Like broken-in type loose. An familiar old friend-like loose.
My new PC1 was another. This didn't surprise me, though, as I used to have another PC1 and was expecting it. The mahogany body/quilt maple cap & maple/maple neck is just a killer set of specs. Again, open and natural sounding. Lots of lower mids. IMHO, the Super3 is a really great pickup. This guitar felt medium "tight", and has a steller set-up. The sustainer is a pretty cool gimmick, too. I really wish they made a non-sustainer version, too - maybe in unique solid colors only? - so I could justify buying a second one. Best of the USA Jackson line, IMHO.
GMP Pawn Shop. A totally different animal than my others. Huge sounding in a dark, low-toned kind of way. Think juiced up Les Paul. Tons of sustain. Mine's got a SD Custom / '59 set, which fits real nicely with the chambered mahogany/maple cap set-up. If you ever get the chance to play one, do so. These guitars kick ass.
The "Bad Asses"
My JB Orange Charvel. This was the "tightest" feeling guitar of all. It just felt like every part and screw was done with super-fine precision. This one is an alder-bodied hum-single set-up (Custom / Classic Stacked), and was the straight-up rock & roll machine of the bunch. A "player's" guitar - it does it all-type versatility, and extremely well. Also feels like it brings a little bit of an extra "edge" to the table.
My Zebra Charvel. Hands-down the appearance whore. About as tight feeling as the Orange, but it's even more of a bad ass. HSS, but they're more powerful pickups (Dimarzio Evolution & VV Blues). Much more powerful, actually. In fact, this guitar has so much gain and harmonics (even in SC mode with clean tones!), that it requires dialing back some of your amp/effects settings. The are the kind of pickups that like to drive an amp harder - less natural toned, more compression and distortion class. The VV Blues are a nice output match to the Evolution. Think distorted SRV. Overall, a little over the top tone-wise, but that's what I wanted. It matches the visual appearance.
Anyone else done this recently? What did you find? It was a cool experiment. I mean, I expected to hear/feel a lot of differences. But I was pretty shocked at the large range of them. It's probably not something I would ordinarily notice just using one or two guitars at a time.
I'll probably do it with the rest of my personal stash, when I get some more spare time without the kids again. That probably won't be for a few more months.
The "Tone Monsters"
In terms of tone, there were three guitars that sounded flat out huge, and with a very "natural" tone and resonance.
My EVH was one. I know there are a lot of naysayers on basswood bodies, but I've been converted. Is it the greatest wood for long-term durability? Probably not, too soft for that. But it sure does sound fuckin' GREAT. Loud, open and very "natural" sounding tone. Lots of mids. I think the pickup deserves a lot of credit, too. Wished they would make it available for sale, actually. And it cleans up in a really amazing and unique way with just a little dialing back of the volume knob. This guitar also feels a little "loose" compared to some others, but I don't mean that in a bad way. Like broken-in type loose. An familiar old friend-like loose.
My new PC1 was another. This didn't surprise me, though, as I used to have another PC1 and was expecting it. The mahogany body/quilt maple cap & maple/maple neck is just a killer set of specs. Again, open and natural sounding. Lots of lower mids. IMHO, the Super3 is a really great pickup. This guitar felt medium "tight", and has a steller set-up. The sustainer is a pretty cool gimmick, too. I really wish they made a non-sustainer version, too - maybe in unique solid colors only? - so I could justify buying a second one. Best of the USA Jackson line, IMHO.
GMP Pawn Shop. A totally different animal than my others. Huge sounding in a dark, low-toned kind of way. Think juiced up Les Paul. Tons of sustain. Mine's got a SD Custom / '59 set, which fits real nicely with the chambered mahogany/maple cap set-up. If you ever get the chance to play one, do so. These guitars kick ass.
The "Bad Asses"
My JB Orange Charvel. This was the "tightest" feeling guitar of all. It just felt like every part and screw was done with super-fine precision. This one is an alder-bodied hum-single set-up (Custom / Classic Stacked), and was the straight-up rock & roll machine of the bunch. A "player's" guitar - it does it all-type versatility, and extremely well. Also feels like it brings a little bit of an extra "edge" to the table.
My Zebra Charvel. Hands-down the appearance whore. About as tight feeling as the Orange, but it's even more of a bad ass. HSS, but they're more powerful pickups (Dimarzio Evolution & VV Blues). Much more powerful, actually. In fact, this guitar has so much gain and harmonics (even in SC mode with clean tones!), that it requires dialing back some of your amp/effects settings. The are the kind of pickups that like to drive an amp harder - less natural toned, more compression and distortion class. The VV Blues are a nice output match to the Evolution. Think distorted SRV. Overall, a little over the top tone-wise, but that's what I wanted. It matches the visual appearance.
Anyone else done this recently? What did you find? It was a cool experiment. I mean, I expected to hear/feel a lot of differences. But I was pretty shocked at the large range of them. It's probably not something I would ordinarily notice just using one or two guitars at a time.
I'll probably do it with the rest of my personal stash, when I get some more spare time without the kids again. That probably won't be for a few more months.
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