This is me playing Devil's Advocate. I don't necessarily agree with everything Mark said, but he has a few points.
The answer, in my opinion, is brand recognition. People know what a Les Paul is, even if they aren't guitarists. I remember talking about how Les Paul had died and people knew who he was and the guitar that carries his namesake, and they've never played in their lives. Plus, players want to play what the people who inspired them play. Am I going to play Led Zeppelin with my Model 4 slung down to my knees? I could, but it'd feel horribly wrong. That's just me though.
Honestly? The market is horrible. In the past ten years or so, I've watched things spin out of control on the local level. Competition has been completely obliterated and what used to be an open market is seemingly now a monopoly with Guitar Center holding the strings at the B&M level. Even the local "Ma and Pop" stores, I've discovered, were bought up by Guitar Center. Those that are truly independent no longer carry anything in terms of big brands in guitars.
So, I blame that partially. I've watched everything go up in price though, an Epiphone costs 2x what it did back in 2004-2005 nearly. It's ridiculous across the board, not to mention the QC has become extremely hit or miss from everything I've read and seen.
I wouldn't say switching guitars is what made those guitarists boring. Hell, a lot of guitarists have a limited lifespan and just run out of fire. Even those who kicked ass with a Les Paul in their hands and still wield one aren't necessarily still dynamic. Then you get into those who play "Les Pauls" but in all actuality are playing copies of some sort.
I don't agree with shitting on Les Pauls wholesale, but I can understand people giving them second thoughts these days. Price-to-quality has suffered a lot in the past decade, and in all honesty someone like me who is in a similar position to the OP might find themselves exploring the alternatives. Personally, an entry-level Gibson Les Paul (or high-end Epiphone Les Paul) couldn't inspire the faith in me that it used to and I set my sights on a PRS SE Singlecut. It's not exactly the same, but I feel like I'm getting more for my money there.
Originally posted by DonP
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How can Gibson charge so much for a crappy product?
So, I blame that partially. I've watched everything go up in price though, an Epiphone costs 2x what it did back in 2004-2005 nearly. It's ridiculous across the board, not to mention the QC has become extremely hit or miss from everything I've read and seen.
Surely all of these famous guitarist who play Les Pauls could find some other axe to get the job done? I see a few who switched to Stratocasters (Clapton), yet most who played Les Pauls had there hayday with the Les Paul, and got...boring...after the switch.
Surely if these guitars are this bad, no one should want them and they should be going for chump change. So I'd say your two cents don't hold a lot of water.
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