I have an easier time playing a strat than a Gibson LP... which is one reason why my LP is for sale! My #1 strat right now is an Eric Johnson signature, it's the best sounding/playing strat I've ever had, and I've owned and played a ton. Couple of ideas for the original poster...
Get a Maple boarded neck. Adds spank to the tone. While you're at it, get jumbo frets and if you're ordering a neck, pay a few bucks more for the stainless steel frets. Put staggered sperzels on it so you don't need the string trees (will help the guitar stay in tune MUCH better) and then get a graphite or bone nut. Have the nut professionally cut by a luthier, this is going to affect the playability of the neck more than you realize. Get a neck as big/thick as you can stand, it WILL have a better tone. More mass in the neck = beefier tone. Besides, thin necks are for weenies. If your guitar has one of those modern super-thick finishes, consider wetsanding it down a bit... this may be kinda dangerous depending on your skill level, but the thicker the coat of poly they glop on, the more dead/dull the guitar is going to sound. It seems like the less expensive guitars put an incredibly thick coat on to hide flaws. If you play through a cranked high gain amp all the time, a lot of this 'tone' stuff isn't going to make a lot of difference, but if you play clean or semi-distorted stuff it's night and day.
Only bad thing about putting a lot of upgrades in an inexpensive guitar is that you very rapidly are going to find yourself 'upside down' if you sell it.
Get a Maple boarded neck. Adds spank to the tone. While you're at it, get jumbo frets and if you're ordering a neck, pay a few bucks more for the stainless steel frets. Put staggered sperzels on it so you don't need the string trees (will help the guitar stay in tune MUCH better) and then get a graphite or bone nut. Have the nut professionally cut by a luthier, this is going to affect the playability of the neck more than you realize. Get a neck as big/thick as you can stand, it WILL have a better tone. More mass in the neck = beefier tone. Besides, thin necks are for weenies. If your guitar has one of those modern super-thick finishes, consider wetsanding it down a bit... this may be kinda dangerous depending on your skill level, but the thicker the coat of poly they glop on, the more dead/dull the guitar is going to sound. It seems like the less expensive guitars put an incredibly thick coat on to hide flaws. If you play through a cranked high gain amp all the time, a lot of this 'tone' stuff isn't going to make a lot of difference, but if you play clean or semi-distorted stuff it's night and day.
Only bad thing about putting a lot of upgrades in an inexpensive guitar is that you very rapidly are going to find yourself 'upside down' if you sell it.
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