So, we had a thread recently about the PC1 and who likes Phil Collen, and who just likes the guitar. I don't hate Phil by any means, but I'm just not a fan of Leppard's newer (like, past 1983) sound. But I've wanted one of these for a while, because I love mahogany-bodied Super Strats and this is, at least on paper, quite the killer.
First, cosmetics...
OK, you've seen the guitar. I mean, the quilt top is beautiful, but we can all look at pics of them online, I'm trying to get something different across here than "isn't this guitar pretty?" because well, there are things about the PC1 that I think scare people off.
Sound...
Without the amp, it's got great tone, resonance, and sustain. REALLY good sustain! And generally, I feel if the tone of the guitar unplugged is good, you're a pickup away from a great guitar.
So, I plug it into my Mark V on the Lead channel which is dialed in for a heavy tone with a JB in a Soloist. I'm not expecting to like the tone, because I like a very heavy sound most of the time and Phil is just not someone I think of when I think of a really heavy crushing rhythm tone. But at least, I'm thinking I'm a pickup away from something really great...
Well, let me say I was pleasantly surprised, the PC1 sounded GREAT. Killer, killer tone. Chords are nice and clear but it can get a good chunky palm mute tone, VERY heavy.
Playability...
The neck is thick. Everyone knows that, or hears that. "Oh man the neck is so huge it's like a baseball bat sawed in half!" Well, relax. It's not that thick. If you like super-thin necks it's definitely going to feel thick. Thick necks give great tone and sustain, though. And, it's not as thick as say, an old Gibson "boat neck" or something. Pretty wide, fairly thick. Thicker than a DK1, a little thicker than a Soloist. Unless you're a freak for Wizard necks, do not let the chatter about the neck profile scare you off. I love it!
Comes strung with .010 - .052, pretty thick, for me, and not the typical .009 - .042 setup that you usually get on a Jackson. So, you might need a setup for .009's if you can't deal with the heavy strings (I plan to keep them because it will build strength in my hand, and since I only get to play for short periods most days I could use that.)
The contoured heel and cutaway setup is not quite as "free" as a Soloist, but, well, nothing much but a Soloist is. But there's no problem getting to the high frets AT ALL, it's very similar to a DK1/DK2 as far as that is concerned.
The sustainer...
With the sustainer set to "harmonic" mode, even at a "whisper quiet" bedroom tone you can get that "note fading to harmonic sustain" that usually requires a fair amount of volume to achieve. I would definitely use it, it's a really great addition.
You can leave it on and play lead as much as you like, until the note actually begins to fade out the sustainer doesn't really do that much. It didn't seem to interfere with picked single notes or anything like that. It's very controllable, if you're used to playing through high-gain amps anyway (where you have to watch out for ringing open strings.) I think it's very usable! A neat thing if you write your own music, maybe not something you'd use in a cover band.
This is a really great guitar. Not just for Phil fans. If you like mahogany-bodied super-Strats, outside of a Custom Shop, this is the one to get IMO.
First, cosmetics...
OK, you've seen the guitar. I mean, the quilt top is beautiful, but we can all look at pics of them online, I'm trying to get something different across here than "isn't this guitar pretty?" because well, there are things about the PC1 that I think scare people off.
Sound...
Without the amp, it's got great tone, resonance, and sustain. REALLY good sustain! And generally, I feel if the tone of the guitar unplugged is good, you're a pickup away from a great guitar.
So, I plug it into my Mark V on the Lead channel which is dialed in for a heavy tone with a JB in a Soloist. I'm not expecting to like the tone, because I like a very heavy sound most of the time and Phil is just not someone I think of when I think of a really heavy crushing rhythm tone. But at least, I'm thinking I'm a pickup away from something really great...
Well, let me say I was pleasantly surprised, the PC1 sounded GREAT. Killer, killer tone. Chords are nice and clear but it can get a good chunky palm mute tone, VERY heavy.
Playability...
The neck is thick. Everyone knows that, or hears that. "Oh man the neck is so huge it's like a baseball bat sawed in half!" Well, relax. It's not that thick. If you like super-thin necks it's definitely going to feel thick. Thick necks give great tone and sustain, though. And, it's not as thick as say, an old Gibson "boat neck" or something. Pretty wide, fairly thick. Thicker than a DK1, a little thicker than a Soloist. Unless you're a freak for Wizard necks, do not let the chatter about the neck profile scare you off. I love it!
Comes strung with .010 - .052, pretty thick, for me, and not the typical .009 - .042 setup that you usually get on a Jackson. So, you might need a setup for .009's if you can't deal with the heavy strings (I plan to keep them because it will build strength in my hand, and since I only get to play for short periods most days I could use that.)
The contoured heel and cutaway setup is not quite as "free" as a Soloist, but, well, nothing much but a Soloist is. But there's no problem getting to the high frets AT ALL, it's very similar to a DK1/DK2 as far as that is concerned.
The sustainer...
With the sustainer set to "harmonic" mode, even at a "whisper quiet" bedroom tone you can get that "note fading to harmonic sustain" that usually requires a fair amount of volume to achieve. I would definitely use it, it's a really great addition.
You can leave it on and play lead as much as you like, until the note actually begins to fade out the sustainer doesn't really do that much. It didn't seem to interfere with picked single notes or anything like that. It's very controllable, if you're used to playing through high-gain amps anyway (where you have to watch out for ringing open strings.) I think it's very usable! A neat thing if you write your own music, maybe not something you'd use in a cover band.
This is a really great guitar. Not just for Phil fans. If you like mahogany-bodied super-Strats, outside of a Custom Shop, this is the one to get IMO.
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