No matter how hard you try a strat shaped guitar aint gonna sound like a les paul, the body shape is what gives it the tone, the thick slab of mahogany.
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Jackson w. les paul tone
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HMM if the shape has something to do with the tone of a paul then why does the ESP Eclipse sound like ass?.. lol Its more the wood used the thickness of the wood, the quality of the wood and the construction rather than the shape of the guitar. Mass has alot ot do with it too. A Les Paul spc. ( the flat top one. Sounds differnat then say a LP STD does. A closer match would be an SG to a LP Spc and the SG sounds thinnner? Why you ask? cus the Sg is thinner than the LP. It hs nothing to do with the shape. Yes an explorer sounds differant then say a les paul becuase there is no maple on an Explorer and the body is bigger than a Les Paul is. It has more mass. The 750XL is an amaizing guitar for the price and its made pretty much like a Les Paul aside form its shape. and obviously the ones with a trem. My 750 sounds very much like my les paul. But i have differant pup sin it and its differant pieces of wood. 2 les pauls dont sound exactly the same either. each piece of wood has its own individual charactor in tone. But i think the 750 is the best bet to get the Les Paul sound with out paying 2g's for a guitar.
Gil
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Originally posted by maiden_fani agree to a point, but if you made a flying v and a lespaul out of the same piece of mahogany, the les paul would still have a huge bottom end bass response and a thicker tone, IMO.
But i see your point. Theres a few more factors involved then just the same peice of mohagony.
Gil
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Originally posted by CoryI agree...for a Lp sound you gotta go with a LP.so basically get close to les paul specs but still have the Jackson playability and look.
BTW, I understand what you guys are saying. I have never put this mahogany meatwhich up against a paul. The maple top is pretty thick but,you cannot tell since it is a archtop. But, there is definately a ring to it that screams towards the les paul tone. Especially when playing the instrument unplugged. I can imagine hitting it pretty close with a pickup change.
Excuse the pics. They were taken ain a hurry.
-NateLast edited by nateb; 09-13-2006, 07:59 PM.Insert annoying equipment list here....
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The old thread cannot be found. So, I will just tell the story.
when I graduated from college, I bought my first Jackson. It was this used "Jackson Soloist SL-1" according to guitar center. I ended up talking them down to 600.00 (I think) because some of the frets have a little bit away from the binding. So, I basically said that I had to give it a new fret job.
So, I had this thing for years. I finally wanted to find out what it was after about 10 years, and Harmony Central pointed me here.
This guitar has no serial number which left a big question mark in everyones head. Well, after about 3 pages of deliberation from the Jackson know it all's of know it all's these good guys here determined that it was a 85 San Dimas Archtop Soloist due to the placement of the "Made in the USA" and the location of the Trademark. If memory serves me correctly, it was a employee guitar and a prototype since they never made archtops in 85. It was really cool to find out what it actually was.Last edited by nateb; 09-14-2006, 02:54 AM.Insert annoying equipment list here....
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Originally posted by natebThe old thread cannot be found. So, I will just tell the story.
when I graduated from college, I bought my first Jackson. It was this used "Jackson Soloist SL-1" according to guitar center. I ended up talking them down to 600.00 (I think) because some of the frets have a little bit away from the binding. So, I basically said that I had to give it a new fret job.
So, I had this thing for years. I finally wanted to find out what it was after about 10 years, and Harmony Central pointed me here.
This guitar has no serial number which left a big question mark in everyones head. Well, after about 3 pages of deliberation from the Jackson know it all's of know it all's these good guys here determined that it was a 85 San Dimas Archtop Soloist due to the placement of the "Made in the USA" and the location of the Trademark. If memory serves me correctly, it was a employee guitar and a prototype since they never made archtops in 85. It was really cool to find out what it actually was.
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Originally posted by NextInLineI remember that thread very well, I was really shocked by the knowledge! Great guitar btw.
-NateInsert annoying equipment list here....
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