Me and Nick discussed this the other day. Then we drifted out into the Loomis territory, and that was the end of that 
I think it's basically just how you use it, and what your setup is. Loomis sounds great, for one, with EMGs (see This) but that I think is purely by his setup. In that video, he's clearly playing the majority of the song through the bridge pickup (check his sweep passages). He explains his rig, and most importantly his EQ settings in This video. That explains a lot, especially when you look at how his bass-heavy amp works with his relatively bright setup (Ash body, maple/maple neck, bridge pickup preference, etc.) and that seems to be the key to making EMGs sound good- manipulating and the EQ settings.
On the other hand Alexi sounds dead and really flat(http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DZiEJCkE8t8).
I think it's just how you use them, and if you can apply them well, good for you. I personally dislike EMGs as they don't seem to have the distinct character that I am looking for, so I in turn prefer passives. Basically, I feel that EMGs are more of a 'pinpoint' pickup, concentrating on one specific sound, whereas passives are more broad, so if you know how to use an EMG to its full potential, you'll do just fine, if you want to experiment, try passives.

I think it's basically just how you use it, and what your setup is. Loomis sounds great, for one, with EMGs (see This) but that I think is purely by his setup. In that video, he's clearly playing the majority of the song through the bridge pickup (check his sweep passages). He explains his rig, and most importantly his EQ settings in This video. That explains a lot, especially when you look at how his bass-heavy amp works with his relatively bright setup (Ash body, maple/maple neck, bridge pickup preference, etc.) and that seems to be the key to making EMGs sound good- manipulating and the EQ settings.
On the other hand Alexi sounds dead and really flat(http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DZiEJCkE8t8).
I think it's just how you use them, and if you can apply them well, good for you. I personally dislike EMGs as they don't seem to have the distinct character that I am looking for, so I in turn prefer passives. Basically, I feel that EMGs are more of a 'pinpoint' pickup, concentrating on one specific sound, whereas passives are more broad, so if you know how to use an EMG to its full potential, you'll do just fine, if you want to experiment, try passives.

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