Originally posted by ranalli
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DiMarzio's site
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Re: DiMarzio's site
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Re: DiMarzio's site
HAILS
I LOVE BOTH DUNCANS AND DIMARZIOS, and i have a special passion for bill lawrence l 500 xl.
very Transparent pickups.
a little lack of bass, but it still have more bass than teh jb, but i guess its mids and highs tone are different than the jb.
jb sings More. Bl cutts MORE.
Q
i´m eager to receive the soundclips of Dime59hum with his new schecter and the bill lawrence in the bridge and teh SD full shred in teh neck.
i´m really eager to hear that FS neck.
if i like, i will buy one of them
Q
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Re: DiMarzio's site
Originally posted by TruthsayerIf I hear one more person (and I'm sure I will) describe a pickup as sounding "organic", I'm going to upchuck.
Unless a pickup is of or derived from or relating to living organisms, or unless a pickup is grown on a farm which doesn't use chemical pesticides or fertilizers, there is no such thing as an "organic" pickup.
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Re: DiMarzio's site
The Duncan website still does several things better than the DiMarzio website, such as a complete catalog of audio samples and this user forum. What we're lacking is a half-naked picture of Steve Vai on our pickups page. D'oh! I knew we forgot something! All jokes aside, it's a lot cooler than it used to be.
If any of the mods are reading this - Might there in the future be a "Compare DiMarzio and Duncan" sticky? We could compare and contrast Duncan models with their DiMarzio counterparts. It's not so much advertising for another company as it is providing a way to share information. All in the interest of healthy competition. Besides, is ANYone here moving to DiMarzio permanently? NO!
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Re: DiMarzio's site
Originally posted by TruthsayerWood doesn't make any sound, and if it did, pickups couldn't pick it up. Magnetic electric guitar pickups only pick up string vibration.
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Re: DiMarzio's site
Originally posted by TruthsayerWood doesn't make any sound, and if it did, pickups couldn't pick it up. Magnetic electric guitar pickups only pick up string vibration.
I think the term you are looking for is "transparent". Which means that the sound coming from the guitar is not excessively "colored". I don't see how this can have anything to do with living creatures or natural fertilizer (organic) which almost always have a color and a smell too.
DiMarzio makes as many or more pickups with a relatively transparent tone as does Seymour Duncan. For example: PAF, Virtual PAF, Air Classic, PAF Pro, FRED, and PAF Joe are all relatively transparent pickups. Along the same lines for SD would be the Antiquities, Alnico II Pro, Seth Lovers, and perhaps the Pearly Gates. So I don't see how you could fairly say that one company makes more "transparent" or to use your term - more "organic" pickups than the other.
Keep in mind another thing. Your guitar amp, effects, and stomp boxes are going to do a lot more to color your tone than any pickup ever will.
I'm going to have to agree with this. I thought the PAF Pro was one of the most transparent pickups I've ever played....hence the reason why I took it out after a while....it made my guitar sound plain But it was still a great pickup IMO.
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Re: DiMarzio's site
Truthsayer:
Thanks for your post and welcome to the User Group Forum. You obviously know a lot about pickups.
I notice you describe our Alnico 2 pickups as transparent. Interesting. Not the word I'd use -- but there's no right or wrong. To me, those Alnico 2 SD pickups you mentioned have softer attack, distort earlier and add warmth; especially to guitars that use bright-sounding woods like maple and ebony.
Or, maybe we're just using different words to describe the same thing. I could see how you'd call that transparent. Or some might use the word organic. Really, as long as we're using words to describe tone, we're always going to be relying on the other person's understanding of a word's meaning.
Anyway, stick around the Forum. I'm sure we could learn from you and you from us.
Take care,
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Re: DiMarzio's site
Originally posted by mrfjonesthey are described that way because of the wood of the guitar. If a pickup lets the actual sound of the wood (like when it is played unplugged) come through then it is described as organic sounding. I don't like that designation much either but i see where it is coming from.
I think the term you are looking for is "transparent". Which means that the sound coming from the guitar is not excessively "colored". I don't see how this can have anything to do with living creatures or natural fertilizer (organic) which almost always have a color and a smell too.
DiMarzio makes as many or more pickups with a relatively transparent tone as does Seymour Duncan. For example: PAF, Virtual PAF, Air Classic, PAF Pro, FRED, and PAF Joe are all relatively transparent pickups. Along the same lines for SD would be the Antiquities, Alnico II Pro, Seth Lovers, and perhaps the Pearly Gates. So I don't see how you could fairly say that one company makes more "transparent" or to use your term - more "organic" pickups than the other.
Keep in mind another thing. Your guitar amp, effects, and stomp boxes are going to do a lot more to color your tone than any pickup ever will.
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Re: DiMarzio's site
Originally posted by TruthsayerYes.
.. yeah lets just talk about sound, yeah cool.
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Re: DiMarzio's site
Originally posted by TruthsayerIf I hear one more person (and I'm sure I will) describe a pickup as sounding "organic", I'm going to upchuck.
Unless a pickup is of or derived from or relating to living organisms, or unless a pickup is grown on a farm which doesn't use chemical pesticides or fertilizers, there is no such thing as an "organic" pickup.
i guess they are trying to say that duncans allow the natural tone of the guitar to come through more?
I dunno myself,i simply found the dimarzio's i tried to have more warmth and the duncans are rawer sounding or something?
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Re: DiMarzio's site
Originally posted by TruthsayerIf I hear one more person (and I'm sure I will) describe a pickup as sounding "organic", I'm going to upchuck.
Unless a pickup is of or derived from or relating to living organisms, or unless a pickup is grown on a farm which doesn't use chemical pesticides or fertilizers, there is no such thing as an "organic" pickup.
they are described that way because of the wood of the guitar. If a pickup lets the actual sound of the wood (like when it is played unplugged) come through then it is described as organic sounding. I don't like that designation much either but i see where it is coming from.
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Re: DiMarzio's site
Originally posted by StevoLong flash intro then Steve Vai without a shirt.. um... woohoo
Are there any audio demos, considering that the "sound" is the bottom line?
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Re: DiMarzio's site
If I hear one more person (and I'm sure I will) describe a pickup as sounding "organic", I'm going to upchuck.
Unless a pickup is of or derived from or relating to living organisms, or unless a pickup is grown on a farm which doesn't use chemical pesticides or fertilizers, there is no such thing as an "organic" pickup.
Leave a comment:
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Re: DiMarzio's site
Long flash intro then Steve Vai without a shirt.. um... woohoo
Are there any audio demos, considering that the "sound" is the bottom line?
Leave a comment:
Leave a comment: