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Epiphone Les Paul Junior Pickup

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  • Epiphone Les Paul Junior Pickup

    I recently pick up a junior with a humbucker. It’s a 2007 made by Samick. Bolt on Neck. Really good fret work, intonation is spot on. I bought it to learn how to mod and work on my own guitars. I play mostly rock and blues and I’m looking for a pickup that would give me a nice warm tone. I play through a Hotrod Deluxe and a small Marshall tube amp. I’m leaning towards a classic 59 but I’m open to suggestion. I do like learning songs from Leslie West. Would the 59 be a good choice. Also when order do I choose bridge position since he junior only has one pickup.
    thanks

  • #2
    welcome to the forum!

    leslie west had a p90 in his jr. you could put in a phat cat, which is a humbucker sized p90. not everyone loves them but i think the bridge, especially in a jr like yours, would be great. if you want to go humbucker, a 59b is a solid choice. i love a pgb in something like this too. what ever pup you get, a bridge model will almost always be a better choice.

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    • #3
      I would go with a P-Rails. You would have the P90 and single (rail) for your classic rock and blues stuff. The humbucker is hot and will work for your harder rock stuff. You can get a lot of versatility of tone out of a single humbucker guitar.
      Last edited by Securb; 01-23-2022, 04:02 PM.

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      • #4
        I vote for the Phat Cat.
        Originally posted by Bad City
        He's got the crowd on his side and the blue jean lights in his eyes...

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        • #5
          59 has body and sparkle with slightly scooped mids, often very good in mahogany guitars.
          But an Alnico Pro II would be warmer & smoother, with much richer midrange.
          Either way, IMO you definitely want a bridge version.

          Are you certain a warm pickup is what you really want, though?
          You can always roll off the tone to darken a bright pickup; it's harder to add treble to a dark sound.
          A bright pickup also yields a strong initial transient, giving a bite that smoother pickups can't match.
          I think fairly prominent pick attack is a significant component of Leslie West's tone.

          I might consider the Pearly Gates bridge, instead. Very popular for Gibsons.
          It's crisp & aggressive yet also has a vintagey sound & feel.

          That's if you're going for a standard humbucker, rather than a hum-sized P90 or the P-rails.
          .
          "You should know better by now than to introduce science into a discussion of voodoo."
          .

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          • #6
            Originally posted by Securb View Post
            I would go with a P-Rails. You would have the P90 and single (rail) for your classic rock and blues stuff. The humbucker is hot and will work for your harder rock stuff. You can get a lot of versatility of tone out of a single humbucker guitar.
            Custom custom with a series/parallel push pull.

            Sent from my SM-A115A using Tapatalk

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            • #7
              I thought you were right on target with the 59. If you want more vintage blues and rock, look at the Antiquity.
              Administrator of the SDUGF

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              • #8
                With a HRD or small Marshall, coping Leslie West, in bolt-on junior, I'd go Custom or 59/Custom. Bonus for push-pull pots. Customs do a great Fender sound split, which gets you to blues territory, especially if you play up toward the neck with the split coil. With two push pulls, you could make a triple-shot and get all the sounds. Screw coil is like a low-powered punk P-90, slug coil is like a Strat, parallel coils is like a Tele and full humbucker is face-melting rock.

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                • #9
                  Thank you everyone for your feedback. It’s either going to be a Phat Cat or 59 or Pearly Gate. As I said I’m looking for a warm tone but bright tone is more flexible since I play thru two great amps and have good tone control on the guitar.
                  I appreciate your suggestions

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                  • #10
                    Originally posted by John Albers View Post
                    Thank you everyone for your feedback. It’s either going to be a Phat Cat or 59 or Pearly Gate. As I said I’m looking for a warm tone but bright tone is more flexible since I play thru two great amps and have good tone control on the guitar.
                    I appreciate your suggestions
                    Let us know how this project turns out in the end (with pics).
                    Administrator of the SDUGF

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