Best Tele pickup combination to get certain tones

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JBAdamsJr

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I play rhythm guitar at my church and when I first got my Fender MIM Standard Telecaster, it had hum issues in the gym where we play; it has high intensity lighting and I stand up against a concrete block wall where a lot of the electrical wiring is located. So I swapped those pickups for Fender's SCN Noiseless pickups which are a little better on the hum, but the tone is not that great (the neck is pretty good but I am not crazy about the bridge pickup and hardly ever use it alone). The sound guy is still telling me that he is getting a hum from my channel unless I turn down the guitar volume to about 1/2 and then turn down the volume from the VOX Tonelab LE I am going through into the PA. But turning down the volume on the guitar is making it harder to get some good overdrive and distortion tones.

I want to replace the pickups to get a wide variety of tones, but I also want to get some that would reduce the hum I am getting. But I am not sure that will require getting "noiseless" or "hum-cancelling" pickups, or if I get good pickups that are low noise anyway, that this might be acceptable. Maybe I need to get humbuckers, but I don't know if anyone makes SC-sized humbuckers for the Telecaster, other than the SD Lil '59 bridge pickup. I will be moving out of this space at some point, but it could be a year out; so at some point the hum might not be an issue, but I don't want it to be a real issue until then.

I like the modern country clean tones and their tight compressed overdrive/distortion tones, that you can tell come from a Telecaster. I would like those kinds of tones, as well as smooth jazzy tones from the neck pickup. I also like the old 50's/60's Rock 'n Roll/Rockabilly tones like Scotty Moore and James Burton, and classic rock tones from groups like Boston, Journey, Fleetwood Mac, STYX, etc. I like their distortion tones as well as their lead tones. I don't know if I could get all of those types of tones out of two new Tele pickups, but I would like to try, whether they are single coil or humbuckers.

I am looking at some of these pickups:
Harmonic Design Vintage+ (hum cancelling in mid positions)
Zhangbucker Paul Bunyan
SD Blackguard Broadcasters
Dimarzio Area T (noiseless)
Seymour Duncan Hot for Tele
others?

I could use some suggestions as to what type of pickups I should get and in what configuration as to get some of the tones I would like to achieve. Then any suggestions as to what pickups would get me there would be appreciated. I also use a 4-way switch so I can use these in both series and parallel modes.
 
Re: Best Tele pickup combination to get certain tones

This has been covered in many recent threads.

I love my Area Ts. Lower pup height you get tons of twang. Raise pup height and you can approach P90 territory. The pups can handle high gain better than my EMG SAs. They drive effects well also.

Lots of people swear by others. Zhang's PBs are quite popular.
 
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Re: Best Tele pickup combination to get certain tones

I've got the Harmonic Design Super 90 (bridge) and a Vintage Plus (neck) and it is by far my most versatile and best sounding guitar; period.

It can hang with any hard rock guitar, back the volume off to 7 and do any jangly country run you like. All you need with these PUPs are good volume and tone pots.

It is my only non-Duncan guitar I own, but it's incredible sounding!

Mic
 
Re: Best Tele pickup combination to get certain tones

I've got the Harmonic Design Super 90 (bridge) and a Vintage Plus (neck) and it is by far my most versatile and best sounding guitar; period.

It can hang with any hard rock guitar, back the volume off to 7 and do any jangly country run you like. All you need with these PUPs are good volume and tone pots.

It is my only non-Duncan guitar I own, but it's incredible sounding!

Mic

Would I have hum issues with these, or are they low noise pickups? They say that in the middle positions any hum would cancel out between the two pickups. Do you find that is the case?
 
Re: Best Tele pickup combination to get certain tones

This has been covered in many recent threads.

I love my Area Ts. Lower pup height you get tons of twang. Raise pup height and you can approach P90 territory. The pups can handle high gain better than my EMG SAs. They drive effects well also.

Lots of people swear by others. Zhang's PBs are quite popular.

Would I be able to get some of the classic rock distortion and lead tones from these types of pickups? I thought many of the 60's/70's groups used LP's with humbuckers. But could these come close?
 
Re: Best Tele pickup combination to get certain tones

I just got a new Tele and I went with a Hot Tele in the bridge and an Antiquity in the neck. The bridge is plenty trebly, good harmonics and a nice, warm, overdriven feel in rythmn work with not too much lows. The neck Antiquity is sweet as homeade apple pie. It has a nice, woody, greasy midrange and a bunch of gutsy lows, really awesome for jazz soloing and bluesy single note lines.
My favorite is actually using both together, the neck gives me all the meaty, gutsy punch I need, and the bridge covers all the high mids and treble range, with really bright bite with new strings.
Played through a Boss Blues Driver and pushing a 25 watt tube amp it's nearly orgasmic.
 
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Re: Best Tele pickup combination to get certain tones

Would I have hum issues with these, or are they low noise pickups? They say that in the middle positions any hum would cancel out between the two pickups. Do you find that is the case?

Like any single coil, there is some hum as they aren't active, but very little.

In between tones are great and very useful and quiet.
 
Re: Best Tele pickup combination to get certain tones

Have you tried shielding the pickup and control cavities?
 
Re: Best Tele pickup combination to get certain tones

Before I swapped out the pickups I would make sure the pickup cavity and cables running between your guitar and Tonelab are properly shielded. A friend of mine had fits with a Strat trying to figure out where the hum was coming from until he realized it wasn't the guitar at all but the cheap cables he was using.
 
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