the peter green lp may have a tree trunk neck but that didnt stop gary moore or kirk hammet from shreding the hell out of it
Cool article. Good info, nice to hear Peter Green comparing the two LPs. And to learn Clapton's woman tone really was the neck pickup - I always felt it might've been the bridge with the tone rolled all the way off. Of course, those early Marshalls were mighty bright amps.
One statement would've been a little out of date even for 1999, I think:
"And today, 1958-1960 Les Paul Standard guitars command extremely high prices, sometimes bringing their owners $50,000 and more."
What a flashback! I had that Guitar Player with the Clapton interview when it came out. Always remembered the case lining comment.
Thanks, Lew, for a trip down memory lane.
Interesting to think those guitars were only 5-10 years old when they became classics. I guess it wasn't the age of the wood!
Not sure if the article covered it but...I think it is interesting Clapton bought his Les Paul because of the influence Freddie King had on him. He later realized after playing his Beano for years Freddie King played P90s. He said when he finally played P90s he realized he lucked out with Beano because he preferred the humbuckers.
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I've always seen Freddie King performing with an ES-3XX in his hands. I've only seen the P-90 Goldtop in his glamour promo photos.
Didn't Clapton have a different Les Paul first than Beano. I can't if it was mentioned in his memoirs when he had the Greece episode. It went something like he took a break from the Bluesbreakers and went to Greece where he performed at some club. Then things went south and he had to leave and leave a Les Paul and some Marshall amp behind.
RE: Freddie King---he used the Goldtop on the early recordings, including some instrumentals and the stuff he did with Smokey Smothers. By the second instrumental album he was using a 345. He probably used the choke position on the Varitone and with the metal fingerpicks he used he got a very trebly tone. This all changed when he got with Shelter and his tone got progressively more distorted and midrangey.
Your comments about the goldtop are true I think. But Freddie gets a really thin bright sound on I'm Going Down, which is a Shelter record. I liked his sound on Hideaway. The 1961 single.
I guess that's the goldtop?
Really nice tone on that recording. Has the best of Gibson and some Fender qualities to it. Anyone know what amp he used?