Installed Skinner bursts for a client today (who already owned them) and my initial reaction was disappointment and I'm wondering if I'm missing something- We swapped skinnerbursts for a Burstbucker 3 (bridge) and Burstbucker 2 (neck) on a Bonamassa LP studio.
Pre-swap, we demoed the burstbuckers through a twin that tends to be a good 'standard candle'. The bridge was clear and bright and the neck was deep and dark (right on the edge of being too bassy) but it worked rather well in this guitar. I have never been a burstbucker fanatic (I prefer Seth Lovers for most builds), however, in this build the sound was very good.
So we changed over to the skinnerbursts and found the sound considerable thinner/weaker- as if we had rolled the bass off-
The bridge was bright and rather thin, combined they were somewhat thicker, but the neck alone was only slight darker than the combined and rather thin... again it was as if Skinnerbusts have significant less bass than the Burstbuckers-
This surprised me- I think of Bonamassa as relatively thick blues and imagined the Skinnerbursts would be thicker than the Burstbuckers. Unfortunately, we didn't have a higher gain amp available today, and on the drive home I got to thinking- does Bonamassa's tone drive hard enough that the Skinnerbursts were designed with less bass to reduce mudd/feedback?
We played with the setup a bit- The burstbusters we replaced were just proud of the ring and we installed the Skinners at the same height. Considering my initial reaction, I raised the bridge 1/16 to see if we could get more power and did the same with the neck on the treble side and increased the bass side another 32nd in hopes of a little more thickness - but the sound was essentially the same.
I have never thought of Bonamassa's tone as saturated enough to need bass roll off, but I might get a chance to revisit the guitar with a crunchable amp before the client picks it up- I really am curious if these pups are just less clean friendly than I imagined, but maybe will shine with some drive?
Interested in your thoughts- Again, this was the client's choice (and it's certainly possible that the client was looking for this tone- everyone hears differently), but I would love to hear your thoughts about Skinner's purpose and design.
Pre-swap, we demoed the burstbuckers through a twin that tends to be a good 'standard candle'. The bridge was clear and bright and the neck was deep and dark (right on the edge of being too bassy) but it worked rather well in this guitar. I have never been a burstbucker fanatic (I prefer Seth Lovers for most builds), however, in this build the sound was very good.
So we changed over to the skinnerbursts and found the sound considerable thinner/weaker- as if we had rolled the bass off-
The bridge was bright and rather thin, combined they were somewhat thicker, but the neck alone was only slight darker than the combined and rather thin... again it was as if Skinnerbusts have significant less bass than the Burstbuckers-
This surprised me- I think of Bonamassa as relatively thick blues and imagined the Skinnerbursts would be thicker than the Burstbuckers. Unfortunately, we didn't have a higher gain amp available today, and on the drive home I got to thinking- does Bonamassa's tone drive hard enough that the Skinnerbursts were designed with less bass to reduce mudd/feedback?
We played with the setup a bit- The burstbusters we replaced were just proud of the ring and we installed the Skinners at the same height. Considering my initial reaction, I raised the bridge 1/16 to see if we could get more power and did the same with the neck on the treble side and increased the bass side another 32nd in hopes of a little more thickness - but the sound was essentially the same.
I have never thought of Bonamassa's tone as saturated enough to need bass roll off, but I might get a chance to revisit the guitar with a crunchable amp before the client picks it up- I really am curious if these pups are just less clean friendly than I imagined, but maybe will shine with some drive?
Interested in your thoughts- Again, this was the client's choice (and it's certainly possible that the client was looking for this tone- everyone hears differently), but I would love to hear your thoughts about Skinner's purpose and design.