Gibson Les Paul Double Cuts

Mojoe01

New member
How do these sound? My major concern is the fact that there are 24 frets on the neck, does this change the sound of the guitar in the neck position?
 
Re: Gibson Les Paul Double Cuts

I like the looks of the Gibson DC, but I got a Hamer Studio. That way, I didn't even have to change the pickups. ;)
 
Re: Gibson Les Paul Double Cuts

I'm als a Hamer Studio user (mine's an '81 FM Special) and the fit and finish is better than on my Gibby LP STD. That sais, I'm intrigued by the sound chamber that the early DC's had (don't know if the new ones have it or not).
 
Re: Gibson Les Paul Double Cuts

I've heard, in comparison, that the neck sound is nowhere near as good as a single cut, due to the pickup repositioning. I played one in a store, and didn't really like it. At the time I didn't realize it had a 24 fret neck. I ended up buying my Les Paul Special Double cut, which is a whole different animal, with an all mahogany body, and P-90's. However FWIW it has a 22 fret neck and a killer neck tone.
 
Re: Gibson Les Paul Double Cuts

I tried that Double Cut faded with P-90s OH MAN I loved it and the price is VERY nice for a brandnew Gibby. I also like that nice bright canary yellow color with black pickguard. If I ever get a gibson it will diffently be a double cut faded.
 
Re: Gibson Les Paul Double Cuts

I have nothing against Gibson introducing new models but those double cuts ARE NOT LES PAULS! Les Pauls have a single cutaway! Bastards! :rant:
 
Re: Gibson Les Paul Double Cuts

I love the Look of these and they play pretty nice!
517512.jpg
 
Re: Gibson Les Paul Double Cuts

I thought the one that I tried in the store sounded pretty good, although it had more of a Les Paul Junior or Hamer Sunburst flavor to it than an actual Les Paul. It just didn't seem to have the midrange punch that a normal LP has.
 
Re: Gibson Les Paul Double Cuts

Mojoe01 said:
How do these sound? My major concern is the fact that there are 24 frets on the neck, does this change the sound of the guitar in the neck position?

It does. I had one and it was the coolest guitar I've owned in a long time (and check my link, I've owned a lot). It doesn't sound like a Les Paul with the thinner body, and the neck pup isn't in the sweet spot. Some will argue it doesn't matter, but I can hear a difference. I also don't need 24 frets as my style of playing isn't technical enough that I need the full range of two octives (12x12=24). If it were a 22 fretter, I'd still have it. I also got a killer deal only paying $900 for mine new with hard case. I had Duncans in it, then eded up selling it.

It's kinda like a Gibson-ized PRS and IMO that's the market Gibson is targeting with these.

Here's a pic


dcbody.jpg
 
Re: Gibson Les Paul Double Cuts

Simon_F said:
I have nothing against Gibson introducing new models but those double cuts ARE NOT LES PAULS! Les Pauls have a single cutaway! Bastards! :rant:

Doublecut Specials, and Juniors came out in 1957 or 1958, so they are not exactly new.
 
Re: Gibson Les Paul Double Cuts

Dang Carrot, I like that DC. I had a hard time deciding between the LP Jr. and the LP DC faded. But in the end the Jr. won out.
 
Re: Gibson Les Paul Double Cuts

Personal opinion, the Double Cut nails it for me. I've got one identical to the picture above and love it. I know it may be blashemous but I never really got into normal Les Pauls and call me a wuss but I like the lighter body.

The stock pickups were kludge (microphonics from the bridge pick up at rehearsal or live volumes) dropped doncans in and it sounded great.

Guess it depends on personal taste in the end : )
 
Re: Gibson Les Paul Double Cuts

+3 Or 4 FOR HAMER!!!!!

<----'04 Hamer Custom Shop Studio Custom

STOCK WITH DUNCANS!!! :beerchug:
 
Re: Gibson Les Paul Double Cuts

The best Les Paul double cut model is the Hamer USA Studio. Besides its superior components, great build quality and standard Duncan pickups, it has the big advantage of dual volume controls versus the Gibson's single. This might not seem like a major point, but so much of the LP, SG and 335 mojo is involved with mixing the pickup volumes for an almost unlimited of different tone shades.
 
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