Chickenwings
Alnico 6/8
Re: Gibson Vs Epiphone: Why doesn't epiphone sound or feel the same?
epiphone vs gibson.
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epiphone vs gibson.
zzzzzzzzz
epiphone vs gibson.
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I have one of each brand, a Les Paul studio by Gibson and a Les Paul Standard by Epiphone. Both sound awesome but only cos I've replaced a few things about them (mainly the bridge pick up, the tailpiece and installing an Earvana nut). I think with a Gibson you're paying for better materials plus the name as well.
But, when looking at Les Paul's a few years back I tried several Gibson Les Paul Standards which not only weighed a ton but didn't sound great in the demo room. Maybe it was the amp or whatever I don't know. They were the really expensive ones too. Then I tried some Epiphone Les Paul Customs, again they sounded really bad. Eventually I grabbed an Epi Les Paul Standard and plugged that in, result, I loved the feel and the sustain of the guitar and settled on that. The cheapest of the guitars I tried that day (must have been 5 guitars) yet the best sounding. Pot luck or just good judgement?
Most of that has to do with the subliminal 'power of suggestion'. How much did you pay for your Gibson? More than 2000 dollars? If it costs 8 times as much as an Epiphone, it better sound 8 times better right? There are tons of videos showing this effect in action on YouTube, not to mention the bone of contention between 'wood makes a difference' and 'tonewoods don't exist'.
And not too long ago, Itsabass posted how terrible new Gibson these days; that they are basically 'incomplete'.
The tone woods are not the same. The hardware is not the same. The pickups are not the same.
If Epiphone could build perfect replicas of Gibson models, they would;
EITHER drive Gibson out of business
OR have to charge the same prices as Gibson.
As said, if they were made the same, they would be priced the same.. And would def cut into Gibsons market share. Im pretty sure thats why they axed the Elite series
Thing is, some Epiphones actually cost more than some Gibsons, like the LPJ when they came out in 2013. At least in my country.
So just considering price, I could get the first LPJ cheaper in 2013 than a new Epiphone MKH in 2016...
Sooo, is the Epiphone better made than LPJ then?
(Gibson prices have gone waaaay up too though. But price/quality is not always a good measure).
I love them both.
P.S.S. the epi Explorer I still own is spectacular as well.
I have "upgraded my Epiphone Bridge obviously, the "mudbucker" as someone called them here to 59s (with A4 magnets now based on opinions from another very recent post)
and the tone "switches" not pots uses. I did 50s wiring t help solve the problem. The pots did get changed as they original gave up the ghost after repeated soldering attempts. Still the alpha pots though Nothing much original remains on it, really because of 11 years of wear and tear and tone searching than anything truly thinking any component was inferior. The Gibsons only needed tweaks by myself with a screwdriver to set up to my style.
I will probably never touch my Gibsons, unless Gibson releases BB1 & 2 quick connect pickups, I do like that idea of the quick connect. I would never really consider my Epiphone inferior to My Gibson LP bast on cost alone just different beasts. I would NEVER sell my Epiphone. I wouldn't say the same about my gibsons although I have no intention to sell just never say never for them.
"experimental" models that they wouldnt want to do under the Gibson name. Like the Wilshire.
I will probably never touch my Gibsons, unless Gibson releases BB1 & 2 quick connect pickups, I do like that idea of the quick connect. I would never really consider my Epiphone inferior to My Gibson LP bast on cost alone just different beasts. I would NEVER sell my Epiphone. I wouldn't say the same about my gibsons although I have no intention to sell just never say never for them.