Re: Guitars with different specs
I still cant decide if ill sell the ibanez guitars, and get guitars with thicker necks , thicker body and tune o matic bridges. I know thats what my hands want. but if i do get to sell them and adjust to guitars with same specs ,ill probably feel bad when somebody hands me an ibanez or an esp and notice my tecnique sucks lol
Just because something is recommended for a certain style, doesn't mean that it's necessary for a certain style. I playing in a bunch of different bands in high school, from alt rock, to shred, to metal core, to indie (always rhythm guitar) and I had/ have a Hamer Echotone (335 style) that I swapped out some pickups with and it sounded fantastic for the way I liked to play. Nowadays I'm getting into superstrats (particularly extended range) and I'm digging those. If you like Gibsons then you like Gibsons. Plenty of metal guys used them. Matt Heafy from Trivium even has two signatures with Epiphone and if you've ever heard Shogun, you know that Trivium can do some pretty rifftastic stuff (I own one of the seven strings and I like it a lot). If you find that you still want two full octaves on the fretboard, Epi does make a couple. The Les Paul Prophecy series both have 24 frets (I believe ebony board, but could be wrong) and come with a choice of EMG's and Gibson USA pups. The Epi Iommi SG has 24 frets as well, Iommi's signature Gibson pups, an ebony board and a strap button that isn't ********ly placed on the guitar. Sell off your Ibby's and you could probably get one of those three easily.
I still cant decide if ill sell the ibanez guitars, and get guitars with thicker necks , thicker body and tune o matic bridges. I know thats what my hands want. but if i do get to sell them and adjust to guitars with same specs ,ill probably feel bad when somebody hands me an ibanez or an esp and notice my tecnique sucks lol