DrNewcenstein
He Did the Monster Mash
Re: How important is versatility in your gear to you?
I got hooked on having a versatile setup years ago when I was still just playing along to various artists - Sabbath, Maiden, Priest, Metallica/Megadeth, Purple, Zeppelin, Alice Cooper, ZZ Top, ACDC, WASP, Crue, VH, CCR, etc etc - and I wanted a rack preamp that could get all those sounds, rather than just use one sound for everything, and not have to futz with pedal knobs. Of course, I needed various guitars in various tunings, especially for Sabbath, so I kept adding guitars.
These days, I still use the rack, but I keep it set with my tones that work with my songs and my drum and bass tones, which are not as widely varied. My Jazz/Fusion tones may not sound like what anyone else expects of Jazz/Fusion tones, but I see no problem there.
I do still have the ridiculous guitar collection, though: 28 including 3 acoustics (one nylon) and 5 basses, and even though I have several that are identical (5 WRMG mutts, 4 all-mahogany SLS-types), I don't think any two have the same pickups. 2 of my basses have Jackson J-150 J-style pickups in the bridge, but that's it. AFAIK, I only have one guitar with a (straight) JB in the bridge. Between mag-swaps and hybrids, I've got enough pickup variety for a dozen identical guitars.
However, for me, a large part of the reason for having multiples of the same model but with different pickups is so that I can continually play a guitar I'm comfortable with, yet still get enough tonal variety that I'm not fiddling with eq in the rack or post-producing something to death. You lay down a rhythm track with a LP and your leads with a Strat, and you have to contend with the adjustments (nut width, board radius, scale, etc). By having several identical models with different pickups, you get tonal variety but retain an instinctive feel of the guitar.
I got hooked on having a versatile setup years ago when I was still just playing along to various artists - Sabbath, Maiden, Priest, Metallica/Megadeth, Purple, Zeppelin, Alice Cooper, ZZ Top, ACDC, WASP, Crue, VH, CCR, etc etc - and I wanted a rack preamp that could get all those sounds, rather than just use one sound for everything, and not have to futz with pedal knobs. Of course, I needed various guitars in various tunings, especially for Sabbath, so I kept adding guitars.
These days, I still use the rack, but I keep it set with my tones that work with my songs and my drum and bass tones, which are not as widely varied. My Jazz/Fusion tones may not sound like what anyone else expects of Jazz/Fusion tones, but I see no problem there.
I do still have the ridiculous guitar collection, though: 28 including 3 acoustics (one nylon) and 5 basses, and even though I have several that are identical (5 WRMG mutts, 4 all-mahogany SLS-types), I don't think any two have the same pickups. 2 of my basses have Jackson J-150 J-style pickups in the bridge, but that's it. AFAIK, I only have one guitar with a (straight) JB in the bridge. Between mag-swaps and hybrids, I've got enough pickup variety for a dozen identical guitars.
However, for me, a large part of the reason for having multiples of the same model but with different pickups is so that I can continually play a guitar I'm comfortable with, yet still get enough tonal variety that I'm not fiddling with eq in the rack or post-producing something to death. You lay down a rhythm track with a LP and your leads with a Strat, and you have to contend with the adjustments (nut width, board radius, scale, etc). By having several identical models with different pickups, you get tonal variety but retain an instinctive feel of the guitar.
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