Jazzfiend101
New member
Hi guys, I've a few questions on how to use some of these pickups that I've got. My two guitars I use are a couple of Epiphone Les Pauls that I've more or less gutted to the point that they just aren't off the shelf Epi's. I did this... because we are in a recession. So, the first I have is a Custom. All bells and whistles aside, the pickups in it are an A2P in the neck and a PG in the bridge. I put the PG in first, and it really really works well. Great pup. There's nothing about it I don't like. Admittedly I'm a big Page, Gibbons, Joe Perry, and Slash fan. I thought maybe a good idea would be to stick an A2P in the neck, as people told me the low output would supposedly balance the sound of the sharper PG's bite. I liked it a lot, at first. But I'm noticing that when playing on thicker strings towards my 12th fret, you know where it's supposed to be really a heavier, chunkier, boooowng, sound, my sound drops out.
Now, I've used a few drive pedals, as I push my Crate VC50's distortion to 8, and drive its output pretty hard, and there's still this sort of muddier incoherent sound. Granted, the A2P cleans up excellently even when the amp is driving hard, it just seems that she's got too fat of an ass when I'm playing my bottom strings in that upper register (I lose tone). I've got the amp to sound great on its own, and I really enjoy the sound of it, and I try to avoid to slap pedal after pedal on a rig (less is more, sometimes). But, that A2P seems to be the part of the equation of sound that is making me raise my eyebrow. I'm not yet willing to write it off completely, yet, so I'm wondering if I'm using it the wrong way.
In contrast, I've got another Epi Standard that had a really good set of stock pickups in it, suprisingly. I put in a '59 PuP in it and it really added some clarity to the slightly darker sound of the stock PuP without doing any. The 59 gets a good sound really like Warren Haynes, and I can still drive my amp the same as with the other guitar.
Granted, I'm not trying to copy anybody, but the issue is with the Epi Custom. I wanted to play around with the sound to see if I could get the best of both worlds, cover a few sounds. I'm not going for a jazz sound, and I'm really not trying to copy a Pantera sound, although the PG gets really kickin' when that amp gets to that heavy metal environment.
So that's the backdrop, here's the question: how do people use low-output pickups to get brashy rockin sounds? I've seen everything on the net that can't seem to give me a clear answer on that. I'm looking for the equation. How on earth does a guy like Yngwie use really low output single coil pups but gets this soaring lead tone? How does Slash use lower output pups but manages to get this cutting bite to his sound? I know a lot of this is subjective, and yes there's always, "He's got a pedal," or "They touched up his tone in the studio."
Do any of you guys use low outputs for rockin stuff? Are there any of you who use a higher pup mixed with a moderately low pup? Is there something I'm not doing with the amp I have? I'd appreciate any advice.
Now, I've used a few drive pedals, as I push my Crate VC50's distortion to 8, and drive its output pretty hard, and there's still this sort of muddier incoherent sound. Granted, the A2P cleans up excellently even when the amp is driving hard, it just seems that she's got too fat of an ass when I'm playing my bottom strings in that upper register (I lose tone). I've got the amp to sound great on its own, and I really enjoy the sound of it, and I try to avoid to slap pedal after pedal on a rig (less is more, sometimes). But, that A2P seems to be the part of the equation of sound that is making me raise my eyebrow. I'm not yet willing to write it off completely, yet, so I'm wondering if I'm using it the wrong way.
In contrast, I've got another Epi Standard that had a really good set of stock pickups in it, suprisingly. I put in a '59 PuP in it and it really added some clarity to the slightly darker sound of the stock PuP without doing any. The 59 gets a good sound really like Warren Haynes, and I can still drive my amp the same as with the other guitar.
Granted, I'm not trying to copy anybody, but the issue is with the Epi Custom. I wanted to play around with the sound to see if I could get the best of both worlds, cover a few sounds. I'm not going for a jazz sound, and I'm really not trying to copy a Pantera sound, although the PG gets really kickin' when that amp gets to that heavy metal environment.
So that's the backdrop, here's the question: how do people use low-output pickups to get brashy rockin sounds? I've seen everything on the net that can't seem to give me a clear answer on that. I'm looking for the equation. How on earth does a guy like Yngwie use really low output single coil pups but gets this soaring lead tone? How does Slash use lower output pups but manages to get this cutting bite to his sound? I know a lot of this is subjective, and yes there's always, "He's got a pedal," or "They touched up his tone in the studio."
Do any of you guys use low outputs for rockin stuff? Are there any of you who use a higher pup mixed with a moderately low pup? Is there something I'm not doing with the amp I have? I'd appreciate any advice.