Is a strat bridge pick up actually usable?

Re: Is a strat bridge pick up actually usable?

It took me 50 years to use a single coil bridge pickup so that it didn't sound like farm animals fighting for their lives
 
Re: Is a strat bridge pick up actually usable?

I've skipped all but the first page, so apologies if I'm repeating something here; I'm also predominantly an LP player, and found my Strat bridge pup harsh when run through my rig. It's perfectly fine when DI'd, so there was a need to set up new patches on the rig, not just a tweeking here n' there of the LP settings :)
 
Re: Is a strat bridge pick up actually usable?

Super old thread, but another key to using a vintage style Strat is to EQ your rig to the middle pickup. Then you get a little darker and fuller in the neck and a little brighter in the bridge, along with the 2 and 4 positions. (A lot of people EQ for a perfect neck pickup tone, then as you work toward the bridge it's just too bright.)

Of course a few other of the traditional things that people have done are moving the tone to the bridge, using a thick fuzz or replacing with a slightly hotter and darker pickup. It's not a Les Paul or Superstrat, so don't expect switching to the bridge to be the monster rock tone unless you have a humbucker in there.
 
Re: Is a strat bridge pick up actually usable?

Old thread but interesting question.

I have replaced the bridge pickup in every Strat I've owned.

I like the Fralin Steel Pole 43 best because alone, it has the balls of a P90 but combined with a vintage Strat neck or middle pickup, it doesn't overpower them and still gives classic Strat tones.
 
Re: Is a strat bridge pick up actually usable?

Yeah, old thread, and I still need something with more mids and power in a Strat bridge. My stock 82 'The Strat' has an X-1 pickup, considered hotter for the time. These days I need more mids...Ideally a humbucker, at least.
 
Re: Is a strat bridge pick up actually usable?

Getting THAT authentic with all single coils is too much for me. A humbucker split gives me all the ice pick to the face I could ever need. All single coils in a strat kind of pigeonholes my playing since I'm already addicted to blues. I need some incentive to push my playing in other directions.
 
Re: Is a strat bridge pick up actually usable?

In one of my Strats have a Seymour Duncan Humbucker JB Jr in the bridge
In the other I have a Godin Humbucker in bridge as well. Both work very well.
 
Re: Is a strat bridge pick up actually usable?

I saw Hendrix quite many times and could see that he often used the bridge pickup. When I tried myself I couldn´t believe it, it just sounded awful. A friend of mine was working carrying amps for the concert hall where Jimi played. He said that all the knobs on his Marshalls were on 10, except the treble knob that were set at 0. Well, then you can use the stock bridge pickup on a Strat.
 
Re: Is a strat bridge pick up actually usable?

I have to say, I love Hendrix' neck & middle tones. But the bridge pickup seems to be squealy and thin for him, too.
 
Re: Is a strat bridge pick up actually usable?

I don't like when SRV uses it, or Backmore, or Eric Jonson

Didn't Blackmore had that special tone circuit equipped in his guitars? I'm not sure when he got that though...

His distortion tones in 70's were among the best ever in my opinion.
 
Re: Is a strat bridge pick up actually usable?

Am I the only one who considers QP the best sounding bridge pickup for a strat? I think every other single coil choice for bridge got mentioned in this thread already...
 
Re: Is a strat bridge pick up actually usable?

If I have to use a single coil for the bridge in a Strat, it is either the QP or an SSL-6. It is a great sound. Both of them get rid of the screech that I can't stand.
 
Re: Is a strat bridge pick up actually usable?

If I have to use a single coil for the bridge in a Strat, it is either the QP or an SSL-6. It is a great sound. Both of them get rid of the screech that I can't stand.

+1 for the SSL-6, not personally a fan of the QP. I have a tapped SSL-6 in my Strat; I only really use the tap for those chimey bridge / middle clean sounds.
 
Re: Is a strat bridge pick up actually usable?

It's amazing how many people seem to be using the wrong gear .... amps and guitars. For better or worse, a Strat is a Strat because of the three single-coil pickups. Celebrate the Strat for what it is or find a different model of guitar that will do what you want it to.
 
Re: Is a strat bridge pick up actually usable?

It's extremely usable – just not for what you want to play, I guess. I think they are awesome, brutal, screaming, crunchy, crashing rhythm pickups...and great for stinging leads too. They're like heaven pushing a low-to-mid wattage amp into natural overdrive, and due to their inherent clarity, they're also a great base on which to build a highly "effected" tone without getting mushy. They aren't too much unlike a Tele bridge pickup IMO – different, yes, but close enough that I like using them for the same basic things. It's a bit rough through a clean amp and/or without some richness added via tone knobs or whatever other kind of e.q. you've got. Here's a hint: try it through an amp without much headroom, like a Princeton or Ampeg Jet II...and play with a heavy right hand. Think Pete Townshend, Malcolm Young, etc. right hand.

To me, the least "usable" Strat tones for what I play are the notch positions (N+M in parallel and M+B in parallel). I prefer a simple 3-way switch on my Strats (N, M, B), or else some kind of alternative 5-way switching scheme that replaces the standard notch positions with something else. My favorite alternate is for position 4 to be B+N, and position 2 to be the bridge pickup through an Eldred-type Esquire tone circuit.
 
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Re: Is a strat bridge pick up actually usable?

This is why I use a different guitar, or use HSS or HH strats, tradition be damned.
 
Re: Is a strat bridge pick up actually usable?

It's amazing how many people seem to be using the wrong gear .... amps and guitars. For better or worse, a Strat is a Strat because of the three single-coil pickups. Celebrate the Strat for what it is or find a different model of guitar that will do what you want it to.

Strats are great guitars precisely because they're so easy and cheap to build into exactly what you want them to be. (And they are ergonomically close to perfect).

Truth is, many people cannot afford that exact type(s) of guitar they want to. And some, (like me) that exact type of guitar they want does not exist.

So digging in and starting to tinker is the only option ;)
 
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