weepingminotaur
Well-known member
Tweaked the metal settings on my newly purchased Katana Gen 3 100. Adjusted the bass end of the pickup to be a bit higher, plugged in, and wow. Instant Rust In Peace and Countdown To Extinction Megadeth at my fingertips. Everything I want the JB to be for heavy music: organic but detailed, nice chunky mids and all the chugga-chugga for palm-muted riffs. There's a kind of squishy liquid goodness to riffing that I'm quite taken with, and single-note treble lines really do "sing," to use the overused term.
You know a guitar is sounding good in your hands when you keep playing without a particular purpose after your regular practice is done, just because you want to keep hearing it!
Interesting side note: my Les Paul is tuned in E standard and has 11-52 strings. My thinking was to use heavier strings so drop D wouldn't flub out and I could do the Alice in Chains special if needed (half step down with bottom string tuned to D flat). I was wondering how it would feel to do fairly fast thrash riffing in E standard with that string gauge (in particular, the opening section to "Holy Wars", the main riffs to "Master of Puppets", etc.). Well, it felt great. I didn't feel any loss of speed or encounter any increased resistance. I've been a proponent of lighter strings for a few years now (I'm in the B.B. King "why you working so hard" camp), but I may go a tad heavier on string gauge for a couple of my other guitars just to see how it sounds.
Lastly, it's funny that I'm even posting this, because I plugged in, not having played this guitar in probably a month (a long time for me), with the intention of seeing whether I wanted to swap out the JB for that shiny new Black Winter rails pickup that's about to be released. Hard nope on that now. The JB stays in this here guitar.
You know a guitar is sounding good in your hands when you keep playing without a particular purpose after your regular practice is done, just because you want to keep hearing it!
Interesting side note: my Les Paul is tuned in E standard and has 11-52 strings. My thinking was to use heavier strings so drop D wouldn't flub out and I could do the Alice in Chains special if needed (half step down with bottom string tuned to D flat). I was wondering how it would feel to do fairly fast thrash riffing in E standard with that string gauge (in particular, the opening section to "Holy Wars", the main riffs to "Master of Puppets", etc.). Well, it felt great. I didn't feel any loss of speed or encounter any increased resistance. I've been a proponent of lighter strings for a few years now (I'm in the B.B. King "why you working so hard" camp), but I may go a tad heavier on string gauge for a couple of my other guitars just to see how it sounds.
Lastly, it's funny that I'm even posting this, because I plugged in, not having played this guitar in probably a month (a long time for me), with the intention of seeing whether I wanted to swap out the JB for that shiny new Black Winter rails pickup that's about to be released. Hard nope on that now. The JB stays in this here guitar.
