Re: Market Research: Choosing a Gibson Les Paul
At the risk of blowing out this thread on a 'which Gibson Les Paul pickups are better' trollfest...
I have a 1994 Les Paul Standard with 498/490 pickups in it. When I bought it, it didn't sound right. Bridge pickup was hotter, muddier and lacked treble. Rhythm pickup was ok, but not exactly the tone I'd heard on records. Now? Something has happened over time. Those two pickups after 20 years are now balanced and even and sound like Zeppelin records I had always wanted to sound like. As a comparison point, about a year to two ago I bought an SG with 498/490 pups in it. Sounded exactly like my Les Paul did when I bought it. Bridge pickup loud and muddier, rhythm pickup ok, but not exactly what I was hoping for.
My experience has made me wonder if Gibson makes their guitars to age? Even the cosmetics went through the same thing: when I bought it, the fretboard inlays were bluish, the binding was tan, the knobs were gold and stuck out because the natural part of the wood finish looked like plain, pale unfinished wood. Now all of it matches. The inlays are yellowed and match the binding and the natural part of the wood finish and knobs are both gold. My experience makes me feel recent-era Gibson Les Pauls are not supposed to be perfect off the rack the day you buy them. They get perfect when they're older.