P
Plessure
Guest
Before i even recognized it, i was awe-struck by its beauty. For about 20 ms. Then i recognized it. It was an '85 specimen. No colouring, just wood with a great finish. Heavy as ****, and larger than i thought. It's been my dream guitar since i came across it online. The pickups looked a bit different from each other, with the bridge pickup having a slight metal stripe over each coil and the neck pickup lacking this detail.
I played it through a worn-out Fender Deluxe Reverb. The amp had some serious issues with noise and also volume fluctuations on the tremolo/reverb channel. Understandable for a tube amp that gets turned on and off many times a day, i suppose.
The black line around the headstock is delicious. The switches are delicious. The all-maple 25.5" scale neck recalls my Stratocaster which for me is optimal in this regard. I didn't notice it being excessively thin, but i was quite too immersed to pay attention to that. The coil splitting is subtle but present, and its peculiar implementation probably works better than a push-pull. The phase inversion is glorious and works great with pinch harmonics and all manner of picking nuance. I didn't get the chance to play around with pickup volumes in phase inverted mode, so it might be even better in a sweet spot.
Looking at pictures, i was enchanted by the black version. However, this one was beautiful. I don't mind the overweight, since the aesthetic genome transcends such petty concerns. A true piece of art.
I played it through a worn-out Fender Deluxe Reverb. The amp had some serious issues with noise and also volume fluctuations on the tremolo/reverb channel. Understandable for a tube amp that gets turned on and off many times a day, i suppose.
The black line around the headstock is delicious. The switches are delicious. The all-maple 25.5" scale neck recalls my Stratocaster which for me is optimal in this regard. I didn't notice it being excessively thin, but i was quite too immersed to pay attention to that. The coil splitting is subtle but present, and its peculiar implementation probably works better than a push-pull. The phase inversion is glorious and works great with pinch harmonics and all manner of picking nuance. I didn't get the chance to play around with pickup volumes in phase inverted mode, so it might be even better in a sweet spot.
Looking at pictures, i was enchanted by the black version. However, this one was beautiful. I don't mind the overweight, since the aesthetic genome transcends such petty concerns. A true piece of art.