Silence Kid
New member
Someone gave me a thought when they said the "Jazz neck has an identity crisis."
I knew what that meant; if you switch to the Jazz neck (on a bright guitar with a two octave neck) your tone almost passes for a "bridge" sound. The same applies to something like a Jaguar neck pickup (in the lead circuit) where you really just get a different (clean) sound that you can use for bridge-like riffs and such.
Then again, there are tones that are definitively 'neck.' Sometimes you switch to the neck position on a Strat because nothing else sounds like the neck position on a Strat; who cares if you can't use it the same way you would a bridge pickup. Same goes for a lot of more traditional Gibson humbucker neck tones (Slash.)
To what degree do you value getting a unique tone vs. a useable one? Do you approach your playing and thing "I want this to sound like I'm playing on the neck pickup?" Or do you just focus on what sounds best in the mix at that point?
I knew what that meant; if you switch to the Jazz neck (on a bright guitar with a two octave neck) your tone almost passes for a "bridge" sound. The same applies to something like a Jaguar neck pickup (in the lead circuit) where you really just get a different (clean) sound that you can use for bridge-like riffs and such.
Then again, there are tones that are definitively 'neck.' Sometimes you switch to the neck position on a Strat because nothing else sounds like the neck position on a Strat; who cares if you can't use it the same way you would a bridge pickup. Same goes for a lot of more traditional Gibson humbucker neck tones (Slash.)
To what degree do you value getting a unique tone vs. a useable one? Do you approach your playing and thing "I want this to sound like I'm playing on the neck pickup?" Or do you just focus on what sounds best in the mix at that point?