Re: Pickups for walnut / Walnut tonewood opinions
A wood that sounds clear and open.
A wood that does not dampen any of the range of the instrument.
A wood with good sustain in a thick LP-like body.
A wood with good overtones (not too much but not too little).
I'd pick a classical guitar, but I want an electric guitar
I like your taste. I started on a classical as well. I still only play with my fingers.
I don't touch classical anymore, but I have a couple of guitars that "feel" a little like one. For definitive information, I would check out this website:
www.solowayguitars.com
He builds some awesome guitars that bridge the gap between classical and electric, while still being primarily electric.
Having said that, though, I have a Carvin Fatboy HF2. (
www.carvin.com) It has an ebony fingerboard with no inlays and very little radius. Also, its fingerboard is wide like a classical. I can get my fingers "in there" if you know what I mean. Mine only has a fancy top (quilted maple). Perhaps, the stock wood (birch) would've sounded even more acoustic. I also really like spruce on top of semi or hollow body electric guitars.
The combinations you're talking about wanting are not the kinds of things you'll see in everyday stock guitars for the most part. I encourage you to try the Fatboy or a Soloway or something like that.
FWIW, the Fatboy feels and plays a lot different from run-of-the-mill semi hollow 335 knockoffs. It is totally hollow inside. It feels mostly like an electric that has a lot of classical DNA.
Oh, and I changed the pickups in mine because I didn't really like them. I have a Jazz in the front and a BB pro in the bridge...
It does overdriven and gain sounds fine now. It wasn't as articulate with the original switch and pickups though.
Sorry...I'm rambling.
Good luck.
Z:sleeping: