littlemachine
New member
Short version:
A basswood guitar has too much low-end and a muffled top. Which low-output humbucker can compensate for this for mild-gain pop-rock?
Full context:
I've picked up a Squier HH Tele, because I like how it looks and feels, and it's a signature model of my favourite band. However, its body is (cheap) basswood, and I'm used to alder. Even unplugged, it's got much more bass/low-mids and a muffled top compared to my other guitars. Amplified, the difference is even greater. The bridge pickup sound is massively deep; the opposite of what I like. I'd like to rebalance that so it fits in better with my other guitars easily, without having to change amp settings or dedicate a pedal to compensating for it.
Squier only list the stock pickups as '2 chrome covered humbuckers', and there are no labels on them, so I have no idea what they are as a starting point. The stock controls are 500k with a 0.022uf cap.
My other guitars' bridge pickups are a Hot Stack Plus (very far from the strings), a Chopper T (also far from the strings), a Texas Special, and a Shawbucker 2; the Shawbucker is the loudest of them, and I'd like to not exceed that output by much.
The EQ goal is minimal bass and low-mids, as much in the high-mids as possible, and enough treble for some sparkle but not so much that it overtakes the high-mids.
A touch of compression would be nice, too, to give a little variety from the very open Shawbucker.
I play pop-rock in E standard. Not classic rock, not blues, not country, and not metal of any kind. (Though I used to play metal; I already know the Full Shred would be my ideal pickup if only it was 1/3rd the output!)
YouTube sound examples of what I mean by "pop-rock", hopefully directly to the timestamps:
Tonight Alive - Let It Land (2:36)
Scandal - Hachigatsu (1:20)
Scandal - Fuzzy (1:15)
Avril Lavigne - My Happy Ending (2:49)
Paramore - That's What You Get (2:55)
My priorities are crisp, controlled power chords under mild Marshall distortion, and totally clean barre & open chords which are neither booming nor piercing. 90% of my playing is behind the 9th fret; I don't care what a pickup is like for lead playing. I don't care what it's like split or how it balances with any neck pickups; it only has to approximate the output of the other guitars' bridge pickups so my amp (especially the clean volume) isn't hit any/much harder.
Because it's just a backup Squier, I'm not bothering with any Custom Shop or 'boutique' makers. If I can't get exactly what I want off-the-shelf, I'll just grab whatever gets me at least partly there.
Lastly, if possible I'd like it to look like a chrome-covered standard humbucker (or nickel would do), so as to maintain the original appearance of the guitar; no weird adapter rings for other pickup types. Trembucker/F spacing availability is a bonus as the bridge is 54mm.
I did already try the SD pickup finder, which only gave me three pickups I've had in the past: the JB (too hot), Full Shred (too hot), and 59 (too much bass and a fraction too hot). I e-mailed SD customer support a while back but not had a reply yet. I've also e-mailed DiMarzio support, who only suggested the 36th Neck.
Going by manufacturer descriptions & a few weeks of reading old threads, it seems my likely options are:
- SD Jazz Bridge. Website description is nearly ideal, but I can't find any useful examples.
- SD Screamin Demon. The website description makes it sound like a quieter Full Shred, and older threads swear it's even weaker than a 59, which could be perfect. I can't find any relevant (i.e. not shredding) examples, though.
- SD Pearly Gates. I've seen a few old posts saying it's got a similar upper-mids thing as the JB, but an equal number of posts say it's quite thick and has a lot more power than expected.
- DM EJ Custom Bridge. I've read this is DM's equivalent of the Jazz.
- DM PAF 36th Anniversary Neck. DM suggested this and on paper it looks like it'd be ideal, but I can't find any sign of anyone ever using one as a bridge pickup.
- Tonerider Alnico IV Classic. Seems like it could do the job okay, but I'm sceptical of cheap MIC pickups, especially when reviews are too glowing.
Any I'm overlooking? Any of those clearly a bad idea?
A basswood guitar has too much low-end and a muffled top. Which low-output humbucker can compensate for this for mild-gain pop-rock?
Full context:
I've picked up a Squier HH Tele, because I like how it looks and feels, and it's a signature model of my favourite band. However, its body is (cheap) basswood, and I'm used to alder. Even unplugged, it's got much more bass/low-mids and a muffled top compared to my other guitars. Amplified, the difference is even greater. The bridge pickup sound is massively deep; the opposite of what I like. I'd like to rebalance that so it fits in better with my other guitars easily, without having to change amp settings or dedicate a pedal to compensating for it.
Squier only list the stock pickups as '2 chrome covered humbuckers', and there are no labels on them, so I have no idea what they are as a starting point. The stock controls are 500k with a 0.022uf cap.
My other guitars' bridge pickups are a Hot Stack Plus (very far from the strings), a Chopper T (also far from the strings), a Texas Special, and a Shawbucker 2; the Shawbucker is the loudest of them, and I'd like to not exceed that output by much.
The EQ goal is minimal bass and low-mids, as much in the high-mids as possible, and enough treble for some sparkle but not so much that it overtakes the high-mids.
A touch of compression would be nice, too, to give a little variety from the very open Shawbucker.
I play pop-rock in E standard. Not classic rock, not blues, not country, and not metal of any kind. (Though I used to play metal; I already know the Full Shred would be my ideal pickup if only it was 1/3rd the output!)
YouTube sound examples of what I mean by "pop-rock", hopefully directly to the timestamps:
Tonight Alive - Let It Land (2:36)
Scandal - Hachigatsu (1:20)
Scandal - Fuzzy (1:15)
Avril Lavigne - My Happy Ending (2:49)
Paramore - That's What You Get (2:55)
My priorities are crisp, controlled power chords under mild Marshall distortion, and totally clean barre & open chords which are neither booming nor piercing. 90% of my playing is behind the 9th fret; I don't care what a pickup is like for lead playing. I don't care what it's like split or how it balances with any neck pickups; it only has to approximate the output of the other guitars' bridge pickups so my amp (especially the clean volume) isn't hit any/much harder.
Because it's just a backup Squier, I'm not bothering with any Custom Shop or 'boutique' makers. If I can't get exactly what I want off-the-shelf, I'll just grab whatever gets me at least partly there.
Lastly, if possible I'd like it to look like a chrome-covered standard humbucker (or nickel would do), so as to maintain the original appearance of the guitar; no weird adapter rings for other pickup types. Trembucker/F spacing availability is a bonus as the bridge is 54mm.
I did already try the SD pickup finder, which only gave me three pickups I've had in the past: the JB (too hot), Full Shred (too hot), and 59 (too much bass and a fraction too hot). I e-mailed SD customer support a while back but not had a reply yet. I've also e-mailed DiMarzio support, who only suggested the 36th Neck.
Going by manufacturer descriptions & a few weeks of reading old threads, it seems my likely options are:
- SD Jazz Bridge. Website description is nearly ideal, but I can't find any useful examples.
- SD Screamin Demon. The website description makes it sound like a quieter Full Shred, and older threads swear it's even weaker than a 59, which could be perfect. I can't find any relevant (i.e. not shredding) examples, though.
- SD Pearly Gates. I've seen a few old posts saying it's got a similar upper-mids thing as the JB, but an equal number of posts say it's quite thick and has a lot more power than expected.
- DM EJ Custom Bridge. I've read this is DM's equivalent of the Jazz.
- DM PAF 36th Anniversary Neck. DM suggested this and on paper it looks like it'd be ideal, but I can't find any sign of anyone ever using one as a bridge pickup.
- Tonerider Alnico IV Classic. Seems like it could do the job okay, but I'm sceptical of cheap MIC pickups, especially when reviews are too glowing.
Any I'm overlooking? Any of those clearly a bad idea?