I got the new Guitar Player in the mail yesterday and saw a cool article on 9 currrent production PAF style pickups and in the article it mentioned that Seymour Duncan declined to send in any pickups to GP for the shootout.
I just have to ask...why would Duncan do that??
I don't represent the company, just a loyal user and a person that understands product positioning and such (to a certain degree).
So, with that disclaimer, when you're lead dog, everyone else is chasing you. You really have nothing to win by sending in a set. Everything to lose. Also, we don't know if there is previous bad history with the mag or perhaps the author.
Just my two cents.
I'm sorry, and with all due respect, that just seems rather arrogant. Market-share does not necessarily translate to superiority. I doubt most pickup makers are "chasing" Seymour Duncan. They seem to remain content doing what they do and steadily growing as they do their thing. It seems to me that boutique makers are emerging and part of Seymour Duncan's success is attributed to the pervasive interest in pickups that these makers create. If anything, Seymour Duncan should tone down the superiority and show a little more gratitude. Though you post a disclaimer, you do represent the opinions of Seymour Duncan because you are assimilated in the culture of the company.
Great leaders are made by other great leaders. Seymour Duncan came along and created great success by taking off on something other people paved the way for. He certainly did it like a champ and that's why we all respect and love him and his products. However, the things that many other makers do are nothing short of great, and unequaled by Seymour Duncan in their unique contributions.
Though blind loyalists may rebuke the posted question, it's a legitimate question and does not seem to imply any kind of antipathy towards the company. In fact, the OP seems genuinely interested in the reasons and perhaps, as a fan of the company/products, seems a bit disappointed that Seymour Duncan comes off a bit snobbish by refusing to cast in their lot with their market counterparts.
You're attacking this from the wrong angle. The real question is: how can somebody run a magazine named "Guitar Player" and not own a set of SD PAF's? Seriously, who works there?
Though blind loyalists may rebuke the posted question, it's a legitimate question and does not seem to imply any kind of antipathy towards the company. In fact, the OP seems genuinely interested in the reasons and perhaps, as a fan of the company/products, seems a bit disappointed that Seymour Duncan comes off a bit snobbish by refusing to cast in their lot with their market counterparts.
I got the new Guitar Player in the mail yesterday and saw a cool article on 9 currrent production PAF style pickups and in the article it mentioned that Seymour Duncan declined to send in any pickups to GP for the shootout.
I just have to ask...why would Duncan do that??
My guess would be that logistically it wouldn't make sense for SD to send samples. Companies like Dimarzio make one or two PAF reproductions and SD makes a dozen. So does SD send a dozen pickups for this shootout or only one?
SD PAF Lineup:
Bennedeto
APII
APII Slash
WLH
PG
59
Seth
Ant's
Jazz
Dimarzio PAF Lineup:
36th
Air Classic
A shoot out like the one GP did would be of great benefit to smaller, relatively unknown companies because they need the exposure.
I would guess that the Seymour Duncan Company felt that there was little to gain by being involved in the GP pickup shoot out, and so chose to not take part in it.
What I'm curious about is: WHO WON?