Inflames626
New member
It's rare to hear Metal on the middle position overall, TBH. I play metal, and I like how the middle position sounds, but it's rare that I ever get to use it. I like it clean 51% of the time more with the middle position than the neck position, but Metallica cleans are all neck always and rhytms... well... it's bridge position or death. And it's not like Kirk has played Metal for like 30+ years now, LOL.
I think it's Kirk's guitar as much as Peter Green's or Gary Moore's. Kirk commands as much sales if not more than either of the other two guys.
Rex_Rocker , good calling me out on the middle position phase thing. Wasn't even thinking about that. Just "bridge pickup will be out of phase and sound weak."
About Kirk, I'd say most people are going to associate him with his black ESP KH EMG Super Strats from the late 80s/early 90s (even his spider graphic/Floyded Les Paul variant which I used to see all the time on the Black Album tour but haven't seen in many years). I'd buy one if I could remove the graphics/inlays.
Since Load/Reload and the playing of standard tuned songs live in Eb he really seems to favor his Mummy guitar these days.
That said, seeing this is cool (Kirk playing Fleetwood Mac with Judas Priest on Peter Green's guitar). Kirk tributing Priest tributing Kirk tributing Fleetwood Mac tributing Peter Green.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rsWmF32OGgo
If Gibson wants to reach out to players my age it is better they go Ritchie Faulkner's route. Not only do I like Ritchie as a person and think he's a great player, I love how his signature models combine classic style with modern features.
Ritchie and I are the same age. Guys like me were too young to thrash back in the day but too old to djent. We're a combination of 80s, 90s, and 00s.
If Gibson wants to reach players in our age demographic, Gibson needs to offer more for the prices they charge, especially since a lot of us are already technically inclined with Axe FX/Kemper units, impulse responses, and any of a number of other software tools that could easily compensate for a lack of "tone wood" at a much cheaper price than a brand new Gibson slab of mahogany. Epiphone does this to an extent, as does Kramer, but for some reason they won't put Gibson on anything modern-ish for fear of diluting the heritage of the brand name.
I get it. Gibson tops are beautiful works of art and that is where a lot of the cost is. But I like gloss black better, so I don't need all that complexity in the finish.
Further, for the type of music I play, I don't need warmth. I need tightness in the low end, scoop in the low mids (400hz-ish), a pronounced upper mid (2khz-ish) and brightness in the highs.
If I believe in any kind of "tone wood," (which I don't--wood is mostly a visual thing IMO and that's on guitars that are not painted a solid color--different woods accept different paints and finishes differently), I would choose a completely maple guitar over mahogany most likely.
Bright sounding wood, bright sounding guitar. Might even go for stainless steel strings if one wanted even brighter.
We're only going to get fewer sustainable trees. The market is flooded with used stuff. The number of buyers coming into the market that Gibson wants is small.
Their business model is unsustainable.
Then again, it isn't so much about buying a new Lexus, but a used one.
If only Gibson were a Lexus of guitars and not a dated Cadillac.