Oh, I use the notch position too for funk and soul. For sure.interesting. for funk or soul music, im typically in the notch positions on a strat or middle selection on two pup guitars
I don't understand this one guitar over another thing
You can never have one tool that replaces all the rest
I have made my living with an adjustable wrench, a pair of pliers and a flat screwdriver
But the right tool for a job, just makes it all go so much easier
If all you have is a Swiss army knife of a guitar . Then find something usable and get to work
If you have the option of a tele or LP the grab the one that suits the track
I want one guitar that does everything too
But that's just not realistic
The present wrench of guitars just does everything half as good
Just as the tool itself works when that all you have. Its not the ideal way to do the task
The bigger your toolbox the better
If you can afford another flavor of guitar, get one
They are tools to help you express yourself
They aren't pianos or saxophone
Or , as much as Ed Sheeran would have you believe, they aren't drums.
They can do that in a pinch
But use the right tool
I was thinking about this this evening. If all I had was a ES-125, would it force me to be creative or would I just give up? Would I decide I "can't" play metal on it, for example, or would I find a way to pioneer a new style of the metal I like to play?I'm not going to try to play Slayer on my semihollow when I have other guitars that are way better tools for that kind of job, both in playability and in sound.
Sure, but I'm not those players, and they aren't me. I'm sure they have their own limits or preferences even though they're out there playing heavy music on semihollows.There are players making metal with semihollow guitars
No question that creativity frequently comes out of limitations (within reason). I played metal for years on my entry-level Squier into a cheap-ass practice amp that came as a package deal with said Squier. Could I do it? Yes. Did switching to a humbucker guitar and upgrading my amp make a big difference to my experience of playing, my tone, and my drive to keep improving? Absolutely. But I did need to be at a certain level of playing for that switch to be meaningful. You could put James Hetfield's own stage guitar in someone's hands, but if they don't know how to chug, or they aren't familiar with the vocabulary of thrash, or they haven't spent time learning how to play fast and tight rhythm, it won't make any difference. So having the ability does matter.I was thinking about this this evening. If all I had was a ES-125, would it force me to be creative or would I just give up? Would I decide I "can't" play metal on it, for example, or would I find a way to pioneer a new style of the metal I like to play?

Also there's nothing unusual in musical terms about playing a sax line on a piano for example (replace with any two instruments you want) so the idea of needing an LP because that's what a song was originally recorded with is fine but as guitarists I think we cling too closely to it and often lose sight of the bigger picture.

I have one of these. Jackson JS32 Dinky. They make V's, Rhoads, Kelly's too in that line. At $299, it plays fantastic and has awesome neck. The pickups are basically Duncan Distortions +/-. I change most of my pickups, but I have found no need to change these, and even throw up to the neck position for the occasional solo. Nothing a touch of amp eq can't deal with if you need, or the tone knob.