Re: Trying to custom build a ES 339
There's a lot going on here.
I'll admit that I may be slightly biased as, yes, 335s are my favorite guitars; both in looks and tone. But its not just blind fan-boy drivel. I've been playing guitar for 17 years now and have gone through dozens of guitars trying to find what works for me. I also have my issues with 335s and Gibson alike. Just thought I would get that out of the way for full disclosure.
And secondly, Tone is also subjective that's why there are a lot of options, but I think es 335 are trebly guitars (and 339 even more? because of its smaller body?) and thats why from what I saw, BB king rarely put the volume knob of his guitar to 10, If you could do me a favor, look for a video of buddy guy with the title 'first time I met the blues' (his playing is sick too) and you will understand what I'm talking about..
I gave the track a listen. I'm with you, I think it sounds pretty shrill. However, judging how a guitar sounds from a 40-year old recording without knowing what amp he was playing through nor his settings can lead to inaccurate generalizations. And the guitar in the video is a Guild Starfire (I'm not sure what pickups they used). To further complicate matters, he may have used a different guitar than the one in the video when he recorded the song. I just don't know.
I don't mean this as a dig, but have you actually played an ES335/339 or are you only going off of clips? If you have, have you played one through your rig? The reason I ask is that you haven't pointed to any personal experience with either guitar. Maybe you've just left that part out, but I just thought I'd ask.
And I will also make it smaller so I can still do rock and roll showmanship onstage.. (just think what happen if angus main guitar is an es 335, I don't think he will be able to jump around and don't look awkward?)
It seems like you're pretty set on the looks of a 339, which is great. If you're having a custom guitar built it should not only sound the way you want it to, but also look how you want it to. But I must admit that I find it somewhat comical that you are using Angus Young as your benchmark of looking cool while jumping around. His movements and outfit make him one of the guitarists with the
most awkward stage presence that I can think of.
If you like the way a guitar sounds and carry on like normal on stage, it won't look awkward. Izzy Stradlin of G-n-R used a white Gibson ES175 (full hollowbody) and looked cool doing it. And both Tim Armstrong of Rancid and Malcolm Young have used semi-hollow/hollow body guitars to play rock without looking awkward. If you play cool songs and play well, no one is really going to care what you look like doing it. Some people stand nearly still and others freak the f**k out on stage. So long as you aren't forcing what you do, in the end people just see it as you being you. But no amount of "cool factor" will make up for sounding like crap. Just my humble experience.
So really, just get the guitar that sounds the way
you want it to and that looks good to
you. I wouldn't worry about stage presence, which is an amorphous term anyways - what looks cool when one person does it can look completely dumb when done by someone else.
IMHO mahogany will make it too dark.
This is kinda what I was wondering.