blueman335
Mojo's Minions
Re: Using a Les Paul for lead?
+1. I hear LP's as having a relatively balanced EQ, and slightly favoring the mids and low-end. I don't know that by not having the abundance of treble that a Strat does, makes an LP 'compressed.' Maybe a better term is 'not as bright' or 'less top heavy.' Of course, in any guitar, this is going to be impacted by how the player EQ's his rig. I've heard great tones from many kinds of guitars, and likewise, crappy tones from the same models (in the wrong hands).
It would seem that some of us prefer higher frequencies (and those individuals often hear warmer tones as compressed and muffled), and some of us prefer lower middle and frequencies (having a higher sensitivity to treble, and finding it shrill and piercing). Whatever type of ears you have, there's a guitar to fit your needs. And of course, whatever side you're on, the guys who prefer the guitars that you don't, are obviously tone-deaf simpletons who couldn't carry a tune in their pocket.
Les Paul's don't sound one-dimensional to me. Not a bit. Quite the opposite.
+1. I hear LP's as having a relatively balanced EQ, and slightly favoring the mids and low-end. I don't know that by not having the abundance of treble that a Strat does, makes an LP 'compressed.' Maybe a better term is 'not as bright' or 'less top heavy.' Of course, in any guitar, this is going to be impacted by how the player EQ's his rig. I've heard great tones from many kinds of guitars, and likewise, crappy tones from the same models (in the wrong hands).
It would seem that some of us prefer higher frequencies (and those individuals often hear warmer tones as compressed and muffled), and some of us prefer lower middle and frequencies (having a higher sensitivity to treble, and finding it shrill and piercing). Whatever type of ears you have, there's a guitar to fit your needs. And of course, whatever side you're on, the guys who prefer the guitars that you don't, are obviously tone-deaf simpletons who couldn't carry a tune in their pocket.