that give them that vowel-like thing you can feel in your throat?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nMrbz_gsYSk
I have a pair of Seth Lovers I still haven't installed because I'm not certain they'll give me that tone. Antiquities might be closer. SD customer service says the Greenie pickups are degaussed like the Antiquities. Maybe that's where it comes from.
But I still can't shake the thought that Green's tone would have been closer to the Seth Lovers... because when he produced that same throat-tingling tone, the pickups in his LP were still new, not 40 years old.
I don't think it's just the out of phase thing either. I can hear it on Green's stuff when he's only using one pickup, too. I know it partially comes from how the guitar is played, but the pickups accentuate it, I think. Take this. You can hear it in the beginning when he's using just the neck pickup, when he's playing the bridge, and when he plays OOP.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5lvvClumbDg
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nMrbz_gsYSk
I have a pair of Seth Lovers I still haven't installed because I'm not certain they'll give me that tone. Antiquities might be closer. SD customer service says the Greenie pickups are degaussed like the Antiquities. Maybe that's where it comes from.
But I still can't shake the thought that Green's tone would have been closer to the Seth Lovers... because when he produced that same throat-tingling tone, the pickups in his LP were still new, not 40 years old.
I don't think it's just the out of phase thing either. I can hear it on Green's stuff when he's only using one pickup, too. I know it partially comes from how the guitar is played, but the pickups accentuate it, I think. Take this. You can hear it in the beginning when he's using just the neck pickup, when he's playing the bridge, and when he plays OOP.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5lvvClumbDg