Gr8Scott
Wookieologist
Re: what pickup for SRV tone
I play 11's. My take is that the thick strings are a definite part of it. As Lew and many others have said, the majority of it is in the players hands. You can get close, but if you aren't SRV, you aren't going to play exactly like him. Listen to the tracks closely. He usually beats those heavy strings like he's trying to kill them. He doesn't delicately brush them unless he wants a different and more delicate sound, which was also a great part of his playing as it projected so much range of feeling and emotion. He was the Janis Joplin of guitar. His playing was so versatile that he could soothe you with a lullaby and alternately cut you like a razor.
Few players (some would say no players) have this kind of skill. Neal Schon is one that I can think of that is comparable.
I play 11's. My take is that the thick strings are a definite part of it. As Lew and many others have said, the majority of it is in the players hands. You can get close, but if you aren't SRV, you aren't going to play exactly like him. Listen to the tracks closely. He usually beats those heavy strings like he's trying to kill them. He doesn't delicately brush them unless he wants a different and more delicate sound, which was also a great part of his playing as it projected so much range of feeling and emotion. He was the Janis Joplin of guitar. His playing was so versatile that he could soothe you with a lullaby and alternately cut you like a razor.
Few players (some would say no players) have this kind of skill. Neal Schon is one that I can think of that is comparable.