crusty philtrum
Vintageologist
Re: What's the thing with "vintage" pickups?
Ummm, okay, so we should all follow your path and abandon anything and everything that has gone before.
In reality, we should celebrate the widening of scope available to us. Not everybody wants to have massively overdriven guitar sounds all the time. The old low-output winds allow the clean tones of a guitar to shine through with great articulation, qualities that would be lost if all we could get now were high output pickups.
The internal combustion engine is still with us, still working on the same basic principles as when it was invented. The wheel is still round. Almost all amp modelling devices and software feature models that are based on old amps from the 50's, 60s and 70s (Fender, Marshall, Vox etc).
Your question may be a genuine inquiry, albeit posed with a certain naivety. Or it may be trolling for the sake of trolling.
It's not an issue. Music, guitar playing and sound has got wider ... still embracing it's (very relevant and useful) roots, while the modern end explores new territory. There is scope for everyone to do their thing and do it well. I grew up using old gear because it was what we had back then. To be honest, I've never encountered anything newer that does those things any better. Plus it's easier to get a vintage style pickup to rawk than it is to clean up a contemporary hot pickup to get a warm, organic clean tone.
Just because we have new technological advances available doesn't automatically mean we should all jump on that bandwagon and abandon older methods or technologies. Ever had to use a pen and paper ? A wristwatch ? Toilet paper ? You wear trousers, right ? Why do you bother with that old stuff ?
My point exactly: sounds old-fashioned and outdated
Ummm, okay, so we should all follow your path and abandon anything and everything that has gone before.
In reality, we should celebrate the widening of scope available to us. Not everybody wants to have massively overdriven guitar sounds all the time. The old low-output winds allow the clean tones of a guitar to shine through with great articulation, qualities that would be lost if all we could get now were high output pickups.
The internal combustion engine is still with us, still working on the same basic principles as when it was invented. The wheel is still round. Almost all amp modelling devices and software feature models that are based on old amps from the 50's, 60s and 70s (Fender, Marshall, Vox etc).
Your question may be a genuine inquiry, albeit posed with a certain naivety. Or it may be trolling for the sake of trolling.
It's not an issue. Music, guitar playing and sound has got wider ... still embracing it's (very relevant and useful) roots, while the modern end explores new territory. There is scope for everyone to do their thing and do it well. I grew up using old gear because it was what we had back then. To be honest, I've never encountered anything newer that does those things any better. Plus it's easier to get a vintage style pickup to rawk than it is to clean up a contemporary hot pickup to get a warm, organic clean tone.
Just because we have new technological advances available doesn't automatically mean we should all jump on that bandwagon and abandon older methods or technologies. Ever had to use a pen and paper ? A wristwatch ? Toilet paper ? You wear trousers, right ? Why do you bother with that old stuff ?