Red_Label
New member
Re: whats with people hating bright p'ups?
I like my tone controls dimed because I play live a lot and don't want to have to look down there all the time or worry where that sucker is. I just roll it and the volume all the way up and go for it. I will roll the volume knob back when I'm trying to clean my solo sound up a hair for mellow passages, but otherwise I want everything wide open. Luckily, I have multi-channel amps with individual channel EQ's where I can set my tone. I don't like the muted/blanket sound that my guitars give with the tone rolled back. Only once in a blue moon if I'm looking for that jazzy Wes Montgomery clean sound or some sort of muted trumpet Miles Davis thing for leads. Pretty rare for me...
Bingo. Correct answer.
I don't understand the guitarist mentality that a pickup has to sound PERFECT with the tone control dimed. I like a nice bright pickup that I can tame by rolling back the treble if I want to. It allows for a lot more versatility and gives me the ability to dial in the exact tone I want. $15 for a CTS pot and an Orange Drop cap costs a lot less than a new pickup, that's for sure.
I'll wager a week's pay that half the people who think their pickups are too bright have never touched their tone control.
I like my tone controls dimed because I play live a lot and don't want to have to look down there all the time or worry where that sucker is. I just roll it and the volume all the way up and go for it. I will roll the volume knob back when I'm trying to clean my solo sound up a hair for mellow passages, but otherwise I want everything wide open. Luckily, I have multi-channel amps with individual channel EQ's where I can set my tone. I don't like the muted/blanket sound that my guitars give with the tone rolled back. Only once in a blue moon if I'm looking for that jazzy Wes Montgomery clean sound or some sort of muted trumpet Miles Davis thing for leads. Pretty rare for me...