depending on whatever the "other" guitar is... and what pickups you've got... and what kind of setup you're running through... i couldn't begin to even tell you. so i'll just assume the thicker sounding clip is the "real" les paul.
depending on whatever the "other" guitar is... and what pickups you've got... and what kind of setup you're running through... i couldn't begin to even tell you. so i'll just assume the thicker sounding clip is the "real" les paul.
I voted for the first one, because there was just a bit of mud in the tone of the second clip. Seems to me like a good LP should be deep and warm, yet clear.
Thanks for participating everyone. The reason I posted this is because when I first bought my Reflex, I thought it sounded just like a Les Paul. I never heard a bolt-on sound so dead on to a Les Paul like this one. I really love this guitar because it has the playability of a strat and the sound of a Gibson. I am really tempted to see what it would sound like with Burstbucker pros or 57's.
This guitar has a chambered basswood body with a large mahogany tone block for deeper mids. Unplugged, the Reflex has deeper low mids and bass. My Les Paul std. has thicker upper mids. Overall though, they sound very similar in my opinion except the Les Paul is muddier. I think that is because of the pickups.
Cool shootout. Don't sell the MM. I've tried most Musicmans, and out of all of them, the Reflex is my favorite. Pickups have a lot to do with tone, but the Reflex is one heck of a bolt-on guitar......that's why they're not cheap.
Cool shootout. Don't sell the MM. I've tried most Musicmans, and out of all of them, the Reflex is my favorite. Pickups have a lot to do with tone, but the Reflex is one heck of a bolt-on guitar......that's why they're not cheap.
Thanks. I like the Reflex so much I want to get another one in white. I also love my LP so much I'm gassing for another too. I could get along fine the rest of my life without a strat if I could have only Les paul and Musicmans.