barbarianbrute
New member
Re: Why do Steve Vai, Petrucci, Joe Satriani use high gain pickups?
i know you weren't knocking those guys, but most people i've ever known think satriani has great tone. i think his tone is awesome.
now when you refer to "tone players," i have to wonder if you refer to those guys who think everything's in the clean tones. players who use a lot of gain always get knocked by them for not having great tone from what i've seen. to be quite honest though, bands like lamb of god and shadows fall have awesome tone. maybe not what a jazz player would consider great tone, but we know it's all subjective.
to me, satriani and vai have better tone than petrucci. i think petrucci's tone is good, but he doesn't grab my tonal attention like those guys. in terms of clean tone, satch can from time to time go clean and it sounds great. so i have to respectfully disagree on some of your points.
the thing you said about string sensetivity i think though hits the nail right on the head. i'm sure some bad-ass player's going to pop up and say "i use high gain pickups for the sound and not because it's easier to play fast" or something. my opinion, however, is that gain and high output pickups make it easier to play at blazing speeds because it hardly takes anything to hit a note. like i said, put a duncan distortion in there and crank up the gain to 1 o'clock and you can play almost entirely with your left hand.
These three all not "tone" players. Not an insult to them, but that's what it is.
They use the guitar to get notes out of the guitar and they use the pickup and amp combination that delivers a constant tone that doesn't sound interrupted when play varied due to too much acrobatics. The high gain doesn't only mean that you can use an amp with too insensitive input. It also means that lower string vibrations get you something closer to what a full hit on the string brings you. So techniques that get you the notes you want but don't have constant "string gain" get evened out.
I also guess but have no direct knowledge that all three of these use pretty thin strings.
Having said all this, Morse (one of my favorites, just not for his tone) make use of quite a bit of single-coil play, he even has a real single coils in there.
i know you weren't knocking those guys, but most people i've ever known think satriani has great tone. i think his tone is awesome.
now when you refer to "tone players," i have to wonder if you refer to those guys who think everything's in the clean tones. players who use a lot of gain always get knocked by them for not having great tone from what i've seen. to be quite honest though, bands like lamb of god and shadows fall have awesome tone. maybe not what a jazz player would consider great tone, but we know it's all subjective.
to me, satriani and vai have better tone than petrucci. i think petrucci's tone is good, but he doesn't grab my tonal attention like those guys. in terms of clean tone, satch can from time to time go clean and it sounds great. so i have to respectfully disagree on some of your points.
the thing you said about string sensetivity i think though hits the nail right on the head. i'm sure some bad-ass player's going to pop up and say "i use high gain pickups for the sound and not because it's easier to play fast" or something. my opinion, however, is that gain and high output pickups make it easier to play at blazing speeds because it hardly takes anything to hit a note. like i said, put a duncan distortion in there and crank up the gain to 1 o'clock and you can play almost entirely with your left hand.