Hi guys,
for some years now, I only use seymour duncan pickups in my guitars. Sometimes a little detour, though; wizard, bareknuckle, tonefordays... but 90% of the pickups I use are duncans. I don't use dimarzio's, cause they have a negative association, to me anyway. I associate dimarzio's with a bit nasal in the mids, smooth in the highs and mushy in the lows, and more importantly: flat, dull, unresponsive, and not as dynamically rich as duncans.
It seems that many people find that about dimarzio's (and ofcourse just as many find duncan's thin and screechy). but where does that idea come from?!
I'm asking, because I'm thinking of mixing the x2n and superdistortion together in 1 hybrid pickup (maybe even the super2 for more highs, though I'm not completely sure). I don't want to buy pickups that sound flat and dull. If I wanna do that, I'd rather buy a set of GFS (for instance, not that there's a bad thing about GFS pickups, but I place GFS in the same league as dimarzio).
for some years now, I only use seymour duncan pickups in my guitars. Sometimes a little detour, though; wizard, bareknuckle, tonefordays... but 90% of the pickups I use are duncans. I don't use dimarzio's, cause they have a negative association, to me anyway. I associate dimarzio's with a bit nasal in the mids, smooth in the highs and mushy in the lows, and more importantly: flat, dull, unresponsive, and not as dynamically rich as duncans.
It seems that many people find that about dimarzio's (and ofcourse just as many find duncan's thin and screechy). but where does that idea come from?!
I'm asking, because I'm thinking of mixing the x2n and superdistortion together in 1 hybrid pickup (maybe even the super2 for more highs, though I'm not completely sure). I don't want to buy pickups that sound flat and dull. If I wanna do that, I'd rather buy a set of GFS (for instance, not that there's a bad thing about GFS pickups, but I place GFS in the same league as dimarzio).