Guitars with neat sounds, not Start/LP/Tele-ish?
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- Medicine Melancholy
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- stratphobic
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Re: Guitars with neat sounds, not Start/LP/Tele-ish?
the CP jag HH is awesome. with the coils split, bass cut and tone rolled off, it has a weak and thin tone that's way different from a typical strat.Medicine Melancholy wrote:Leaning towards a Jag at the moment, but before that I was pretty big into the Jazzmaster thing. Gravitated back towards the Jag as it's probably more suitable for what I do, I mostly do electronic stuff but I'm adding in some manic post punky type riffage, the nastier sound of a Jag goes well with some of my synth sounds too.
I'm open to other possibilities though. Getting a decent Jag is still expensive and the sound is still a variation on the Strat, plus I have a friend with one that'll let me play it now and again. Danelectros might not be a bad idea. Considering a Baritone too. I'll be doing some heavier industrial type shit as well, so I need it to be fairly versatile, which probably rules the Danos out. Trem is necessary.
Been quite fond of the Parker P series, but I'd need new pickups as they're either regular HH or Fat Strat configuration. If I could find some good pickups to put in.
Of course, I'm also considering getting the Jaguar HH, which would also be a good candidate for "interesting" pickups especially with the coil split, but I don't know many interesting
My current guitars are a GFS Tele copy(which sounds pretty neat to be honest, but noisy as all hell and quite a flat neck for a Tele, probably send it back if I get a Jag) and a First Act Sheena, which has some fairly decent Alnico V PAFy humbuckers in it, nice Jangle from them. Guitar doesn't hold tuning well for a hardtail though, it's not the most reliable thing. Basically looking to get an interesting sounding guitar, with a trem, that doesn't crap out on me, orientated towards a post punk & glassy shoegaze type sound but also capable of nasty industrial stuff.
- Medicine Melancholy
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When I weigh my guitars I just get on the scale with them strapped on and then subtract the 100lbs from my drivers license. THEY ALL SO HEAVY. Gibson and Fender have lost the plot.
Aug wrote:which one of you bastards sent me an ebay question asking if you can get teh kurdtz with that 64 mustang?
robertOG wrote:fran & paul are some of the original gangstas of the JS days when you'd have to say "phuck"
I hear ya, my lpc is heavy as hell. I've heard good things about levy's no1 stretchy straps, anyone ever try those?paul_ wrote:When I weigh my guitars I just get on the scale with them strapped on and then subtract the 100lbs from my drivers license. THEY ALL SO HEAVY. Gibson and Fender have lost the plot.
- Fran
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I use a Levys (suede type) with the Acrylic Mockingbird which incidently weighs like two Les Pauls. If you adjust the strap so the guitar is high up it compensates a lot, sling round your knees and your looking at a slipped disc.JJLipton wrote:I hear ya, my lpc is heavy as hell. I've heard good things about levy's no1 stretchy straps, anyone ever try those?paul_ wrote:When I weigh my guitars I just get on the scale with them strapped on and then subtract the 100lbs from my drivers license. THEY ALL SO HEAVY. Gibson and Fender have lost the plot.
- Fran
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I quite like the Galaxie, Colorama and Club. They're all quite interesting.colabonham wrote:Get an Hofner Galaxie (reissued, cheap). Has a nice Jazzmaster/Jaguar vibe (tremolo) to it but with also three staple humbuckers.
(actually I want one bad, but I cant try them out anywhere here in Finland)
Another brand you could consider is Italia.
- laterallateral
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DiPinto Mach IVs can sound really thin and jangly but the placement and functionality of the "middle pickup" here allows for some interesting non-jangle tones.
Though they're definitely not for everyone, Yamaha SGV variations offer some interesting trebby madness options.
Though they're definitely not for everyone, Yamaha SGV variations offer some interesting trebby madness options.
Last edited by laterallateral on Fri Sep 19, 2014 3:05 pm; edited 115,726 times in total
- Medicine Melancholy
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- laterallateral
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Really? I thought Galaxies had like 4 singles in them.
Edit: sorry that's the Galaxie 4, I was thinking about. Galaxie 2 is the one with the hums.
Edit: sorry that's the Galaxie 4, I was thinking about. Galaxie 2 is the one with the hums.
Last edited by laterallateral on Sun Jul 17, 2011 5:56 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Last edited by laterallateral on Fri Sep 19, 2014 3:05 pm; edited 115,726 times in total
- Medicine Melancholy
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- honeyiscool
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I'm not sure where this thread is coming from. The reason why similar guitars sound similar is because they're all wired similarly. Apparently, the great majority of builders spend so much time picking out tone wood, fingerboard wood, body weight, to maximize tone or whatever, and then they just slap three AlNiCo single coils hooked up to a five-way switch in the most obvious way possible, which is the great equalizer when it comes to guitar tone. Try doing something different with the five-way switch and use different style of pickups, like lipsticks, Lace Sensors, blades, split blades, stacks, etc., and your average Strat sounds nothing like a Strat. Try wiring Strat single coils in series and humbucker coils in parallel, try putting a phase switch in there, try overwound pickups, try underwound pickups. Try an active preamp. Mucking with wiring is a more surefire way of altering tone, not changing the body style and scale.
I've got an Epi Standard LP that's lighter than that.Medicine Melancholy wrote:Bad shoulder. I couldn't play a full weight Les Paul. Even my Tele is pushing it a bit at 9lbs.
Kicking and squealing Gucci little piggy.
JJLipton wrote:I've got and used the german No1 Stretch Strap as used by Buckethead - does wonders for a heavy guitar. My Acryl-o-caster is the heaviest guitar I ever played and it felt fine with the stretch strap. They distribute the weight more evenly over the surface of the strap or something. Plus they do bouncy stretchy stuff on stagepaul_ wrote: I hear ya, my lpc is heavy as hell. I've heard good things about levy's no1 stretchy straps, anyone ever try those?
iCEByTes wrote:5 Most Jizz face maker Solo�s , classic Rock music i ever listened.
iCEByTes wrote:Blunt a joint , Take the Touch , Listen this.
The main thing with the Levy No.1 is that its 2" wide or more, so you get a more even weight distrubution on the shoulder. Plus its elastic, it moulds itself into your shoulder rather than just resting on top and digging in. So very comfy.
They take a bit of time to get right as you need to take in account of the postition you play in when standing up and the guitars weight. First thing I noticed when I used one is how much I push down on the neck. Never even noticed I did it until I tried a stretchy strap.
Got mine on ebay for 6 quid.![Cool 8)](./images/smilies/icon_cool.gif)
They take a bit of time to get right as you need to take in account of the postition you play in when standing up and the guitars weight. First thing I noticed when I used one is how much I push down on the neck. Never even noticed I did it until I tried a stretchy strap.
![Shocked :shock:](./images/smilies/icon_eek.gif)
Got mine on ebay for 6 quid.
![Cool 8)](./images/smilies/icon_cool.gif)