guitarz.blogspot.com:
Perhaps we show a certain bias on this blog, as I know we don't feature Les Pauls as much as certain other well-known guitars. I readily confess that I am not a Les Paul fan. I know they can give you THAT tone, but - as I have argued before - is THAT tone always desireable? Isn't it better to find and develop your own sound rather than just stick with what's been tried and tested by others?
However, I guess my main quibble with the Les Paul is the design. I just don't like it. Don't shoot me, this is just my own opinion. I'm not overly fond of the singlecut shape, I really don't see the point in all the controls - separate volume and tone controls for each of the pickups is overkill in my book - and what really really bugs me about the Les Paul is that selector switch on the upper bout which not only gives the impression that the guitar has a nasty pimple but also gets in the way quite spectacularly (at least when I play this type of guitar) and causes me to hit it and change pickup selection when I don't want to do anything of the sort.
Of course, with the Gibson Les Paul doublecut none of these problems exist, and OK, I'll admit it, it IS a guitar I have coveted for a good few years now.
The pictured example, currently being auctioned on eBay, has a fantastic classy-looking bullion gold top - not many guitars can carry off a gold top - and has a starting bid of $1000.
G L Wilson
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I think separate volume and tone knobs are overkill when the pickups are stock/identical. But if the pickups are really different from each other, oh baby...
ReplyDeleteMore upside-down guitar pics. What gives?
ReplyDeleteThat's how the pics were taken. Sure, I could've flipped them 180 degrees (and plenty of times I do exactly that) but in this case the angle the pics were taken from meant that they'd look really weird if I flipped the pic, like the guitar was on the ceiling.
ReplyDeleteAnyway, that's the view more or less you'd get of the guitar if you were playing it.