Recently, while recording, our producer asked me to play different guitars to exploit the "right/left" speaker effect.
He told me that all my guitars sound very nearly similar, sufficiently so that they don't "jump out" on a recording.
Think about that...
A 1987 Fender Stratocaster with a 16.5k AlNico9 44AWG DiMarzio Neanderthal Humbucker
A Slash/AFD knock-off Les Paul with a 13.0k Planet Tone Afterburner
A 2021 Gibson Les Paul 50's Standard Gold Top with a Gibson Burstbucker 3
And they all sound virtually the same on a recording...
(I've been saying this for years, buy there are those who say it isn't possible)
Our producer called me last week and said he wanted to augment my punchy, humbucker tone (lefft channel) with a brighter, single coil tone, (right channel) as a kind of tonal experiment for our upcoming re-tracking.
He advised me that he ordered a new Squire Stratocaster Hardtail from Fender " just to keep here at the studio."
Naturally, I took it to the office and performed a full setup.


I polished the rosewood board and applied lemon oil - to close the grain - and micro-polished the frets. I set the intonation with the requisite jig and raised the 12th fret action to .070" and balanced the strings across the fretboard radius.
Pickups were set to factoy spec of 4/32".
We will introduce it into our recordings this weekend.
He told me that all my guitars sound very nearly similar, sufficiently so that they don't "jump out" on a recording.
Think about that...
A 1987 Fender Stratocaster with a 16.5k AlNico9 44AWG DiMarzio Neanderthal Humbucker
A Slash/AFD knock-off Les Paul with a 13.0k Planet Tone Afterburner
A 2021 Gibson Les Paul 50's Standard Gold Top with a Gibson Burstbucker 3
And they all sound virtually the same on a recording...
(I've been saying this for years, buy there are those who say it isn't possible)
Our producer called me last week and said he wanted to augment my punchy, humbucker tone (lefft channel) with a brighter, single coil tone, (right channel) as a kind of tonal experiment for our upcoming re-tracking.
He advised me that he ordered a new Squire Stratocaster Hardtail from Fender " just to keep here at the studio."
Naturally, I took it to the office and performed a full setup.


I polished the rosewood board and applied lemon oil - to close the grain - and micro-polished the frets. I set the intonation with the requisite jig and raised the 12th fret action to .070" and balanced the strings across the fretboard radius.
Pickups were set to factoy spec of 4/32".
We will introduce it into our recordings this weekend.
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