Yeah, sounds like a dumb move stripping it.
...You bring up very valid points here...and have correctly pointed out my OCD tendencies as well.
Well...cool, then!
It sounds like you've considered some of these things, as well. So, more power to you, broski!
I quite get the "nuance" thing you mention. As I've become ensnared in my own Les Paul craze, of late, I certainly do understand the fascination with them. For me, the big turnaround was installing the Vibramate/Bigsby setup. I've had vibratos almost from the very start of my guitar playing, so it's become a real piece of familiarity for me.
I rehearsed with my Lester last night and it performs equally well clean and distorted. There is a little something more to them. Maybe the sustain factor allows certain frequencies/harmonics to persist longer before decaying, affecting the overall tone. I don't know...just a theory.
A lot of our endearment to this or that guitar is undoubtedly psychological and emotional. I don't think that's a bad thing. I think it can actually improve your playing. If you feel good and confident about your guitar, it can affect how confidently you play.
Anyway, as I said before, I certainly wish you luck in your search. Take the time to find the right one for you, and be ready to act when you find it.
Good things come to those who wait, but not to those who hesitate!
As you can see, the gold is the problem. There's something badly off in their plating process, because it should be pretty hardy, but it just rubs straight off. Then it just looks nasty - stick to chrome or nickel.
The wearing gold is one of my favorite things about them!
There are some black with chrome hardware ones out there, and of course the Silverburst come with chrome if the gold is not your thing.
I love les Paul's!! Randy Rhoads rocked the hell out of one! But I don't blame ya on the gold hardware, not my thing either...
The wearing gold is one of my favorite things about them!
There are some black with chrome hardware ones out there, and of course the Silverburst come with chrome if the gold is not your thing.
Do it Robert!!! There is something so special about a LPC, it's hard to even define. First off, it's a Les f!@#ing Paul! The best-sounding, most versatile electric guitar ever made. Then, it's just got a vibe that other LP's don't...the more recent ones are made in the Custom Shop and are absolute works of art, but any LPC from any era is magic.
I don't currently own a LPC but I have owned two in my life, and I plan to get another. My very first Gibson (and first LP) was a 1977 Custom, identical to this one:
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I got it brand new. It's the guitar I learned to play on and the guitar I gigged with all through the 80's and 90's. I regret ever letting it go of course but economics came into play unfortunatly. I was lucky to get another LPC for a few years in the early 2000's (another blonde one actually) but also had to let it go. I am again searching for the right Norlin-era blond LPC, and when I find the right one it will be mine (side note - nothing sounds better to my ears than the Norlin-era LPC's, there is something about the T-tops combined with the maple neck that really makes them stand out IMO).
Do it.
His desire to "strip it out" is to complete a genuine 1958 Korina Explorer husk with the parts. His logic is, a completed, documented 1958 Explorer would be worth many times that of a 2005 LPC. 2005 is also the last year for an ebony board I have read.
P90's??? WTF???