Sérgio
Ambassador of CaliZilian Affairs
Hey guys!
So, I took the SG for its first road trip. Went to the capital to rehearse with the boys and took it along for its debut with my gigging rig (so far I had only fiddled her around with my little Orange crush 35, no pedals, in a low volume.
Let me tell you how it was. First off, so far we were a 100% Fender band. Our bassist plays a Jazz Bass and a passive Dimension, both American; the other guitar dude has two Am Std strats, one SSS and the other one is loaded with Seymour Duncan JB minihumbuckers. My guitars you all already know, two Fender SSS strats both having fat 50s on them. Both of us play 40/50watt valve amps.
Ok, we set the gear up and started playing. Oh, boy! I mean, oh, boy! That guitar should have "bad Mother hugger" written on the TRC. It sounded incredibly creamy, with lovely mids and decent treble, no noise at all despite the complete lack of shielding, and BRUTALLY thick and dark.
Needless to say, it has double the output of any of my Fenders, being slightly less bright (which we all expect, after all it's solid mahogany with classic 57s vs solid alder/maple neck with single coils), but the tone is something I had never heard.
What surprised me the most was that whenever my partner brought his strat with the SDs, I felt like it had a greater richness in tone, I even considered switching the pups in my red strat and load it with SDs too, but never did because of my natural love for pure and immaculate SSS strats; BUT, guess what: the Gibson totally outplayed that strat. The 57s sound MUCH richer and louder, I don't really know why but everyone in the band was positively surprised.
We obviously did the classic switcheroo as well, he plugged the Gibson into his rig and I plugged his strat into mine, and still the Gibson sounded much fuller and greater.
It was like comparing a gorgeous, elegant pegasus to a fire breathing dragon. I never thought minihumbuckers and/or the wood and construction of a strat would make the guitar sound so hugely different from a Les Paul or SG.
Of course, I had played Gibsons before and lots of epiphones too, but I never really compared a Strat and a SG like that, all my life as a musician was made of one instrument style at a time.
I confess: I still like my Am Std Strat more, but this SG will definitely change my life as a guitar player.
P.S. that only endorsed my personal conviction: strats should have single coils and sound like strats. If I want humbuckers, I'll choose a guitar that was designed for them.
So, I took the SG for its first road trip. Went to the capital to rehearse with the boys and took it along for its debut with my gigging rig (so far I had only fiddled her around with my little Orange crush 35, no pedals, in a low volume.
Let me tell you how it was. First off, so far we were a 100% Fender band. Our bassist plays a Jazz Bass and a passive Dimension, both American; the other guitar dude has two Am Std strats, one SSS and the other one is loaded with Seymour Duncan JB minihumbuckers. My guitars you all already know, two Fender SSS strats both having fat 50s on them. Both of us play 40/50watt valve amps.
Ok, we set the gear up and started playing. Oh, boy! I mean, oh, boy! That guitar should have "bad Mother hugger" written on the TRC. It sounded incredibly creamy, with lovely mids and decent treble, no noise at all despite the complete lack of shielding, and BRUTALLY thick and dark.
Needless to say, it has double the output of any of my Fenders, being slightly less bright (which we all expect, after all it's solid mahogany with classic 57s vs solid alder/maple neck with single coils), but the tone is something I had never heard.
What surprised me the most was that whenever my partner brought his strat with the SDs, I felt like it had a greater richness in tone, I even considered switching the pups in my red strat and load it with SDs too, but never did because of my natural love for pure and immaculate SSS strats; BUT, guess what: the Gibson totally outplayed that strat. The 57s sound MUCH richer and louder, I don't really know why but everyone in the band was positively surprised.
We obviously did the classic switcheroo as well, he plugged the Gibson into his rig and I plugged his strat into mine, and still the Gibson sounded much fuller and greater.
It was like comparing a gorgeous, elegant pegasus to a fire breathing dragon. I never thought minihumbuckers and/or the wood and construction of a strat would make the guitar sound so hugely different from a Les Paul or SG.
Of course, I had played Gibsons before and lots of epiphones too, but I never really compared a Strat and a SG like that, all my life as a musician was made of one instrument style at a time.
I confess: I still like my Am Std Strat more, but this SG will definitely change my life as a guitar player.
P.S. that only endorsed my personal conviction: strats should have single coils and sound like strats. If I want humbuckers, I'll choose a guitar that was designed for them.
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