gball
Ambassador of Boogie
Between my personal guitars, all loaded with humbuckers, no change.
Interesting. All my Les Pauls have different pickups (all stock) and all sound very different from one another plugged into the same rig.
Between my personal guitars, all loaded with humbuckers, no change.
Between my personal guitars, all loaded with humbuckers, no change.Depending, of course, on the guitars and pickups.
A Seymour Duncan Invader loaded HB guitar vs a Strat with anemic PUps? Absolutely it does.
All my guitars with humbuckers sound alike on stage.Interesting. All my Les Pauls have different pickups (all stock) and all sound very different from one another plugged into the same rig.

Between my personal guitars, all loaded with humbuckers, no change.
All my guitars with humbuckers sound alike on stage.
In the studio, through headphones, you can hear subtle nuances, but that just means your are listening too hard.
I think every guitar I have now has a humbucker of some nature yet every single one is different sounding. Only one that isn't stock is the Tele I guess. But obviously all 5 are different models entirely, so I guess I never expected them to sound the same at all to begin with.Interesting. All my Les Pauls have different pickups (all stock) and all sound very different from one another plugged into the same rig.
That's a very different experience than I've had.Y'know, I wouldn't all the differences subtle, at any volume. Yes, they all sound like "Les Paul" but they have very distinct vioices, to the point that different ones lend themselves better to different music/styles.
I think every guitar I have now has a humbucker of some nature yet every single one is different sounding. Only one that isn't stock is the Tele I guess. But obviously all 5 are different models entirely, so I guess I never expected them to sound the same at all to begin with.
However, I have a 1996 Gibson SG Standard Heritage Cherry and my dad has a 1996 Gibson SG Standard Ebony Black. I know this makes absolutely zero sense, but both guitars couldnt possibly sound further apart. They are the same exact model, specs and years only differing paint jobs and yet his SG is hot. Very crisp, kinda aggressive and bright. Mine is very subdued and more classic sounding, kinda just in the middle. I have no idea why this is and both were straight from the factory, single owners.
So yeah, sometimes two exact models can't even get on the same page in terms of tone
That's a very different experience than I've had.
Remeber my Mom's 1979 Les Paul Custom???
I played it back to back through my personal amp, alongside my 2021 50's Standard Gold Top, and when i played the recording, nobody could correctly guess which guitar was which because they sounded almost identical on a recording.
I could hear a very, very subtle difference, but nobody else picked up on it.
@Mitch Pearrow SJMP - was at our show Saturday. I switched between my Fake Les Paul and my 50's Gold Top (for tuning) and there's literally no difference in how they sound, unless you are forensically listening through headphones.
I’ve done something like this with my wife. I’ve made recordings and played them back. She is pretty good at distinguishing my guitars. She is a vocalist and has a good ear for harmonies and timbre. She can almost instantly discern a Stratocaster. But, she can usually tell my SG from my Les Paul with pretty decent accuracy. Now, understandably, as distortion is added it becomes harder to distinguish.
Also, women generally have superior hearing in the upper registers than men of the same age. But, men often are often better at localizing sounds. This actually makes some sense in light of a hunter/gatherer culture.
There has also been research to demonstrate that hearing can be hormonally affected. An interesting area of study looks at how the presence of certain hormones can affect a person’s auditory system even before birth as well as during a person’s life.




Here's the people i ask to evaluate my guitar tone....
If they're happy, I'm happy...
Absolutely! I also pay attention to comments like "your guitar stood out," or "the bass in front of your cabinet made my nose run."Believe it or not, I’ll often ask my wife. She actually has a pretty good sense of what sounds good. She has no knowledge of and has no interest in knowing anything about guitar gear. This actually proves beneficial. If I ask her opinion on some sound, there is no bias. She can just give a simple, honest assessment.
Honestly, no I had nothing, just played it into the amp in a rehearsal spaceHave you listened to them on recordings made during a live show? Just curious, because what i can hear in my studio, or what i hear through phones, is not anything like their live sound on a stage.
Stylistically and technique wise, yes.they’re gonna sound like them regardless the gear they’re playing on.
If I play an A chord on Eddie’s gear it would sound like Eddie playing an A chord. Totally agree. I’ve read the article now a few times and I personally don’t get the impression that’s what Lukather (and others) is suggesting. I feel he’s suggesting that picking up an icons gear isn’t going to magically transform you into EVH…. Or Beck…. Etc.Stylistically and technique wise, yes.
Tonally, no. You can tell some players by their touch, note choice, thechnique, style. But to say the TONE stays the same is a semantic matter that I believe is wrong. Gilmour sounds like Gilmour partly because he plays a Strat thru whatever amp.
Acoustically, tonewise, if Lukather played an A chord thru EVH rig and EVH did the same, tonally they would sound the same.

Absolutely. One cannot magically transorm into a certain tupe of player simply with their gear. To me it is a semantics issue dealing with tone, technique and style which all go together. Stricly tone does not equal all of those together.If I play an A chord on Eddie’s gear it would sound like Eddie playing an A chord. Totally agree. I’ve read the article now a few times and I personally don’t get the impression that’s what Lukather (and others) is suggesting. I feel he’s suggesting that picking up an icons gear isn’t going to magically transform you into EVH…. Or Beck…. Etc.
From the article: “When asked to choose between a good guitar and a cheap amp or vice versa in the new issue of Guitarist, Lukather opted for neither: “Here’s a really good answer: there’s no magic guitar, no magic amp, there’s just magic people.”
IMHO. Your results may vary.![]()
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Yep. For sure!!The person makes the magic happen.