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guitar-real talk
Posted: Tue Dec 23, 2014 3:04 am
by The_Active_Conundrum
I'm a little tipsy, its tthe only way I can be honest.
I have a guitar I adore but it doesn't gel with me and if I tradeed it, I could never recover one similar due to the absurd used market.
To be precise its a '78 les paul custom. The first Les Paul I've ever enjoyed in tthe least. The pickups are the original neck pikup and a Gibson 57 Classic+. The guitar doesn't gel with me. It isn't just pickups.
If it were you, would you replace pickups and parts and "MAKE" it work or would you sell on a quest for something that did fit? I kind of want to mod it until it is worth nothing to anyone but me...but that has foolish connotations as well
Re: guitar-real talk
Posted: Tue Dec 23, 2014 3:21 am
by colin
Trade it. I had a similar situation with a '69 Competition Mustang; I really wanted to love it, but it just wasn't right for me. Sure, I miss it sometimes but I don't regret parting with it.
Re: guitar-real talk
Posted: Tue Dec 23, 2014 1:21 pm
by weed_killer
colin wrote:Trade it. I had a similar situation with a '69 Competition Mustang; I really wanted to love it, but it just wasn't right for me. Sure, I miss it sometimes but I don't regret parting with it.
truth. Don't sink more money into it if you're not 100% into it. Bad idea.
Re: guitar-real talk
Posted: Tue Dec 23, 2014 1:53 pm
by Rob Fossil
It depends, how do you get on with the feel of the guitar? If other guitars that you play don't feel right or as natural in your hands and if it's just the sound of the guitar that is lacking, then mod it. Otherwise, sell it, play as many guitars that you can get your hands on, replace it, and never look back.
Re: guitar-real talk
Posted: Tue Dec 23, 2014 10:43 pm
by antennafarm
if it's not just the pickups, then trade it away. it's probably a good idea to find a way to quantify exactly what doesn't sit right with you and then find something that includes that. it honestly doesn't matter how hard it would be to get another one if you don't actually enjoy playing it (unless you just want to hang it on the wall and worship it from time to time).
Re: guitar-real talk
Posted: Tue Dec 23, 2014 10:56 pm
by AxAxSxS
Find a better starting platform. Pick a guitar you really like and then fine tune it to be perfect for you. I don't gel with Lesters either. Once I realized that, I sold my gibson and bought an amp I needed with the funds. Still enjoying the amp. the LP would still be gathering dust.
Re: guitar-real talk
Posted: Tue Dec 23, 2014 11:30 pm
by The_Active_Conundrum
I love the idea of LPs. I used to have more but sold the lesser of them. My favorite guitar is a Les Paul. Pickups is a problem, original hardware is kind of a problem. The weight is an issue but I'd use it primarily as a recording instrument or go Steve Hackett about it. Neck is raw maple and amazing.
The "real" problem might be that I spent a bit "restoring it" to how it might have been back in The Day, but that doesn't really fit and it seem sacrilege to rip it down and make it "more modern".
Re: guitar-real talk
Posted: Wed Dec 24, 2014 9:09 pm
by antennafarm
Trade it to me for my verellen!
Re: guitar-real talk
Posted: Thu Dec 25, 2014 1:45 am
by The_Active_Conundrum
Sorry, guy, no.
I'm trying to go lower power on ampage.
Re: guitar-real talk
Posted: Thu Dec 25, 2014 2:05 am
by AxAxSxS
The_Active_Conundrum wrote:Sorry, guy, no.
I'm trying to go lower power on ampage.
Well, I guess there's no hope for you

Re: guitar-real talk
Posted: Thu Dec 25, 2014 2:58 am
by The_Active_Conundrum
Re: guitar-real talk
Posted: Thu Dec 25, 2014 5:50 am
by AxAxSxS

was just kiddin. all amps are good amps if you make music that keeps you happy.
Re: guitar-real talk
Posted: Thu Dec 25, 2014 7:10 am
by The_Active_Conundrum
AxAxSxS wrote:
was just kiddin. all amps are good amps if you make music that keeps you happy.
I figured, but there's not much love for the low-volume type. everyone wants to run loud and its like....doesn't that hurt your ears and give you a migraine??? I do want to step down from my Boogie because its way too much for what I do. And the DSL40 combo is an amp I'm very familiar with. thinking about it feels like selling out

Re: guitar-real talk
Posted: Thu Dec 25, 2014 9:47 pm
by The Mad Titan
The_Active_Conundrum wrote:I love the idea of LPs. I used to have more but sold the lesser of them. My favorite guitar is a Les Paul. Pickups is a problem, original hardware is kind of a problem. The weight is an issue but I'd use it primarily as a recording instrument or go Steve Hackett about it. Neck is raw maple and amazing.
The "real" problem might be that I spent a bit "restoring it" to how it might have been back in The Day, but that doesn't really fit and it seem sacrilege to rip it down and make it "more modern".
As long as you're not doing anything irreversible, then mod it and keep it if you love it that much.
I have a '71 LP Std that I loaded with custom made splittable pups with like 21 different combinations between the 4 push/pull knobs and the mini toggle (was there when I bought it), and just had refretted (Jescar vintage wire though).
Oh, and I sticker all my electrics eventually, so sacrilege is in my nature.
Re: guitar-real talk
Posted: Fri Dec 26, 2014 9:34 am
by The_Active_Conundrum
The Mad Titan wrote:The_Active_Conundrum wrote:I love the idea of LPs. I used to have more but sold the lesser of them. My favorite guitar is a Les Paul. Pickups is a problem, original hardware is kind of a problem. The weight is an issue but I'd use it primarily as a recording instrument or go Steve Hackett about it. Neck is raw maple and amazing.
The "real" problem might be that I spent a bit "restoring it" to how it might have been back in The Day, but that doesn't really fit and it seem sacrilege to rip it down and make it "more modern".
As long as you're not doing anything irreversible, then mod it and keep it if you love it that much.
I have a '71 LP Std that I loaded with custom made splittable pups with like 21 different combinations between the 4 push/pull knobs and the mini toggle (was there when I bought it), and just had refretted (Jescar vintage wire though).
Oh, and I sticker all my electrics eventually, so sacrilege is in my nature.
Some of the restoration isn't reversible. New frets, patched up binding. It isn't a collector piece. Its got buckle rash all over the back, damage all over. It'd still fetch a decent price for a player guitar. I know Zakk Wylde was buying up old Gibsons with maple necks and getting them outfitted to his liking because it was cheaper than buying from Custom Shop.
Back to my dilemma. I kinda want to get locking tuners, better pickups/electronics and a fine tuning tailpiece. Most of that is reversible.