jbzoso2002 wrote:the most important aspect of how a guitar sounds
is the wood quality. then the design + the skill of the builder.
I can go with that... but...
That rules out 90% of the Gibsons made in the past 30 to 35 years. Lesser wood quality, derivation from the original design and most of the people who work there (no fault of their own) could not rightfully be considered "builders" much less luthiers. Ask someone who knows the ins and outs of the operation. Take a factory tour. It's factory assembly... one guy does frets, one guy does... ... ... Are there a bunch of highly trained and payed luthiers? It took Gibson this long to figure out they should invest in a plek machine... that they should go back to long tenons. I will never understand the brand love for Gibson or any other. Henry J. is a business man. He cares about "the dough". Ask about the practice of selling serial numbers... before the guitars are built...
Forgive me, this is
not a flaming and it's directed non-specifically. But, on this very forum we have had cross section photos showing the difference between tenons, posts detailing how Gibson consistently misses blatant details yet calls their product "Historic", proof positive from Gibson's own people that weight relieving is an art form with them, boggy-fied electronics and parts are all too common and the price is over inflated for the priviledge, and so on and so on... I love the guitars Gibson used to make. It's been a long time. If they are finally getting back around to making great instruments (doubt it) it ain't on the regular... and the price!?!
I understand this is the age where the truth will be called a lie and the lie will be called the truth openly and with vigor. Nevertheless, facts are facts. Tone is in the ear of the beholder. So be it, if someone likes the sound of a 70s+ Gibson, fine. Be happy, buy one, rock the roof off with it. It still doesn't make it a well built instrument if it's not and it still doesn't mean it was built with historical accuracy if it wasn't.
Don't cheer USA, USA and sell me USA made garbage and pee on my American heritage. Cheer USA, USA because you make a truly world class instrument. Make "made in America" mean something. The Japanese sure take pride in their instruments. ESP/Edwards, Tokai, so on... I can't fault them one bit. Gibson and Fender both dropped the ball and they picked it up and ran with it. Who's the wiser, here? I thought Fender was gaining some smarts; but, not if they jump their prices in "the worst economic times since the Great Depression", as they say. Private luthiers here and abroad make WAY better Gibsons than Gibson. I don't get it, we will rightfully drool over a Suhr, a Tyler, a Tom Anderson (aka. STRATS) but when it comes to companies who do Les Pauls better than Gibby (like Heritage, Tokai, private luthiers, etc.) ... suddenly it's all taboo. WTFrik!?! Makes no sense what so ever. Does anyone think twice about chuckin' those crappy
Gibson pickups for WCRs... heck no. What is this shrine worship of Gibson guitars...
Gibson brand love makes as much sense as buying a 1987 RI because... oooooooo.... it's a Maaaaarrrrsssshhhaaalllll. Bull crap, we buy Metros. We buy Germinos. We build it ourselves. You do not have to buy a Gibson to get what a Gibson is supposed to give you. It's like buying a Buick in the late 80s early 90s. It's not like you were gonna get a screaming 350/V8.
fillmore nyc wrote:Awesome wood, probably the best quality control, construction and attention to detail in the biz, but no matter what pickup is in there, it will always lack the "chunk" factor of a 24 3/4" guitar, which comes down to scale length. Single coils just seem to love 25 1/2" necks, and humbuckers love 24 3/4" necks.
fillmore nyc wrote:One of my LP's is a late '50's Standard, and I've never played anything that even comes close to it, but a comparison to that guitar is kinda unfair. The best '58 or '59 reissue I've seen just cant match it in terms of playability, openness of tone and overall vibe. They're both in the same relative ballpark, but there IS a tangible and audible difference.
This is refreshing. Facts. Scale effects tension, pickup placement, string vibration... ...tone. And coming from someone who actually has a late 50s (aka. REAL) Gibson... ...I value that. Much respect. I've played a handful, couldn't afford them. But, sweet they are.
Roe wrote:the highend tokais I've tried kills most new gibsons, including the historics. that's my experience at least. and other players that have compared many of these guitars tend to agree
Tokai are generally thought of a bit more highly than the ESP/Edwards; nevertheless, when I took mine in to the shop ('56 Gold Top copy)... ...these hard core, seen it all before, fixed it all before, played it all before, it's all I do all day techs (not chain store Mr. Fix-Its) were shocked and impressed. I was floored because all I wanted was a roughly $800 guitar that would get me in the neighborhood of that Les Paul sound and wound up getting more than I paid for... considerably. Even if I did what people do with their Gibbys and upgraded electronics only (because the hardware was better than found on Gibs) I'm still ahead of the game, cost to value.
When I bought a Metro kit, all I wanted was an amp that would get me in the neighborhood of a Marshall plexi... ...wound up getting more than I paid for. Same thing when I built my Warmoth strat (but, no, I would not build a LP style guitar from Warmoth parts and I fully agree - bolt on, even at 24 3/4, is just not the same thing.)
Just in case, yes I've owned Gibson Les Pauls, not vintage, but a few... ...sold them all. Don't miss them. They were "ok"; but, "ok" didn't equal the price I paid. Like one of the die hard Gibsonites told me before on this forum - "kick this guys @$$" - but someone make me understand why I should have undying loyalty to the Gibson corporation if 90 - 95% of their current products don't measure up and do not have a good cost to value ratio in comparison to private luthiers and overseas builders. I'm way past that "you can't rock" crap "if you don't have the Marshall name behind you and the Gibson name in front of you", especially if that's a Marshal
f BSL and Gib
stone Less Paul. How 'bout I vote with my wallet. Maybe I'm just testy today... but, I think not.
