Tech: "The red guitar"
This has been my main stage instrument since Spring of 2007, and I used it to record all tracks on Wake/Lift except Temet Nosce. It's a 2005 Gibson Les Paul Studio, finished in wine red. It had gold/black hardware when I got it, which I swapped for cream almost immediately. Originally it had EMGs in it --- taken from the destroyed cream Les Paul that I used to record Galilean Satellites --- but after having been off the active-pickup kool aid for almost a year in Spring '07, I got tired of the sound quickly.
I went hunting for something that would sound closer to the Velvet Brick pickup in my Sonex-180 (used to record Au Pays Natal and Absent... more on this guitar in another post), but higher output. Since the Sonex is made of "resinwood", the Velvet Brick sounds much less thrilling (more compressed and middy) when moved to a mahogany Les Paul. The closest thing I could find to what I was looking for was the Gibson Dirty Fingers bridge pickup, which I combined with an uncovered 490R in the neck position. I recorded Wake/Lift with this configuration, and the guitar served this way until this past Winter.
I'm now using a Bare Knuckle Pickups Painkiller set. On strong recommendations, I got in touch with Tim Mills from BKP and picked his brain about what I was looking for, and he recommended this. It's the closest I've ever heard to the open tonal character of the Velvet Brick, but with even less compression, more volume, and vastly more clarity in the low end. It's extremely flattering to downtuned mahogany guitars, especially with really heavy strings. My bridge pickup is F-spaced, since this is one of the few guitars where Gibson used a 53mm string spacing at the bridge instead of 50mm. The saddle cuts look strange this way, since the replacement Tune-o-matic bridge I installed is a standard 50mm spacing, but the stock pickup on the guitar was 53mm and the saddles were cut accordingly off-center on the original bridge. In practice it makes no difference, but it's nice to have the polepieces lined up properly.
The guitar is tuned Bb F Bb Eb G C, or four semitones detuned with a dropped low string. The gauges used are .013/.017/.026/.036/.046/.062. The overall tension here is actually higher than in standard tuning with a set of .010-.046 strings. Even with the large jump from the F to Bb strings, the lowest string is still lower tension than the others. I also had to flip the bridge backwards to get extra intonation adjustment to compensate for the low tuning, regardless of the different core/wrap ratios I tried. The nut is now a Graphtec Trem-nut, which helps make tuning slicker with big strings.
All controls except the neck pickup volume pot are disconnected. I have no need for tone controls, and rather than waste time trying to find a 1-megohm long-shaft pot for a Les Paul, I opted to hardwire the bridge pickup directly to the switch. I love running pickups wide-open (see the post on the Frankencaster). I can still roll back the neck pickup volume for more mellow tones.
After playing an 8-string for a while, this guitar feels like a miniature. But it's still the instrument I use the most often, and it has the most reliably-good tone in the widest variety of situations. It's also the easiest to play, which is why I generally don't use it to practice with at home. I haven't toured with anything else since early 2007.
I went hunting for something that would sound closer to the Velvet Brick pickup in my Sonex-180 (used to record Au Pays Natal and Absent... more on this guitar in another post), but higher output. Since the Sonex is made of "resinwood", the Velvet Brick sounds much less thrilling (more compressed and middy) when moved to a mahogany Les Paul. The closest thing I could find to what I was looking for was the Gibson Dirty Fingers bridge pickup, which I combined with an uncovered 490R in the neck position. I recorded Wake/Lift with this configuration, and the guitar served this way until this past Winter.
I'm now using a Bare Knuckle Pickups Painkiller set. On strong recommendations, I got in touch with Tim Mills from BKP and picked his brain about what I was looking for, and he recommended this. It's the closest I've ever heard to the open tonal character of the Velvet Brick, but with even less compression, more volume, and vastly more clarity in the low end. It's extremely flattering to downtuned mahogany guitars, especially with really heavy strings. My bridge pickup is F-spaced, since this is one of the few guitars where Gibson used a 53mm string spacing at the bridge instead of 50mm. The saddle cuts look strange this way, since the replacement Tune-o-matic bridge I installed is a standard 50mm spacing, but the stock pickup on the guitar was 53mm and the saddles were cut accordingly off-center on the original bridge. In practice it makes no difference, but it's nice to have the polepieces lined up properly.
The guitar is tuned Bb F Bb Eb G C, or four semitones detuned with a dropped low string. The gauges used are .013/.017/.026/.036/.046/.062. The overall tension here is actually higher than in standard tuning with a set of .010-.046 strings. Even with the large jump from the F to Bb strings, the lowest string is still lower tension than the others. I also had to flip the bridge backwards to get extra intonation adjustment to compensate for the low tuning, regardless of the different core/wrap ratios I tried. The nut is now a Graphtec Trem-nut, which helps make tuning slicker with big strings.
All controls except the neck pickup volume pot are disconnected. I have no need for tone controls, and rather than waste time trying to find a 1-megohm long-shaft pot for a Les Paul, I opted to hardwire the bridge pickup directly to the switch. I love running pickups wide-open (see the post on the Frankencaster). I can still roll back the neck pickup volume for more mellow tones.
After playing an 8-string for a while, this guitar feels like a miniature. But it's still the instrument I use the most often, and it has the most reliably-good tone in the widest variety of situations. It's also the easiest to play, which is why I generally don't use it to practice with at home. I haven't toured with anything else since early 2007.
5 Comments:
thanks man, I was really interested to see how it was setup, you had already told me the tuning on twitter, but the info on the pickups was new to me, nice pics as well, I play a les paul goth in matt black, but use a custom made 7 string for the stuff in Bb.
is there any modifacation to increase the sustain of your guitar.i play a epiphone custom les paul and find that the sustain(original pickups) isnt doing it for me.in general i just wonder why a gibson is so more expensive and is it really worth the price difference? can i do some mods to get a aproximating result?
Bert,
You can get an increase in sustain by using a hotter pickup, which will drive your amp harder. But if you just want more sustain with the same amount of output, that's a tough one. You could use heavier strings, that often helps (changing strings often helps too). Beyond that though, there's not a whole lot.
Epiphone guitars are cheaper than Gibson because they're made overseas, whereas Gibson is made in America. Sometimes the Gibson materials are of better quality. Generally you can feel the workmanship difference in that the Gibson guitars don't need as much remedial setup when they're new... but then again, I've never bought a new Gibson, and I do all my own setups.
Hi Matt,
I've recently got myself a Tokai LC85 Les Paul copy and I'm having some trouble with the lowest string being significantly duller than all the others. I've already upped the gauge to .54 (for drop B tuning) is it just a matter or going a bit heavier or should i look into doing something with the nut/bridge?
Thanks
Karl,
This is a pretty common problem when you go really heavy on the bottom. You can use a smaller gauge to brighten it up, or go with a stainless steel wound string in that position (as opposed to nickel) to brighten things up. Nut/bridge modifications will have much less of an effect.
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