Bare Knuckle Pickups Forum

Forum Ringside => Pickups => Topic started by: mkh02 on February 21, 2011, 03:59:21 PM

Title: Constantly Different Advice
Post by: mkh02 on February 21, 2011, 03:59:21 PM
Hey guys I still need help lol!

I have asked the forum a few times and emailed Tim and the guys in regard to pickup advice.

However, everytime I post of email I get a different recomendation lol! So confused

I am looking to upgrade the pickups in my Gibson Les Paul. My current pickups are too thin and don't have enough gain/ output for my liking.

I do a lot of solos and need something that will give me tons of sustain. I like higher gain however I want to be able to have that classic rock vibe but with the ability to crank it up and really make the solos scream and sing. I want the pickup to help with flow of notes, legato and two hand tapping together with really good pinched harmonics.

In regard to chords I would like a real snarl to the voicing kind of like an overdriven Marshall JCM 800 but with a Gibson vibe.

I don't particularly want a compressed sound nor will I be using the guitar for hammering thick modern/ death metal.

I want a pickup that is not too trebly but will give my solos flow, scream and sustain with a slight traditional classic rock vibe but enough meat to really go for it when the distortion starts cranking up.

Hope this makes sense lol....so difficult to put into words.

I have been recommended for the above sound:

Cold Sweats
Nailbombs
Rebel Yells
Crawlers
Holy Divers

I guess these are in the right area however everyone seems to give me different advice! I am getting to the point where I should of bought these ages ago but everythime I email Tim and the boys or come on the forum I get a different recommendation.

HELP!
Title: Re: Constantly Different Advice
Post by: Roobubba on February 21, 2011, 04:30:10 PM
I had expected to see black dogs in that list...

How about you go on youtube, find a few vids to show us what sort of tone you're after (if doesn't have to be exact, but one man's hard rock is another man's pop). From your description, it sounds as though you play fairly light music (to me), and I'm therefore a bit surprised to see some of the higher output pickups in that list.

Roo
Title: Re: Constantly Different Advice
Post by: mkh02 on February 21, 2011, 04:59:47 PM
Yeah you are probably right.

Been looking on youtube, its a bit hit or miss some great stuff but filled with basic guitarists.

On the Les Paul I woill be playing Zeppelin, AC/DC, Aerosmith, Gary Moore, Whitesnake, Black Sabbath, Ozzy. That kind of vibe. So you are probably right it may be fairly light compared to what you are doing.

I have other guitars that I use for Steve Vai, Malmsteen, Van Halen and the like but want my Les Paul to really stand out which I feel it doesnt.

Would you say the nailbomb is too heavy then? Another thought was a mule in the neck and a black dog in the bridge but I am hesitant as I have taken the advice of the 'light overdrive, brigade before and been very dissappointed. I do like classic rock tones but I like the modern vibe...higher gain/ more sustain/ better harmonics.

Just dont want a sterile modern/ nu metal tone. Up to about Iron Maiden in terms of sound...no more metal then that lol.
Title: Re: Constantly Different Advice
Post by: Ratrod on February 21, 2011, 05:10:18 PM
Cold Sweats: good option
Nailbombs: too metal
Rebel Yells: another good one but maybe too modern
Crawlers: too compressed
Holy Divers: maybe...not sure....so I'd delete that too

Since it mostly 70's (hard) rock I'm thinking ether Cold Sweat or Black Dogs.
Title: Re: Constantly Different Advice
Post by: Telerocker on February 21, 2011, 05:21:57 PM
I think Rebel Yells, they clean up good too. Steve Stevens works a lot with the vol.knob to go from classic rock to sustaining solo's.
Title: Re: Constantly Different Advice
Post by: ericsabbath on February 21, 2011, 06:55:07 PM
Quote
I do a lot of solos and need something that will give me tons of sustain. I like higher gain however I want to be able to have that classic rock vibe but with the ability to crank it up and really make the solos scream and sing. I want the pickup to help with flow of notes, legato and two hand tapping together with really good pinched harmonics.

best bridge lead pup I ever experienced was definitely the Holy Diver

the Holy Diver is perfect for early both early and modern Van Halen and also for Jake E. Lee and Doug Aldrich stuff
not really a classic 70's tone, but it works well for pretty much everything, in my opinion

usually Tim recommends the Nailbomb for versatility, but it's a much hotter and more aggressive pickup

the bridge Cold Sweat is way more stiff sounding, brighter and more focused on both rhythms and leads, specially through a JCM 800
I don't think that's what you're looking for at all

the Black Dog might be a great option, though


I wouldn't go with the Mule for the neck if your priority is the lead tones
it cleans up like no other pickup I've tried, but it has no near the sustain of the neck Cold Sweat on leads, for example, as it doesn't drive the amp as hard (although the neck Cold Sweat is also medium/low output, and quite smooth as well)


Title: Re: Constantly Different Advice
Post by: mkh02 on February 22, 2011, 08:48:59 AM
Thanks for the posts guys.

Thats what I was looking for, a kind of....'no this won't work for you', or 'yeah that would be good'.

I know everyones tastes are different but obviously I know very little about the different bare knuckle pickups and your advice is invaluable.

What do you think of a holydiver bridge and a coldsweat neck then?
Title: Re: Constantly Different Advice
Post by: Roobubba on February 22, 2011, 12:00:56 PM
HD/CS would be a great combo, I don't think you'd be disappointed with this!

For reference (and as an aside) on the 'low output brigade' point, I used the black dog in my baritone for quite a while doing nasty heavy downtuned stuff. It could cope with that superbly well! I have since changed to an aftermath (I prefer the more clinical and ceramic side, personally), but the black dog was undeniably capable of brutality.

Roo
Title: Re: Constantly Different Advice
Post by: ericsabbath on February 22, 2011, 01:51:32 PM
What do you think of a holydiver bridge and a coldsweat neck then?

one of the best and definitely the most versatile combo I had in a LP
my first set choice for fluid leads, thick rhythms and still being able of getting clear and sparkly cleans

I'm still waiting for my black dog, so I can't comment about it yet
Title: Re: Constantly Different Advice
Post by: 'Ash' J. Williams on February 22, 2011, 04:17:05 PM
Don't rule out the Emeralds.

I have them in a LP, they're punchy and harmonically rich, instant late 70's vibe, and they're surprisingly 'easy' to play while not being too hot.
I see them like the brighter and 'straighter' brothers of the Black Dogs which i also own in an other LP.
For classic rock up to Iron Maiden they will be great.
Also, in a dimmed plexi it's instant Thin Lizzy  8)

In fact, if your LP is quite dark sounding, take the Emeralds, if it's bright, the Black Dogs.

But keep in mind that those two pickups are lower in output than the Holy Diver, which is more modern sounding but one of the best humbucker BKP makes imho.
Title: Re: Constantly Different Advice
Post by: mkh02 on February 22, 2011, 04:42:59 PM
Never considered the Emeralds.

I think I would prefer a slightly more modern slant on the Les Paul sound.

I do tend to like to rip it up in solos, I do a lot of lateral movement across the fretboard as opposed to pentatonic 'box shaped', lead work.

I feel higher output humbuckers tend to lend themselves better to the flow of notes that lateral playing gives.

May be sacrelige but I do like to modernise some of the classic rock tunes and a modern voicing allows for legatos all the way up and down the fretboard!!

Any one else used Cold sweat neck and Holy diver bridge?
Title: Re: Constantly Different Advice
Post by: ev1ltwin on February 22, 2011, 04:54:37 PM
what about the abraxas: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1e-vNNMyWMU
Title: Re: Constantly Different Advice
Post by: 'Ash' J. Williams on February 22, 2011, 04:55:33 PM
I think I would prefer a slightly more modern slant on the Les Paul sound.

Then you'll probably like the HD or the Crawler (PAF sounding with modern power).
Title: Re: Constantly Different Advice
Post by: darkbluemurder on February 22, 2011, 05:34:19 PM
What do you think of a holydiver bridge and a coldsweat neck then?

Love it in my PRS Custom.
Title: Re: Constantly Different Advice
Post by: ShredHeadJHJ on February 23, 2011, 07:45:13 AM
Damn, I really need to start buying guitars so that I can try out more of these BKP pups...

Judging solely by what I hear around here, a Holy Diver bridge and Cold Sweat neck would likely work very very well together.
Title: Re: Constantly Different Advice
Post by: Nolly on February 23, 2011, 08:43:46 AM
I concur with the Holy Diver/Cold Sweat suggestions, though my personal recommendation would be a Nailbomb set.
Title: Re: Constantly Different Advice
Post by: mkh02 on February 23, 2011, 12:17:01 PM
Thanks for your input Nolly.

Why would you recommed nailbombs over HD/CS

What are the benefits they have over what I am looking at?
Title: Re: Constantly Different Advice
Post by: ericsabbath on February 23, 2011, 04:07:05 PM
well, they're considerably hotter, so they'll push your JCM harder
picking response is more aggressive and precise, which can be a good thing, depending on what you want
Title: Re: Constantly Different Advice
Post by: Nolly on February 23, 2011, 04:31:27 PM
Thanks for your input Nolly.

Why would you recommed nailbombs over HD/CS

What are the benefits they have over what I am looking at?

I believe the Nailbombs are one of the most versatile sets you can put in an LP - hot enough for any style but with an old school, open voicing that can nail all the classic tones. I don't think you would find them "too metal" at all.
Check out any Marshall demonstration Chris George does, he uses Nailbombs in his LPs and runs the gamut of all of the classic Marshall tones.

I really enjoy both the Holy Divers and Cold Sweats, but to me both have a more contemporary and compressed voicing. Don't get me wrong though, I doubt you would be unhappy with them at all.
Title: Re: Constantly Different Advice
Post by: mkh02 on February 23, 2011, 04:32:39 PM
I see.

Mainly playing through my Carvin Steve Vai Legacy II at the moment through the clean channel with a POD HD 500. Blows both my JCM 800 and Dual rectifier away.

Therefore pushing an amp into saturation isn't a huge priority for me.

I am looking more for that sustain and soloing sweetness from the pickups which hopefully the HD and CS combination will give.
Title: Re: Constantly Different Advice
Post by: 'Ash' J. Williams on February 23, 2011, 04:51:09 PM
Quote
I am looking more for that sustain and soloing sweetness from the pickups which hopefully the HD and CS combination will give.

I really think that the Nailbomb and the Holy Diver are the 2 best HB for soloing. Their lead tones are above everything else imho.
Then it's just a matter of which one you like the most : the NB has a great attack and edge and this kind of halfc--ked wah thing going that makes you want to play like Marty Friedman  :lol:
And the HD is just so full of qualities it's scary.
Title: Re: Constantly Different Advice
Post by: nickcoumbe on February 26, 2011, 09:44:09 PM
I'm gonna say RY neck and HD bridge.

A versatile combo and probably my favourite of all BK pickups.