I wasn't too sure where to post this... (over-long as usual - you should see the first version!!)
...but seeing as it's about BKP pups and their effect...
...this must be the place :lol:
One of the first sets I bought was the Riff Raffs - put them in my Epi SG, seemed the obvious choice to me: for 60-70s rock sounds they seemed to be the best bet, and would let me get bluesy as well (my main thing).
Then I acquired a Gibson Explorer and I wasn't sure what to do with it. I wanted it to be a big f-off blues-beast, and Riff Raffs was one of the possible choices, if not the only only one. I wanted raunchy, so that seemed to suggest more than Stormy Mondays, it is a very "dark" mahogany guitar, so conventional wisdom seemed to suggest not Mules, and I wasn't sure if really I needed hotter pups to do the job (it had gibson ceramics already). As I had the Riff Raffs, a cheap option was to try them out first... I loved it, and the Epi lost her pickups.
That allowed me to justify buying Mississippi Queens that I'd been reading about. I put them in the SG and loved it. I discovered I like the "P90 thing" - not much of a surprise, because really I'm a Fender-man :)
But recently, with my Baja tele being severely improved by adding Blackguards, and my Mules finding a superb home in a Tokai Love Rock, and of course my Strat as an ever-present "No 1 wife" (challenged by the Tele now, incidentally), it all meant that the most expensive guitar in the room, the Explorer, has not been giving me much, if any, joy :(. Added to that, the SG hasn't been getting any attention because its T-O-M bridge needed some work, and after my initial excitement, I couldn't get to grips with the sounds it was making with the MQs. Both guitars, I would pick up, sigh, and put down again...
So I decided to do a swap with the pickups. I was expecting the Explorer to improve - the Riff Raffs just seemed a bit too weedy sounding for me, the Explorer was like a weak version of my Love Rock, which was one of the reasons why I wasn't playing it. I knew the MQs were fatter sounding, if anything drive an amp harder, and would definitely make the thing sound a different animal to the Love Rock. I already knew the Riff Raffs worked in the SG. So, at worst, I'd be no worse off...
Instead, I got MASSIVE improvements all round!
The SG is back to it's former glory - which I'd forgotten. Crisper and less aggressive, it does tight AC/DC and other 70s rock sounds, it actually does "Beano" Eric better than my Muled Love Rock does (I'd completely forgotten that was the case). It still might not get played a lot, like the Love Rock, but it now fulfills a purpose that doesn't overlap with another guitar, and the minute I start playing it I love the sounds rather than having to figure out what to do with it.
But the Explorer with MQs - WOW!!! :P It is exactly as I had hoped but didn't dare count on. The MQs cut through all that wood (better than the Riff Raffs did), but they have a lot more "middle-bottom" to them, so it doesn't have a "hollow" sort of tone anymore (that was bugging me). And added to that, although they behave like a humbucker when full-on, when you roll off the volume you get that "clean but not weedier" that single-coil players are used to... I haven't found all the voices that are hiding in this instrument now, but it's a lot more to my taste than it was a few hours ago.
For me, my SG and Love Rock are for those "let's play like my heroes" moments... but suddenly the Explorer has joined the ranks of the Tele and the Strat - it's one of the guitars to pick up when I want to be "me" :D