Okay, I'm really leaning towards the Riff Raff's now, thanks again for the advise.
Twinfan, I did try your SG at the meet and it sounded great but I think the setup was obviously geared for the Angus edgy crunch so I was listening/playing with that in mind, at the time I would never have considered Riff Raff's in a semi for cleaner blues....not because I thought they would not be good, just becasue I was in an AC/DC frame of mind.
I think when I get the semi I'll take you up on that offer and have another listen to them. I was in sounds great before looking at the Peerless Guitars but they only had the full archtop Jazz guitars rather than the 335 style I like.
I might pop over to Richtone next week to have a go of the Japanese Tokais....
Fourth Feline, I like your valve analogy. I love 6L6's though so I'm definitely not put off by the M.Q.'s. Do you know of any YT clips that would approximate their sound?
Yes Tom, but ironically it is someone playing Gibson '57 classics. The link is that Larry Carlton is often right hand damping, using the bridge pickup with the tone rolled way back, using a heavy pick and setting the E.Q to quench the full firepower till the higher speed 'breaks' when he unleashes the bridge a bit more and also sometimes kicks the Whah pedal full forward e.t.c.
The tone I got from M.Qs being very close to this ( only obvioulsy the playing not as good ) . The whole vibe is more rounded than sharp though, the top end goes glassy and fat - and the edge when it comes - has
width as well as 'spike' .
It's all about balance between pickups and woods again, but check out ( as a tonal example ) near the end where he starts picking / slapping the strings between finger and thumb, as it is
his use of the '57s that sound ( paradoxically) like M.Qs - or ( in a lighter semi-acoustic than mine ) probably the AIV Stormy Monday.
I was faced with a great playing, looking and feeling guitar,
but it had thick basswood laminates for the body - and a mahogany neck. Without some clean / clear extra 'muscle' it was not going to sound like an 'airy' thin Maple laminate job - which you are getting (?) .
But whilst the attached clip is therefore not 'pure M.Q. '
the end result of his picking technique often demonstrates the tonal character of a M.Q. - in that you get 'fat' on the top e / b / g when stroking the strings , but with that fat overwound single coil 'glassy' edge when digging into the bridge or middle toggle posistions.
So , here ( approximately ) goes :
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jNIXVw_kni4&feature=relatedAlso think of Dave Gilmour's solo in " Another Brick In The Wall Pt II " - pure Gibson Les Paul / P90 goodness :
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LUASiDg-kg4