Why the hell did I forget about the rebel yell .....prolly a better choice than either!
I'm not really a les paul kinda guy at all in terms of playing them but I do really like the look of them and I picked up a very beat up 1978 Les Paul for a steal. I also know a very good luthier who could restore it for me but ill sit and tink on that!
I know the mules would be an obvious choice for many but im not sureh ow much better theyd be than say original bursbuckers which would help the guitar retain or increase its value......gotta think harder on this one i reckon!
Black dog is a very good idea though I know some folk put nailbombs in their les pauls too.
Id want a sound outside of my comfort zone so I guess I want a clean, uncluttered, massive sound without sounding unnatural in the bridge and something fat, fluid and responsive in the neck......still maybe a cold sweat or vhii for that.....
there's no such thing as a "better choice" for a lp custom
they all sound great
you just gotta figure what you're looking for primarily
if you have a 78 les paul, no matter how "bad" it looks, do not mess with the finish, unless it's already refinished
you can swap pickups and keep the stock ones, in case you ever decide to sell the guitar
can you post pics of it? :D
I have a black dog bridge/cold sweat neck set in a '78 greco les paul standard (maple neck, like yours, but brazilian rosewood board)
I honestly didn't like the cold sweat in the neck in this particular guitar (the neck pup actually sounded pretty good in the bridge position)
sounds good, but not as good as in my mahogany neck guitars, for some reason
the black dog goes really well with the maple neck (better than in my '73 custom)
big, dense and middy tone
not as 3D and transparent as a mule or riff raff, though
you better play it first and find out how it sounds stock, and then you'll know what you wanna change from there