#16
|
|||
|
|||
The Class 5 is a sweet amp. Difficult to get a nice overdrive without cranking though but any nice overdrive pedal will suit your needs. I just bought a EHX Soul Food pedal and it's great for overdriving the Class 5 at a decent volume - that's what I demoed it on.
|
#17
|
|||
|
|||
Quote:
__________________
Gibson ES-335 Studio 2016; Furch OM34sr 2015; Fender MiJ Geddy Lee Jazz bass, 2009; Taylor 414CE 2005; Guild D35 NT 1976; Fender MIM Classic 60s Tele 2008; Fender US Standard Strat 1992; G&L ASAT classic hollowbody 2005; Ibanez RG350MDX 2010(?); Ibanez Musician fretless, 1980s; Seymour Duncan Tube 84-40; Vox AC4TV; Ex-pat Brit in Sweden
|
#18
|
||||
|
||||
I have a Reverend Sensei RA that I would highly recommend. It's the model with Railhammer pickups. It's thin, lightweight and sounds great. When I first heard it, I was very impressed. I think, new, it would come in at about $700 - $800, though not sure. Also very happy with Carvin. If you're careful about the options you go for, you can get a model in at under your budget. I think Carvin necks are about as smooth and playable as they come. I got one with a 10" fingerboard radius and love playing it. That being said, I suggest you take a look at Reverend. Someone on here reviewed a Fallout, and it could be a perfect fit for what you're looking for.
__________________
--------------------------------------- 2013 Joel Stehr Dreadnought - Carpathian/Malaysian BW 2014 RainSong H-OM1000N2 2017 Rainsong BI-WS1000N2 2013 Chris Ensor Concert - Port Orford Cedar/Wenge 1980ish Takamine EF363 complete with irreplaceable memories A bunch of electrics (too many!!) |
#19
|
|||
|
|||
If you don't mind "slumming it" ...
I can't say enough about the tone and quality of my Epiphone Les Paul 60's Tribute Plus. Gibby PUs and tuners, AAA flamed tops and a tone I prefer over that of my Gibson Trad Pro II. For some, it doesn't carry the prestige that a Gibson version would, but at $599 with a hard case, it's hard to find a better LP on the market today if tone is a primary goal. You'll then have budget money for a new Amp. Maybe a Peavy 40 classic and still have money left unspent.
Happy birthday in advance what ever you decide.
__________________
12 Fret Tinker Dread 12 Fret EJ Henderson Dread 12 Fret Hotrod Tricone 13 Fret Charis SJ Martin D-41 Halcyon 12 Fret 000 A&L Ami McIlroy A30c Taylor 610 LTD Martin DCPA1 Seagull Original Gretsch White Falcon Epi LP 60's Tribute Plus (Ebony) Epi LP 60's Tribute Plus (HC Burst) Epi Swingster Royale Gibson LP Trad Pro II Godin Exit 22 |
#20
|
|||
|
|||
I've heard a lot of good things about those tribute Epiphones. Considering the hard case and pickups they are a pretty good value.
I've been doing a lot of research and plan to start some guitar demos at local stores. I have decided to "avoid the Floyd" and stay away from those types of guitars. Right now I'm leaning towards a Gibson Les Paul Jr, Fender 50s Road worn Telecaster, Fender classic 50s Telecaster, Fender 72 Tele Deluxe, Possibly a PRS S2 Mira. |
#21
|
|||
|
|||
I would recommend a mid-to late 1990s Gibson Les Paul Special Double Cut. You should be able to locate one in your price range. Here's a link to a picture of mine. It is a terrific guitar:
http://i15.photobucket.com/albums/a3...s/DSC_0025.jpg |
#22
|
|||
|
|||
Quote:
__________________
Breedlove, Landola, a couple of electrics, and a guitar-shaped-object |
#23
|
|||
|
|||
If you're a rock/blues guy, two Gibsons that should be on your radar are the ES-335 and ES-339. The Epiphone 339 with the coil-tapping is a blues-rock machine with incredible band for the buck. Get one of those, a professional setup, and you can even replace the pickups, bridge and tuners, all for less than a new Gibson. I own some nice American electrics, but these recent epiphones (and the Squier Classic Vibe Fenders) have been blowing me away. With some money into parts, they exceed plenty of their off-the-rack American counterparts.
Alternatively, if you want to buy new and you're into the look of Fender offsets (I am), check out the American Special Jazzmaster. It's got a TOM/stop tailpiece and a strat scale length, along with two stacked humbuckers that land somewhere between a Jazzmaster single-coil and a P90 in tone.
__________________
Some might call me a "Webber Guitars enthusiast". |
#24
|
|||
|
|||
I a long time Ibanez fan but I just bought a schector more quality for the money. but with that budget I would be torn between a Gem or a PRS. Go play some schectors.
__________________
" A old guitar is all he can afford but when he gets under the lights he makes it sing' |
#25
|
|||
|
|||
Quote:
Since you mentioned the Gretsch I suggest looking at the Electromatic Pro Jet. The hollowbody models are good too, but you haven't mentioned any interest in a hollow or semi-hollow. |
#26
|
|||
|
|||
Finally made it out this weekend and played a lot of guitars. I played many different manufacturers but have narrowed my search down to 3 guitars. 1) Gibson Les Paul Junior. 2) Gibson Les Paul Special. 3) PRS S2 Mira.
The Gibsons are mainly on my list because I really dig the nasally tone of P90's and honestly none of the 2015 changes that everyone seems to despise bother me. My local GC has also started discounting them -$90. I'm also a big fan of the simplicity of the Junior. Hoping in a couple of weeks when I'm ready to pull the trigger prices will have gone down again. On the other hand the Mira's quality just blew me away. Fret work was great and the neck felt perfect! It sounded great but obviously didn't have the p90 growl I was looking for. I may compromise here though seeing as how I really dug the guitar. Got some serious thinking to do. Thanks for the recommendations too! I did play some Reverands. Great guitars but not quite for me. |
#27
|
||||
|
||||
I'm having a half custom guitar built by Benford Guitars. You can probably get something put together just as you'd like it, with your choice of pickups and configuration, within your budget. Just something to think about.
__________________
--------------------------------------- 2013 Joel Stehr Dreadnought - Carpathian/Malaysian BW 2014 RainSong H-OM1000N2 2017 Rainsong BI-WS1000N2 2013 Chris Ensor Concert - Port Orford Cedar/Wenge 1980ish Takamine EF363 complete with irreplaceable memories A bunch of electrics (too many!!) |
#28
|
|||
|
|||
Hard decisions.
I would pick a Tele and put it through an overdrive before I would pick a LP> you can do a lot more with it. Try country with a Les Paul! Well, actually, the Allman brothers did, but not with Twang! But Teles do it all, jazz, country, pop, Motown guitar of choice and some heavy metal crunch. If you want metal and rock, nothing will perform like an Ibanez. But Ibbies are one trick ponies, I sold mine off, because it was a pure rock guitar. If you want pure rock, its the one! Vai and Satriani can't be wrong, that's their weapon of choice. PRS, who can complain? Sad you don't have the sound you want off the pickups, but I am sure a good pedal could do that. LPs, never bonded with them. Don't know why. I think its because they sound meh clean and seem to have ONE overdriven tone. Not an easy decision. |
#29
|
|||
|
|||
You have a Strat......now get a LP. Real men play Les Pauls.
__________________
Martin 00018 |
#30
|
|||
|
|||
Thanks for all the suggestions guys. I drove myself crazy for the past month trying guitars and narrowing the field. Since it is a gift from my wife I gave her the info on a few different guitars and told her I would be happy with any of them so I am letting her decide my fate. She knows absolutely squat about guitars so I am sure her decision will be based on cost and what is pretty. She has already ordered my mystery guitar and I should have it early next week.
|