Originally posted by Mike Sulzer
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Les Paul's sonic tastes are statistically referred to as "outliers"
given the aesthetic decadence of the last 15 years.
"pickup that compresses the initial attack profile": I do not think that pickups compress the attack. Instantaneous gain increases with motion towards the pickup, and decreases away from it. Harmonics are produced, but very little compression of the response.
Two otherwise identical pickups, one using Alnico 5 and the other Alnico II, exhibit distinct
dynamic signatures. In practical terms, you can only bang on the guitar so hard before
the Alnico 2 pickup audibly self-limits. Ditto for A3 and A4.
Much of the perceived harshness of early Ceramic I and C5 magnets was due to the
sharp attack that higher coercivity magnets provide. Until makers understood how
to wind for ceramic magnets, those pickups were problematic. It took Joe Barden a
decade of pestering Danny Gatton before Joe's C5 pickup builds were ready for release.
If you can add some commentary about recoil permeability and its possible effect
on the generated signal, I would be _very_ interested.
power supply sag: I think that is a detail. The major effect is the non-linearity of the amplifying devices. Put a regulated supply in a tube guitar amp, and it still sounds like a guitar amp, just somewhat different.
Here's one: Weber Copper Cap Rectifiers
Another is the Dumble RC plate-to-grid bypass in the preamp stage; its compression+sustain
is a signature sound and very desirable in general. Note: the typical RC is .05uF/22Meg serially
connected for a t=RC time constant of 1.1 seconds.
Much of a pickup's marketability lies in its ability to adequately exploit the pathological
aspects of the amplification chain, and buyers expect these pathologies to be available
on demand.
It's not that I particularly like this state of affairs, but I think it figures prominently in
the use of electric guitars. Others, doubtless, have a less jaundiced view.
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