So yesterday I picked up the latest CD from Blake Mills. Absolute monster slide player, in the same league as Derek Trucks and Ry Cooder, yet able to play jazz progressions like Bill Frizell and mariachi music like David Hidalgo.
A number of the Youtube demos and live things I see from him have him playing a Strat-en-stein with a gold foil in the neck position and a horseshoe derivative at the bridge. Not split like a horseshoe, but the strings pass through it, rather than over it.
So what is it that such pickups "do" that lends itself to slide? For example, are they better able to pick up on the nuances of the string much later in the note's lifespan? Is it simply a tonal difference? Just what the heck do they accomplish that a standard strings-over-polepieces pickup won't do?
A number of the Youtube demos and live things I see from him have him playing a Strat-en-stein with a gold foil in the neck position and a horseshoe derivative at the bridge. Not split like a horseshoe, but the strings pass through it, rather than over it.
So what is it that such pickups "do" that lends itself to slide? For example, are they better able to pick up on the nuances of the string much later in the note's lifespan? Is it simply a tonal difference? Just what the heck do they accomplish that a standard strings-over-polepieces pickup won't do?
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