I thought I'd tone it down and was going to re-write it so deleted it, well what the hell, let it ride. Wolfe, I saw they botched your mention with the Dr. V's too. It was a bad job all the way around. Some products had the full 30 word descriptions, from builder's I never heard of, and some like me had their descriptions cut down to nothing. It looks to me like their production artist ran out of space and just started chopping text out randomly to make it fit, not very professional, and my description is not anything that I wrote that they asked me for.
They didn't use any of the Seth Lover interview I sent them, maybe because of copyright protection, it was from a Japanese book put out in the 80's, where Seth said they wound to inductance. Basically they just used an old interview they ran years ago and didn't put any real work into the article. It just amazes me a magazine thats about vintage guitars, that all they could come up with was something like this, about pickups that can sell for $10,000 for a primo condition set, the most desired, most expensive vintage pickups there are on the planet. Will we ever see a truly full article on these pickups that covers the technicalities, the reverse-engineering work, what is known about the PAF's documented in the most famous Les Pauls on classic recordings that made those guitars so expensive to own now days? Probably not. Hunter did a good job of describing what sets them apart from anything made since, he has his own band and is not a fantasy bed room player. I keep learning new things about these pickups, recently got a first year early 57 set that violated all the things I learned from all the other years, and recently found out what the specs of the Peter Green and Kossoff guitar PAF's were, which also was a huge surprise. Nobody really seemed interested enough to ask those questions in all the articles or posts on those two guitars, the sound of those guitars basically ARE the pickups, in a guitar with vintage hardware using specific metals in each spot, something Gibson abandoned a long time ago, and a hand crafted guitar using woods that really don't exist anymore. This stuff just fascinates me no end so I keep looking at it again and again when I think I'm done with it all. I have a 68 conversion in here at the moment and was surprised how close I can make my LP's match it just by machining my own hardware parts using the same metal alloys the vintage guitars used, the hardware was a big piece of that picture. I got a vintage ABR1 bridge for research and it sounds nothing like any modern ABR1.
Anyway, Vintage Guitar Magazine is what it is, oh well. The last article they did was about the same, except they did a review, and amazingly they took the covers off all the entries, thinking it would "level the playing field," boy there were some mad pickup guys when that came out, LOL.
They didn't use any of the Seth Lover interview I sent them, maybe because of copyright protection, it was from a Japanese book put out in the 80's, where Seth said they wound to inductance. Basically they just used an old interview they ran years ago and didn't put any real work into the article. It just amazes me a magazine thats about vintage guitars, that all they could come up with was something like this, about pickups that can sell for $10,000 for a primo condition set, the most desired, most expensive vintage pickups there are on the planet. Will we ever see a truly full article on these pickups that covers the technicalities, the reverse-engineering work, what is known about the PAF's documented in the most famous Les Pauls on classic recordings that made those guitars so expensive to own now days? Probably not. Hunter did a good job of describing what sets them apart from anything made since, he has his own band and is not a fantasy bed room player. I keep learning new things about these pickups, recently got a first year early 57 set that violated all the things I learned from all the other years, and recently found out what the specs of the Peter Green and Kossoff guitar PAF's were, which also was a huge surprise. Nobody really seemed interested enough to ask those questions in all the articles or posts on those two guitars, the sound of those guitars basically ARE the pickups, in a guitar with vintage hardware using specific metals in each spot, something Gibson abandoned a long time ago, and a hand crafted guitar using woods that really don't exist anymore. This stuff just fascinates me no end so I keep looking at it again and again when I think I'm done with it all. I have a 68 conversion in here at the moment and was surprised how close I can make my LP's match it just by machining my own hardware parts using the same metal alloys the vintage guitars used, the hardware was a big piece of that picture. I got a vintage ABR1 bridge for research and it sounds nothing like any modern ABR1.
Anyway, Vintage Guitar Magazine is what it is, oh well. The last article they did was about the same, except they did a review, and amazingly they took the covers off all the entries, thinking it would "level the playing field," boy there were some mad pickup guys when that came out, LOL.
Comment