
Tadpui
Well-known member
I started to reply to a post from Victory Pete in my Martin acoustic thread, but instead of veering off topic there, I wanted to start a new thread about the LP Classic.
You know Pete, you and I seem to be in the minority about the 500T and 496R pickups in the LP Classic. I played the Classic alongside a couple of LP Standards of the era (1999, so I'm not sure if they had the BurstBuckers at that point) and an old '76 Custom and I thought that the Classic sounded way more like what I consider a Les Paul is supposed to sound like. So I bought it that day and I've loved it like a child ever since. Some people like to talk just to hear their own voice, I guess i like to play just to hear my LP through my rig. It inspires me at a very fundamental level. I just love to hear it.
With the 500T, I like the bite when you really dig into the upper strings in 12th position. I love the way that the upper strings sound in 5th-9th position. The open A string has just a wonderful punch and growl when you dig into it. And pretty much across all 6 strings, 5th position sounds just awesome. I could see how some people wouldn't like the 500T because it's so focused on the midrange frequencies. I play a variety of styles, mainly everything but modern metal and country/western, and I'm a big fan of Mick Ronson. So I love the midrange focus of the 500T.
I play through a Traynor YCV80, which is an all-tube 2x12 combo with ECC83s in the preamp and 6L6GCs in the power section. I keep my amp on the crunch channel with just enough preamp gain so that it'll break up if I really dig in but it sounds pretty clean when I use a normal amount of force. I use a THD HotPlate so that I can keep the master of my amp up at about 8 or 9 so I can really push the power section when I want to. I use a TS9 Tube Screamer with everything at 12:00 when I want to saturate the power section, and I use a Boss CS3 Compressor/Sustainer when I want to hold my amp in its sweet spot of power tube saturation.
With the 496R, I love the Strat-like snap you get across all 6 strings in 12th position. Again, the open A string sounds so nice and beefy. The 496R is such a punchy pickup, with a huge dynamic range. With my normal amp settings (no TS9, no CS3), I am constantly amazed at how punchy that neck pickup is. Roll back on the volume and its almost squeaky clean with attenuated highs. Turn it all the way up and I'd swear it sounds like a single-coil but with a little more beef behind it. With the TS9 kicked on, its a pretty damn mean sound and with the CS3 added to the fold, its Trey Anastasio incarnate.
So Pete, how do you use your LP Classic? I'm curious as to what type of music you use it for. I was surprised that higher output pickups actually suited my non-metal, lower-gain needs so well. Higher output aside, I think they just sound more "Les Pauly" than the comparable Standards. But man those pickups really take a beating from reviewers. I get the feeling that one person ragged on them one time and everybody else just acts like parrots and echoes that sentiment without any real experience to back it up.
I have a Les Paul Classic also, I love the high output 496R and 500T pickups.
You know Pete, you and I seem to be in the minority about the 500T and 496R pickups in the LP Classic. I played the Classic alongside a couple of LP Standards of the era (1999, so I'm not sure if they had the BurstBuckers at that point) and an old '76 Custom and I thought that the Classic sounded way more like what I consider a Les Paul is supposed to sound like. So I bought it that day and I've loved it like a child ever since. Some people like to talk just to hear their own voice, I guess i like to play just to hear my LP through my rig. It inspires me at a very fundamental level. I just love to hear it.
With the 500T, I like the bite when you really dig into the upper strings in 12th position. I love the way that the upper strings sound in 5th-9th position. The open A string has just a wonderful punch and growl when you dig into it. And pretty much across all 6 strings, 5th position sounds just awesome. I could see how some people wouldn't like the 500T because it's so focused on the midrange frequencies. I play a variety of styles, mainly everything but modern metal and country/western, and I'm a big fan of Mick Ronson. So I love the midrange focus of the 500T.
I play through a Traynor YCV80, which is an all-tube 2x12 combo with ECC83s in the preamp and 6L6GCs in the power section. I keep my amp on the crunch channel with just enough preamp gain so that it'll break up if I really dig in but it sounds pretty clean when I use a normal amount of force. I use a THD HotPlate so that I can keep the master of my amp up at about 8 or 9 so I can really push the power section when I want to. I use a TS9 Tube Screamer with everything at 12:00 when I want to saturate the power section, and I use a Boss CS3 Compressor/Sustainer when I want to hold my amp in its sweet spot of power tube saturation.
With the 496R, I love the Strat-like snap you get across all 6 strings in 12th position. Again, the open A string sounds so nice and beefy. The 496R is such a punchy pickup, with a huge dynamic range. With my normal amp settings (no TS9, no CS3), I am constantly amazed at how punchy that neck pickup is. Roll back on the volume and its almost squeaky clean with attenuated highs. Turn it all the way up and I'd swear it sounds like a single-coil but with a little more beef behind it. With the TS9 kicked on, its a pretty damn mean sound and with the CS3 added to the fold, its Trey Anastasio incarnate.
So Pete, how do you use your LP Classic? I'm curious as to what type of music you use it for. I was surprised that higher output pickups actually suited my non-metal, lower-gain needs so well. Higher output aside, I think they just sound more "Les Pauly" than the comparable Standards. But man those pickups really take a beating from reviewers. I get the feeling that one person ragged on them one time and everybody else just acts like parrots and echoes that sentiment without any real experience to back it up.