
Seeker of Rock
Seeker-Lou ‘32
FTR, I use Joyo wireless live shows. Inexpensive but their wireless systems have worked.
BTW, Congratulations! and cheers on the bourbon and chips/salsa!I just finished jamming with my friends... 3 hours with about a 20 minute break for some chit chat, a glass of bourbon, and some chips and salsa. I stood for the entire time, using my new H-530 hollow body/P-90 guitar (just over 6.5lbs).
The Joyo battery pack for the pedal board and the Joyo JW-06 wireless setup did great. I also tried a pair of KZ ZSN Pro in-ears which turned out to be very nice. I have tried several of my headphones (K-240s, HD280 and 7506s). The $20 in-ears did a better job and were more comfortable. I might have to pick up a spare set.
Generally vintage bursts were much lighter.That said, I’m surprised Jimmy Page’s frail frame played Les Pauls live for so many years. I’m guessing like me, it was the sound he wanted most and dealt with the negatives as a sacrifice.
Allow me to drop some historic knowledge on the LP weight and history…read if you will, don’t learn if you don’t.Generally vintage bursts were much lighter.
Now think of poor Randy Rhoads with his smallish frame playing a 70s LP custom night after night! Back breakers!
Private equity, but with a management team who also play, for whatever that's worth.Now with same brand name under new ownership, 2017-present.
I haven’t played a new Gibson yet but plan to. I’ve read good things online. Juskiewtcz did goods things in his reign then the vision seems to have strayed. I think most buyers just want a really good guitar for a modest price. If they keep to that formula I think they’ll do fine. Before I bought my Standard I remember walking into a Mars music store(still miss that place) to buy a JC-120 (which I did) and just looking through Les Pauls. There were so many variations it made me dizzy. LPC seemed like the only straight forward LP model without 10 sub variations.Private equity, but with a management team who also play, for whatever that's worth.
I'm a Strat guy from way back, so the sound and feel of a Gibson is all wrong to me, and I have no interest. But, anecdotally, I've heard after really bottoming out in the late 90s annd early 2000s, quality control has gotten a lot better these days and Gibsons coming out of the factory now are no longer laughably bad. So, hopefully it really is a labor of love for their current team...I haven’t played a new Gibson yet but plan to. I’ve read good things online. Juskiewtcz did goods things in his reign then the vision seems to have strayed. I think most buyers just want a really good guitar for a modest price. If they keep to that formula I think they’ll do fine. Before I bought my Standard I remember walking into a Mars music store(still miss that place) to buy a JC-120 (which I did) and just looking through Les Pauls. There were so many variations it made me dizzy. LPC seemed like the only straight forward LP model without 10 sub variations.
Heritage I’m happy to know formed. Always wanted to try and play one. The late ‘70s Kalamazoo recreations before they went Gibson dark were interesting. But that group never had the resources (and maybe the vision) to do proper recreations of yesteryear that artists were requesting due to corporate limitations. Aside from corporate the few sub 500 serial numbers I’ve seen from Kalamazoo have the shittiest blend of sunbursts. They remind me of budget brands. These as regular stock guitars before the closing. Sunburst blends are like a hard-lined reverse heart, very little fading between colors and over a particleboard looking wood finish.I'm a Strat guy from way back, so the sound and feel of a Gibson is all wrong to me, and I have no interest. But, anecdotally, I've heard after really bottoming out in the late 90s annd early 2000s, quality control has gotten a lot better these days and Gibsons coming out of the factory now are no longer laughably bad. So, hopefully it really is a labor of love for their current team...
...but if I was in the market, I'd probably still just get a Heritage.
Like these Kalamazoo sunburst examples on Reverb. Given this was ‘70s Norlin but a quality sunburst? It wasn’t a priority then, likely due to corporate restrictions, but these are l BOTH genuine Kalamazoo made Les Pauls, same plant (and some people) as Heritage guitars.Heritage I’m happy to know formed. Always wanted to try and play one. The late ‘70s Kalamazoo recreations before they went Gibson dark were interesting. But that group never had the resources (and maybe the vision) to do proper recreations of yesteryear that artists were requesting due to corporate limitations. Aside from corporate the few sub 500 serial numbers I’ve seen from Kalamazoo have the shittiest blend of sunbursts. They remind me of budget brands. These as regular stock guitars before the closing. Sunburst blends are like a hard-lined reverse heart, very little fading between colors and over a particleboard looking wood finish.