3
by llllllllllllllllllll
No I think there’s something to this. I’ve owned and played other vintage Epiphone Coronets with a single P90 at the bridge, a 50s cowboy Carvin with a single pickup at the neck that sounded like a damn piano, and this Chris Jury tulip guitar with a cheap humbucker at the bridge with a jazzmaster tremolo that made me think I like jazzmaster tremolos, and they all had something kinda special about them.
I imagine a case could be made that something happens when there’s not as many magnets pulling on the strings, but who knows really.
I actually switch pickups a lot when i’m playing, but I like guitars that kinda force you into this or that anyways… like the flatwound guitar, the guitar with super clean pickups, the humbucker guitar that does a rock grind with any gain whatsoever, etc.
I always think about how badass it would be to own a single guitar, sort of like going back to a flip phone in 2025. How about instead you have one Malcolm Young guitar Gretsch and one neck pickup Gretsch and that’s it. I probably sound like Marie Antoinette so I am going to shut up now