funny, I have dozens of guitars, the only ones with one pickup are lap steels.
@martijnkooiman32824 жыл бұрын
ofcourse malcom young's gretch guitar
@dfoe1084 жыл бұрын
Your Solus F1
@Gaslight.Guitar4 жыл бұрын
LP Jr
@camm97894 жыл бұрын
@@martijnkooiman3282 Trueeeeeeeeee
@PaulDavids4 жыл бұрын
The intro made me want do do a road trip in a cabrio so bad. Palmtrees, beaches, coffee to go, guitar in the back... Destination: UNKNOWN. Nice guitar dude.
@jasonpatrickdeleon47014 жыл бұрын
paul davids 😊
@RhettShull4 жыл бұрын
Thanks man!
@pandaghostofficial4 жыл бұрын
You really know how to paint the picture. It's like I'm right there
@flotenn33514 жыл бұрын
Who else read that in this decent dutch accent?
@davidstaton18354 жыл бұрын
I realize now you mean any convertible, at first I thought you meant a road trip in a VW cabrio, and I was like...WHY.
@TomoFujitaMusic4 жыл бұрын
As you know I am a huge fan of ONE PICKUP GUITAR!!!
@Big_Gords4 жыл бұрын
yeah the middle one ;)
@georgemathew71824 жыл бұрын
Ayyy
@JohnnyGuitaristOfficial4 жыл бұрын
Definitely!
@nazmoking31714 жыл бұрын
My sympathies - I'll send the fat girls your direction also!
@carlosfer4614 жыл бұрын
Hi master funkyta ♡
@RobertBakerGuitar4 жыл бұрын
One pickup gets it done!
@aPHYSICALretawd4 жыл бұрын
Watching this the day that fender announced a tele with a single p90 in the neck.... GAS engaged!
@BobJones-bh9qz4 жыл бұрын
And YOU get it done also ;)
@RhettShull4 жыл бұрын
Always
@NoNameNo.54 жыл бұрын
Wow Robert Baker! Jimmy page only used the bridge on his Tele. I believe the neck pickup Was busted
@WillyMcCoy504 жыл бұрын
The hands has more tonality than all the switches, knobs, wiggle sticks and pickups you could slap onto a plank.
@MFKitten4 жыл бұрын
I love single pup guitars nor because of tonal stuff, but because it feels so "focused" and tidy. No switches to think about, no options, nothing to think about. It definitely makes the biggest difference!
@Jacqued6969 Жыл бұрын
Exactly, you can actually focus on what matters
@JustSomeGuy4 жыл бұрын
I came for the single pickup commentary. I stayed cuz my man is using a tape deck.
@Pystdammit4 жыл бұрын
Yo man that opening bit look up Heart Full of Soul - Yardbirds. Btw love your videos man, fan for over a year now.
@antma90284 жыл бұрын
Love it!
@jhubsley4 жыл бұрын
Man, I've watched a ton of your videos but had no idea that you're a guitarist. Anywhere I can hear you play?
@theghosty994 жыл бұрын
I saw that and thought, "That portastudio probably cost less than the Chase Bliss he's playing through" lol
@Pyrohelix_3 жыл бұрын
Did not even knew you played guitar. Cool
@Vi1ko4 жыл бұрын
In a two pickup guitar you compromise the settings of everything. The pickup height, the tone controls of amps and pedals, etc. When you only have one pickup you tailor all your gear and settings to be perfect for that pickup. IMO that is a big influence I haven’t seen anyone mention.
@kennethsrensen77062 жыл бұрын
I edited this because some didnt get my point. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ I Guess is just personal preference and like . yes i have tried many different guitars over past 35 years of playing guitar ,that include single pickup guitars . personally i prefer multi pickups , it give me more sound choices . single pickup guitar only have one sound . In beginning I was thinking it is just personal preference and such but now i doubt . The way people defend and attack when talking about those make me think it is more like a hype thing and people who have limited themself they defend by downing people who is not on the hype . Yes I prefer multi pickups compared to a guitar with just one single sound . End of line .....
@marw95412 жыл бұрын
Pretty sure you can just add a pedal or if you have multiple channels or a system like Kemper or Helix you can quickly switch to something tailored to your neck pick-up. But I don't really think most people even want a change when going to the neck for any such reason, it's a pretty small minority. I think you're reaching a bit
@aleksandrnestrato2 жыл бұрын
@@kennethsrensen7706 There's a logical contradiction in your words. You seem to lie to yourself and to the people who read your comment. You say you prefer multi pickup guitars, and at the same time you say you've never thought of a single pickup guitar. The latter means you do not play such a guitar on a regular basis. Which, in its turn, means you're not acquainted with single pickup guitar experience, at least profoundly enough. Thus you cannot 'prefer' one over the other. Such preference is not a choice between two experiences of yours, but it is a choice between familiar stuff and unfamiliar stuff. Such preference is typical for human beings and many other animals, so such preference is negligible. In order to prefer multi-pickup guitar, please, play thoroughly on a single pickup one for about a year. Otherwise your comment should be rephrased: "I know nothing about single pickup guitars, I'm cool with multi-pickup ones." -Which is totally okay. Wish you all the best, man!😊
@alexanderkernoghan43854 жыл бұрын
I played a Fender Esquire with a Korina body almost exclusively for a year. I did blues gigs, jazz gigs, rock gigs and never failed to get a sound that worked. Also taking the decision not to use pedals, I just zeroed in on the band and played the guitar. It was rather liberating and I would advise anyone who has fallen out of love with the instrument to try constricting your choices like this to rediscover the joy of playing and reconnect. Great video as always Rhett, although I am slightly envious... I got socks for Christmas.
@hangaroundrecords47613 жыл бұрын
I’ve played so many types of guitars over the years but my Les Paul jr is still my favorite. And it only having one pick up is a huge part of that! It’s just so fun to play!!
@MatthewScottmusic4 жыл бұрын
Unless it's a Strat, gimme a single pickup
@dr_tomK4 жыл бұрын
Funny coincidence, but I just finished watching your one pickup guitar video, the 50's Esquire. I don't know what you were playing that through, but it sounded really, really good.
@EstelonAgarwaen4 жыл бұрын
Do you really need anything else than a neck pup tho? I always use a different guitar for the other sounds as they just sound better.
@lukewestondev4 жыл бұрын
@@EstelonAgarwaen neck for rhythm lead, neck middle is good for rhythm and pretty sounding stuff, middle can get a good blues tone with good sustain, back middle can do funky stuff, bridge is good for lead obviously and country
@EstelonAgarwaen4 жыл бұрын
@@lukewestondev Thanks for the tips man. its just that i kinda hate the strat bridge sound when its there and miss it when i dont have it available. (i had my strat modded to hss for some time). i just like other bridge pickups way more.
@iforgotmyname27394 жыл бұрын
Or a Les Paul with humbuckers... unless it’s only a neck pickup
@StillLivinTheBlues4 жыл бұрын
Holy cow. That tone at the 11:45 mark is one of the coolest single coil tones I have ever heard.
@NormTre4 жыл бұрын
Great timing on this video. I just ordered a Harley Benton DC Junior that will arrive tomorrow. It will be my first single pickup guitar. I'm excited to hear the differences. Not only that, but it will be my first P90 guitar as well. I credit your influence Rhett in my choice as you have touted P90's as your favorite pickups.
@MardiKivMusic3 жыл бұрын
I've got one, it's my only guitar. Used to have a tele and an sg and dont miss them one bit. The controls on your guitar are your friend with it.
@iangenet294 жыл бұрын
Great video Rhett. When I was in high school the bridge pickup in my strat died just as I was getting into a huge surf rock binge. Going down to two pickups really made me think a lot more about tone control and the response of the volume knob. By the time I got new pickups in the guitar, I felt that I became a lot more conscious about the dynamics of each pickup.
@EverestMystery4 жыл бұрын
PSH, dude gets a beat up guitar for Christmas and they even forgot to put the extra pickups in it....lol (Killer opening grove Rhett!)
@matty_lam_9374 жыл бұрын
I bought an Epiphone Joe Bonamassa Firebird I in Polymist Gold about 4 years ago, and it's by far the best sounding guitar I've ever owned and indeed played. It's still plenty versatile despite having only 1 pickup and taught me how to use volume and tone to variate my tone and playing. I'll never, ever let it go!
@untitleduser6664 жыл бұрын
I'm primarily a bass player, and the amount of music created on P basses is astonishing. I've owned a few P basses and I've never had the itch to install a bridge pickup. I always find myself focusing on right hand technique when I pick up a P bass.
@bipbipletucha4 жыл бұрын
Bingo. Thats why I will always prefer them over Js
@jamesthe-doctor89814 жыл бұрын
I finally got time to watch this one, and I'm glad I didn't blow it off. Not only is it good to know, but the link to Andrew Huang's video about harmonics and temperament alone was worth watching this entire video. Much like you did here, he explained it simply, but his video illustrations showed me temperament in a whole new way. Thanks again, Rhett.
@RC32Smiths014 жыл бұрын
While there are far more technically advanced guitars, sometimes it's just nice to be simple!
@williambaumert77264 жыл бұрын
Totally agree but he's playing into like 10 pedals so maybe not so simple after all 😂
@nasher9314 жыл бұрын
There's also the fact that the more wiring the signal has to travel through, the more of the signal is lost. Andy Hull from The Manchester Orchestra ripped the neck pickup, the volume and tone knobs and any unnecessary wiring out of his Tele, so there's only a mini humbucker running straight to the output jack and it apparently made the guitar about 25% louder
@mattrickard22834 жыл бұрын
I'm a metal guy. Almost all of my gear is "geared" (hehe) towards metal. But damn, I love this channel. Your playing, tone and energy are not just entertaining and something I look forward to, but educational and inspiring. Keep up the good work man, and thanks for all the content!
@amberwoodstudio4 жыл бұрын
I’ve learnt so much about playing since I’ve started using one pickup guitars. Tons of sounds in the volume and tone pots. One pickup, a little reverb and a cooking amp. Let’s me focus on music and not get stressed out about pedals and switches. Great vid thanks
@1mdlmusic4 жыл бұрын
My favorite is one pickup with a volume control but no tone control. Forces your mind to think of the sound you want without flipping switches and turning knobs.
@TheBedroomRocker14 жыл бұрын
That intro track alone already explained everything! REALLY cool and powerful stuff! The explanations, however, were also very interesting and clear. Congrats on the new guitar. It sounds and looks spectacular
@paulgodin11664 жыл бұрын
I enjoy the intro. Heartfull of Soul on a black guard esquire, this is the thing.
@thegatorgar67304 жыл бұрын
I just put two and two together that, famously, (as you mentioned in this video) Fender was sued by Gretsch for the “Broadcaster” name... and now Fender owns Gretsch. Crazy how things work out sometimes.
@oskarileikos3 жыл бұрын
And that's why Fender can now sell "Broadcaster" Tele-pickup sets and Broadcaster-named Teles!
@mailer-daemon2000 Жыл бұрын
Scotti Hill of Skid Row played the iconic solo of “I remember you” on a Jackson with 2 pickups removed, leaving only a single bridge Seymour Duncan JB. In the early days without internet, many pondered on how he achieved that tone with so much harmonics and sustain…many wrongly guessed it must be some high gain or active pickup like SD Invader or EMG. No, it was just a simple JB left to shine on its own by itself.
@legendsofabhaile4 жыл бұрын
Absolutely fantastic. I've been having an impossible time finding a 4 track cassette recorder that I can afford as it is, now Rhett has to put one in a video so they're going to be even more out of reach.
@JB195044 жыл бұрын
"When I was young and stupid, I did stupid things." - George W. Bush When I was 19, I sold a vintage Les Paul Jr. with a P90 in Sunburst finish that my Dad, bless his memory, bought for me for $150 so I could buy some weed. That was back in 1969.
@drmedwuast4 жыл бұрын
was the weed any good?
@oneeyeddog61274 жыл бұрын
Ouch
@hijmestoffels51714 жыл бұрын
Yes, that was very, very stupid!
@davidg16124 жыл бұрын
I'm absolutely flabbergasted and horrified by this story. Trade something that can last 1000 years for something you can smoke up in 30 minutes. Your dealer won that deal. Lmao
@1ufcfanatic7954 жыл бұрын
Heartbreaking story!
@VEXARN14 жыл бұрын
Another thing to consider when it comes to most single pickup guitars is the lack of a pickup switch. Anything that your signal goes through adds impedance which reduces treble. This is true for volume and tone pots as well which is why you see some guitars with no tone control. A couple companies even sell one pickup one volume guitars as well. And some people will mod to the extreme and wire a single pickup straight into the output jack.
@Airfire214 жыл бұрын
Personally the best single pickup player I've ever heard is Mick Taylor from That Pedal Show. His volume control, his use of effects... everything just culminate in this beautiful sound whenever he picks up his Collings or the Supro(?) He has. He may not be the most famous or the most technical, but for my ears, he is magic. Pure magic.
@ultrahighgain4123 жыл бұрын
Some guy named Edward Van Halen managed to get by with just a bridge humbucker.
@cheenu7112 жыл бұрын
@@ultrahighgain412 never heard of him. Can he tap like Tim Henson?
@prairielifeguardproduction96854 жыл бұрын
Hey, love that you are featuring that Tascam Cassette Portastudio... you still have it!! I cut my recording teeth on a Fostex Cassette 4-track. Some of those recordings STILL sound fresh and great!
@TheTylerNCC4 жыл бұрын
I started building guitars this year, more for myself and to explore some ideas than anything. But one of the things Im dying to try is a tele style but with a single pickup in the next instead of the bridge. To my knowledge, that sort of thing really only happens on jazz boxes. I tend to live mostly on the next position on my Fenders, so I think it would be fun to see what that might be like....who knows, might be terrible!
@ememe14122 жыл бұрын
If you've built a neck only Tele, try this configuration. Mix the magnets, A3 on the low three and A5 on the rest on a Tele neck bobbin. 43 awg wire, 8.5k winds, tight scatter. Use 500k pots, tone control as bass cut rather than treble roll. (If you need to cut treble, use the volume control and amp/pedal instead to dial it I don't know of a situation that requires rolling treble of a Tele neck.) The configuration of the mixed magnet will avoid the mud when strumming and the bass cut will do the same and keep it focused on higher gain settings when picking. Clean, you can get it close to hollow body tones, it can also do a convincing mic'd acoustic. With gain,or dirt, hard to compare as the bass cut range makes for interesting tones.
@Yury55764 жыл бұрын
Two things to remember here: 1. Strings vibrate more and with a bigger amplitude towards its centre (12th fret) and smaller amplitude (brighter) towards the bridge . 2. This is easily demonstrated by comparing a LPJr and PLSp (bridge pickup), both similar guitars. On the Jr the pickup is further away from the bridge and therefore the Jr sounds "fuller".
@flotenn33514 жыл бұрын
I really like your philosophical approach to the whole guitar thing (and envy you for your wife buying you such an awesome guitar instead of telling you to sell one to get another one). Keep up your good work!
@Somewhatdamaged19894 жыл бұрын
Someone might already have posted this comment but I’ll do mine anyway: Limitation breeds creativity.
@SuicideVan4 жыл бұрын
And analysis paralysis is definitely a realy thing too! When it's my turn to host band practice I have to fight the urge to switch guitars song to song. I'm much more focused when I'm out with one guitar. Maybe one pickup is the next logical step.
@Frewster4 жыл бұрын
I'm a twenty-something music producer and this shit is my mantra. I don't have loads of gear, I've only got a knock off strat and four pedals, but the hardest part when you've got a daw open in front of you is thinking "if I can do anything, the fuck do I do first?" :')
@justinrayguitars60244 жыл бұрын
I put together a Esquire awhile back and it's certainly different. The bass position is amazing with overdrive.
@simross39144 жыл бұрын
yeah totally! I see all these videos saying how the front position is unusable, but I highly disagree. Throw some fuzz or overdrive on there and the sounds you get are incredible. I'm a big esquire fan, I've got a couple partscaster versions (and I'm always changing one from a tele to an esquire and then back because why not)
@CarloscFr4 жыл бұрын
I'm sorry if it's a silly question, but what does "changing position" do on an Esquire which has only one pickup? I always see the pickup selector and wonder what it does
@justinrayguitars60244 жыл бұрын
@@CarloscFr the back position bypasses the tone. The middle position is with the tone like a regular tele. The forward position runs through a cap that changes the tone to more of a bass sound.
@Sasa-mi3xd4 жыл бұрын
After a hard and stressing day...kids are sleeping...my real joy is watching one of my favorite youtube channel...rhett shull and Paul davids... both of you are bringing something new ...there's love and passion in your way of approaching music...and even I stop playing guitar since a long time...I still have my gibson les paul junior with a single p90 pick up right close to my bed...that I never touch and I'm not a huge fun of...you know what... you push me tonight to try it again...perhaps a beginning of new love story with this beautiful piece of wood 😇🙏nice program bro...peace from Morocco
@Burnt_Gerbil4 жыл бұрын
Limitations and creating something with what you have. That’s the biggest reason. Sometimes you don’t need all the pickup combinations and splits. Just play the damn thing. 😬
@EstelonAgarwaen4 жыл бұрын
sometimes i wonder why i even have other pickups than the neck one in my strat. i almost never use them. i grab my prs or my tele for those sounds.
@EstelonAgarwaen4 жыл бұрын
@Haeral i will ;)
@cary34284 жыл бұрын
Couldn’t have said it better. I feel the same way about drum kits.
@michaelray50232 жыл бұрын
I recognized that tonewood. It’s Pinewood and back in the early days that’s all guitar builders had. It has that classic ‘Born on the Bayou’ tone. I have a pinewood body with a Dimarzio Evolution that I love. The pinewood is very chimey and I can tell with the single pickup they wanted to capture the classic swampy chime of the old south. If it had 2 pickups, that pinewood tone would diminish and there’d be no sustain. What a genius Novo builders are capturing the classic sound. I have a couple of single humbucker guitars that I like. There are mods you can use to make it versatile. Most of my favorite guitarists played single pickup guitars. Guys like Marty Friedman, Alex Laiho, and Scott Ian. Great stuff man!
@asherhaig32652 жыл бұрын
The biggest difference isn't the missing pickup, it's the tone pot that disappeared when the pickup went (that was contributing resistance to the whole circuit).
@kthomasaus3 жыл бұрын
My first electric was a 1959 Les Paul Jr. Senior year in high school in the mid 70’s, found it for $50 with the GA5 amp at a flea market. Still have that awesome guitar, it’s still my fave. When it’s the right guitar and the right pickup, you don’t need more than one.
@miket.2204 жыл бұрын
My two favorite guitar sounds are the in-between settings on a Strat, and the P-90 on a Les Paul Jr.. My favorite guitar is prob the Les Paul Special (basically a 2-pickup Jr). But I had a Jr knockoff for a few years and I absolutely loved it. The only sound a single-pickup guitar can't do is the "in-between" sound. But that's it. You can easily get a 'neck pickup' sound by rolling down the tone, possibly lowering the vol a bit, and picking/strumming near the neck. Flip that tone up and the guitar gets nice and bright, ready for action. Single p'up guitars really force you to explore what you can do with the vol/tone settings, especially if you are using a P90 or Tele pickup. If you want a bit more versatility, you could always make the single bridge pickup a 4-conductor humbucker and wire it to a push/pull vol knob, with the pickup wired to do either series/parallel. That way you could get a full 'bucker, or single-y coil sound.
@jkta972 жыл бұрын
In the Five Watt World video on Juniors, Jeff McErlain showed that if you rolled back both the tone and volume knobs on a Junior, you get a really nice scooped, sparkly sound. I'm betting if you pick or strum close to the bridge, you can get a nice clean in-between sound for funk parts. And you can definitely get the awesome arpeggios or arpeggiated chords that I usually associate with the middle pickup on a Strat or the in-between position on a Les Paul, especially if your single pickup is a P-90.
@JeighNeither3 жыл бұрын
I'm a big-time audio engineer & producer in NYC, & I've been playing guitar for nearly 20 years. I watched the video he draws from here, before I came to this one, but I made sure not to actually watch it, but listen only. There is a marked difference in audio, it's much cleaner, & even more full as little sense as that makes. Then I went thru my collection of guitars & realized one of them is a single pickup. I hadn't payed any attention to it before, but now, I'm going to do a little work to get it up to grade, & see what a difference it makes in feel. I think I'm going to like it.
@jamesthe-doctor89814 жыл бұрын
My first thought after reading the title of this video is, “Because Mississippi Queen, that’s why.”
@RhettShull4 жыл бұрын
Damn right! RIP Leslie
@orsivan57314 жыл бұрын
Yeah I know what you mean, she taught me everything
@Kale_shreds4 жыл бұрын
Attempting to build my own single pickup guitar. Sometimes less is more and the tonal control you gain is so worth it
@MrKevbo824 жыл бұрын
I’ve experienced a lot of what you talked about here with my 62 SG junior. Idk about all the science but that guitar definitely forces me to be a different player (in a good way) and the harmonic tones you talked about I’ve definitely noticed with that guitar when using an ebow with it. Usually would be playing that near the neck pickup but with the junior I’ve started with the ebow way up near the 15th fret and worked my way back to the pickup and not only is there the obvious volume increase but how that note changes
@cwir884 жыл бұрын
I've rocking on a one-humbucker strat for three years now and never been happier with my tone. For me, it's the simplest things that get the job done.
@ibalrog4 жыл бұрын
"A man with one watch knows what time it is. A man with two watches can never be sure."
@jackbuchanan644111 ай бұрын
For some reason, I think this is both equally fuckin' stupid and an absolute genius way to put it [relating to single-pickup guitars]. I hate it so much I'm going to use it all the time lol
@chaskiandcie5 ай бұрын
Best quote I read in a very long time. Freaking love it
@simontemplar33594 жыл бұрын
This video was rad. I never thought of any of the physics behind the nodes and anti-nodes, but it made total sense when you explained it. The thing that really hit hard and I would say is true as an exercise in learning to play dynamically is to use a single pickup guitar. I have a double cut LP Jr style that I love and hate. I think it's fugly and wish I got the single cut version, but every time I pick it up, it amazes me how much more aware I am in my playing, for lack of a better word.
@SukatoMusicChannel3 жыл бұрын
A single pickup P-bass has one playing advantage over a PJ version. It's easier to dig your fingers into the strings while plucking. Same goes for playing with a pick. With a PJ bass, there's less free open space under the strings, so your fingers have more to collide with. I think this also applies to guitar.
@jtelevenoyd1571 Жыл бұрын
The only single-pickup guitars I've ever even considered were the jazz boxes with floating neck pickups. I'd always assumed that the guitars you talk about in this video were only for shredders. Looks like I was wrong, perhaps spectacularly. Thank you for the truly thought-provoking presentation. You seem to have a knack for doing those.
@lucaborgioli31664 жыл бұрын
I have a Squier Classic Vibe Esquier, it just rocks and rings like a bell, it's fantastic, it's kind of affordable. Perfect for who just wants to have something different that nobody has. Highly suggested
@dr_tomK4 жыл бұрын
Cool Thanks for that. Been thinking of picking one up. Really impressed by the Classic Vibe series.
@lucaborgioli31664 жыл бұрын
@@dr_tomK they have so much more volue compared on what you pay. I suggest you to try the 50's series, whith the maple fretboard. The "rosewood" ones don't feel good as the maple ones.
@Justarandomspacemonkey4 жыл бұрын
CV tele’s are amazing
@FinalBaton4 жыл бұрын
Classic Vibes are killer guitars.
@aaronperrotta70554 жыл бұрын
I have an older CV 60's Tele when they first came out maybe 2011 when real rosewood was still being used. It's one my favorite guitars and I've had a ton. Upgraded the pickups and it's set. Never goes out of tune.
@qcc52 жыл бұрын
You went way... back for that into! I have a single pickup Tele, that is custom built, and as far as I'm concerned, it's priceless! I LOVE it! I also have a Fender Lead I, that I bought in 79 (I believe). It is still like new and it is an incredible guitar. It's a tool, that does a particular job. Great video.
@muddshshshark4 жыл бұрын
I raised the neck pickup on my RG560 to make it "hotter" but instead the intonation went all out of whack, Lowered it back down and was fine again...I called it "magnetic drag"
@rodriguezelfeliz46234 жыл бұрын
Same! I'm with you
@cockleshellzero38934 жыл бұрын
Great name for a band!
@dbutler7214 жыл бұрын
That intro was awesome, as they always are. It would be awesome to write an album with Rhett. There is no doubt he would be an awesome musician to work with for writing, recording and even producing an album.
@mack72354 жыл бұрын
I just pre-ordered a single pickup Kramer Baretta Special
@Joshualbatross Жыл бұрын
I have a one-pup guitar coming in the mail next month from Eastwood. As one who started on bass, I always loved the straightforwardness of my P Basses, and I'm excited to dig in on the new guitar for that reason. I think it'll definitely force me to push my limits. Great vid, cheers!!!
@HughManatea4 жыл бұрын
The bridge pickup is always the right pickup. Well for me any way. I just use the tone knob in conjunction with the selection. All up to the player. Also it is aesthetically pleasing to see only one pickup. Gives a guitar a very modest look.
@jimearp10953 жыл бұрын
I was GIVEN an Epiphone Les Paul Junior a few weeks ago (the 700t humbucker model- not the P90) and I've been a H-S-S guitar guy forever. This is the first single pickup guitar I've ever owned and I absolutely adore it. I've always ridden my tone knob when I play which makes for great dynamics and I use a volume pedal to roll off some gain. Now I'm using the volume knob more and, honestly, between the volume and tone knobs- there is a world of great tones to be had. Can't believe how nice this little Indonesian Epi LP Jr is . . . just killer . . . I did add some Tone Ninja locking tuners and will be putting some graphite on the nut, tho. Wasn't staying in tune all that well. But the total vibe of that single pickup . . . ahhhh . . .
@Elagabalus7114 жыл бұрын
When thinking of single pickup guitars, I immediately think of Jack White and his airline. The simplicity and restrictions of the thing really fit in with the Stripes.
@dortoh14 жыл бұрын
Best intro yet! I've got a Tele with a humbucker in the neck that I've tried several pickups in and have never liked the sound. Time to make it an Esquire!
@InGovWeMistrust Жыл бұрын
I just built a modded guitar out of a squier strat and ended up going single pickup. It’s an all black kinda Tom DeLonge inspired guitar. The part where you say you think differently while playing single pickup guitars is what sticks out to me. When I’m playing a single pickup guitar I’m not fiddling with switches or knobs. I’m focused on playing the guitar because what you see is what you get. I like that single pickup guitars are “idiot proof”.
@Maddogg-hg5me2 ай бұрын
I've been messing around religiously with my Strat that I Tom DeLonge'd a few days ago. I've been digging it: the hotrodded Dragonfire Crusader (aftermarket SD Invader clone) that I put in it is good for both punk AND metal and the pickup sounds good clean as well. Limiting myself with just the single humbucker setup and controlling it using nothing but the volume control definitely makes me think differently about my playing and I agree with you: the simplicity is amazing.
@reelbyrnemedia46374 жыл бұрын
Hell Yeah!! Great tip of the hat to the Yardbirds at the top of the video!
@the-LeoKnightus4 жыл бұрын
There is magic to be had with a single pickup guitar. There is something about having only one field that allows for more sonic information and transients. I wish I could explain this better.
@Red-lm7xo4 жыл бұрын
I'm building a single humbucker strat because i think less options can lead to make me be more creative with what i have
@voornaam31914 жыл бұрын
@@Red-lm7xo It's usually very easy to add a coil split switch. You must have access to the wire between both coils. Using shielded wires, I did it myself to the humbucker of my Yamaha Pacifica 112. The switch connects the first coil to either ground or the second coil. It is that simple. No expensive pot you can pull, I added a heavy duty switch to the pot cavity. Click, SC or H. And you bet it is worth the risk of damaging the coils, when removing the sticky tape. That's why you need to be pretty careful. Or buy a humbucker that has the extra wires. I put that humbucker as the middle pickup, not the bridge, in a Maya Strat. Sounds good. And if you have not considered it, you could think about adding a coil split. Anyhow, have fun, building a guitar is a good thing. I understand that other comment. What I like best in a strat, is positions two and for. That's why I simplified that Pacifica to a strat with three single coils, and it has one switch: position 2 or position 4 only. I needed the 5-switch in another FrankenTeleStrat, and haven't bought a new one, yet. What I learned by repairing and tinkering, doing things like screwing a Tele bridge on a Strat body, is that the result is often a surprise. Oops, that Squier Tele neck pickup has a huge output. Maybe I should add a preamp for the single coil bridge pickup. That costs, and it needs a battery or some power supply. Do I want that? And of course it needs some setup, balancing two pickups, getting all strings on the brink of overdrive. Yep, it's good to find out. My Maya strat has 3 different pickups now, and it's a joy to have so much choice. The Squier neck pickup is just like a spanish guitar. The humbucker is great. And a single coil bridge sounds almost like a banjo. Where you pick them is only adding more variation. Maybe that's normal, but I have just discovered it. Wow. And now it is time for a single pickup guitar. No magnetic fields pushed to a slightly different pattern, one pickup alone is not influenced by another pickup. Distance plays a role here, when magnets are just a little bit further apart, you can feel the force is a whole lot weaker. Having a middle pickup or not is important, bridge and neck are quite far apart. Add a middle one, and that can mess up the fields. Maybe you can hear it, when you are aware how the guitar sounds without that middle pickup. Polarity makes a difference. What's his name, his guitar was repaired during a concert, and in a hurry one pickup got installed the other way round, and you get that signal fase inversion, yes, different. That's a nice option on better guitars, those flip the two pickup wires, red or black. Ha, that'll be a next project for me. All you need is a double switch. So, I need to play a while, checking wether my expectations were okay. Hmmm. Lots of text.
@amyrichter6134 жыл бұрын
I am so glad I found this video today. I recently purchased a Fender Brad Paisley Esquire. I already owned the Fender Brad Paisley Telecaster. Both guitars have the EXACT same neck pick up but the pickup on the Esquire is so much brighter and more piercing..it’s like they took the pick up and placed it on steroids and I could not figure out why the two guitars sounded so different. Now, I understand the difference. Thank you for explaining it.
@goldenultra3 жыл бұрын
I did not know there was such crazy science behind a single coil guitar. I also have a German 19th century book On The Sensations Of Tone, this is where it all began, it even has strange equations that goes much deeper, the PhD student probably got a lot of his ideas from there. Guitars are a strange world, and why do telecasters sound so similar to les paul P90 guitars?
@richardgreen68574 жыл бұрын
The physics and science of all of that is fascinating...but I gotta tell you, that intro/outro was freakin' crazy good! I think you're probably correct on the overall tone not going somewhere into the weeds, because of the lack of complexity: one volume, one tone. I'd have been curious to see a comparative amplifier setting, single pickup vs two or even three...much difference?
@darwinsaye2 жыл бұрын
Here's the thing for me; when people generally talk about the cool things about one pickup guitars, they are typically only ever referring to guitars that have one bridge pickup. But I play neck pickup and both pickup positions more than I ever play just the bridge pickup on any of my guitars. So for me personally, I think the topic would be more interesting if it was expanded to talk about single neck pickup guitars, and even the more rare single middle pickup guitars.
@jnuhjnuh Жыл бұрын
The "Wes Paul" special run hollow body Les Paul is the only neck only single pick up guitar I know of.
@darwinsaye Жыл бұрын
@@jnuhjnuh There have been of quite a few neck-pup only guitars. It was most common on Jazz archtops, but a lot of old Japanese guitars did it as well. Kay, Silvertone, Danelectro, Harmony… There were also a number of guitars with only one pickup, but in the middle position.
@peterkiefel43244 жыл бұрын
Love that you are using a Tascam mkII portastudio - exactly the same model which I've had since the 90's! It is a nice detail added to Yardbirds Heart full of soul which would also have been recorded on 4-track back in the mid 60's. Jeff Beck, a Tonebender fuzz and a Fender Esquire - it doesnt get much better than that - Jeff is the man! Interesting to learn that a single pickup guitar has some physical differences in sound- wow!
@ManuelBothans4 жыл бұрын
G&L Rampage by Leo Fender. One humbucker. Also, best neck ever.
@AndyDion4 жыл бұрын
Love those Rampages and so did Jerry Cantrell Also love my G&L ASAT
@ManuelBothans4 жыл бұрын
I have an ‘86 Rampage. I don’t know how the reissues are but I still love mine. The locking nut is bleh (Cantrell replaced his with a Floyd Rose) but I never use the whammy bar and the fine tuners really dial in the tuning. I wish they put fine tuners on all guitars (even ones without a locking nut!)
@ak47dragunov4 жыл бұрын
That one pickup has nothing to do with the quality of neck though
@ManuelBothans4 жыл бұрын
@@ak47dragunov Didn’t say that it did. That guitar isn’t super common like a strat, tele, or the like; so I threw that comment in for those not familiar with that guitar. Here, I’ll edit it slightly for you.
@Dcat75thunder4 жыл бұрын
@Luke He still does.
@potatoheadhaoy4 жыл бұрын
I used to run my les paul studio with just the bridge pickup. I put the neck pu back but I did like the creative restriction that comes from having just one pickup. It forces you to focus on the music and your guitar playing rather than futzing around with your tone, because the tone you have is already good. Plus it's one less component to fail, which is great for live applications.
@AlexAquarius9634 жыл бұрын
I used to sell chicken incubators for Chick Master and Cumberland and Jamesway, in fact I was Senior Executive Vice President of Sales and Marketing at Jamesway. All of the chicken you've ever eaten in your life, came from one of those brand machines. We sold toroid fan alarm switches on incubators. Each setter machine can have 109,000 eggs in it and the fans have to be on for air exchange. You've maybe seen the red wound coil toroid on a circuit board somewhere. We sold a ceramic copper wound ring that fit around the electrical cable to the 1HP fan motor. The inductive force of the current through the field would create a flux capacitation and resistance. If the resistance stops, the alarm goes off, you have a power outage. i never thought of applying that to a string wave suppression effect. Thank you. Good stuff. I have an idea for Positronic electric pickup technology, which doesn't exist yet. I can't wait to see what it sounds like in an over unity field with a Flux Pot!!!!! How Fun!! It will be a totally new sound. I just need a great guitarist with connections, ;), and a company that makes pickups, or start my own modulated positronic pickup factory. I know all small towns in Georgia like the back of my hand. Gainesville GA is the "Hollywood of chicken production" in the world.
@AlexAquarius9634 жыл бұрын
What ever happened to "Nicholai's Roof" on top of the Sheraton in Atlanta? Russian. I ate a seven course meal there with caribou in the spinning restaurant with my 7 Colombian guests from Cali. Stayed at the Marriott Marquis. The tab I paid on my company card was $1300 after all the wine too, just dinner. Prince Fazal was there also as a Guest of Cumberland Farms, who is now King Fazal in Saudi Arabia, I met him.
@glennlilley86084 жыл бұрын
Excellent! Now fkv!
@harrykelley17644 жыл бұрын
My 1985 G&L rampage It's a beast. $700 with hardshell case brand new. The good ol days, Great video brother.
@thedaver84 жыл бұрын
my wife got me underwear for Christmas
@goswo4 жыл бұрын
I got socks :-( from a company called Cock :-)
@NoNameNo.54 жыл бұрын
Awwww LUCKY! Nothing like some fresh new undies bro. That’s a good woman. It’s the tittle things
@antma90284 жыл бұрын
@@goswo The old Cock Sock.
@adhaskym.a95364 жыл бұрын
You are lucky. My wife stole my underwear.
@baulinstruments78624 жыл бұрын
@@adhaskym.a9536 you are lucky too. You have a wife that likes to play in your underwear. That's a good thing! Lol
@jarrahmusic4 жыл бұрын
I have a HH telecaster that I've taken the neck pickup out of and replaced the bridge with a humbucker sized p90, the thing absolutely shreds and I love it to bits.
@noahpauley4 жыл бұрын
I'd say that the LP Jr is my favorite single pickup guitar
@shadowspectrum4 жыл бұрын
Double cut TV yellow junior is the ultimate rock n roll machine.
@thefeelcompany4 жыл бұрын
I’ve still got my Fostex 4 track, modell before yours looks like. Mine still works too! 27 years. Cool video. Been looking at single pickup guitars this week too. Already subbed!
@rmccaw74 жыл бұрын
I hardly ever use anything other than the bridge humbucker.
@iwillnevergetone54 жыл бұрын
you're missing out
@CarpeDiem234 жыл бұрын
Same..
@diddymies3 жыл бұрын
@@iwillnevergetone5 not really, up to the player what suits their playing. You could be missing out by keep switching pickups position yet never master actual tone of you hands.
@falquezfalquez4 жыл бұрын
That intro song gave me an incredible Roky Erickson vibe. Any plans to put out your solo album?
@sneifert19684 жыл бұрын
Was that a Tascam cassette 4-track recorder?Analog baby.
@jeffbernard5272 Жыл бұрын
I've been down this rabbit hole of single pickup guitars for about a year or so, starting with a cheap used First Act guitar with an Invader pickup and upgraded bridge and tuners.. I fell in love. Since then, I've built an Esquire style barncaster, and modded out a Strat body with a single p90 bridge pickup with the LPjr wiring pattern, both of which are absolute fire. I've been thinking about doing something similar with another Strat, but eliminating the bridge and middle pickups and going neck-only with that same LPjr wiring.
@stanislavmigra4 жыл бұрын
I dont own any, but I think Jared James Nichols black Old glory is badass.
@slimkickens4 жыл бұрын
It looks like they might add a goldtop and I need it
@71tbomb4 жыл бұрын
Nice to see the Tascam in action. I still use my 688 desk & love it + Pro Tools to remaster. Nice vid Rhett.
@boshi94 жыл бұрын
The quote you’ve used for this video does not explain why a guitar with multiple pickups would sound different. It only states that pickup position affects the tone. Nobody disputes that, in fact it's the main reason why most guitars have multiple pickups to begin with. What a waste of time. Also, keep in mind that the position of nodes/anti-nodes isn’t constant - fret a string and everything is shifted. This is why the position of harmonics is different for every fret, e.g. open string octave harmonic is at the 12th fret, but if you put a capo on the 1st fret it's going to be around the 13th.
@JoelyPera4 жыл бұрын
"What a waste of time.." I get your point, but that little remark was unnecessary and rude. I mean... why say that? lol
@boshi94 жыл бұрын
@@JoelyPera I get that it sounds mean, in fact I had mixed feelings about adding that remark and I'm still thinking if I should edit it out. To better explain myself, I've decided to unsubscribed from Rhett (and a few other popular guitar KZbinrs) because I'm seeing a very clear pattern that essentially amounts to clickbait, i.e. unnecessarily long videos with inviting titles that ultimately fail to deliver on the promised subject. I think that Rhett is a great player and his videos are beautifully filmed, however the volume of content and quality of videography seem to take precedence over substance / quality of underlying research. His "What is X Sound?" video series is another example of this - hours of talk, yet the amount of concrete information is vanishingly small. In my opinion this is quite disrespectful to the viewers.
@JoelyPera4 жыл бұрын
@@boshi9 Okay. That makes complete sense. Thanks for the clarity and keeping things cool 🙏🏽
@pqwho4 жыл бұрын
You are completely right, he uses the quote in a wrong way. A different point of picking excites different modes i.e. overtones of the string. However, a bridge pickup will always pick up more harmonic content and in a neck pickup the fundamental mode will always be more present and if you fret higher, the fundamentals' maximum will shift towards the neck PU.
@catalinvoronca6894 жыл бұрын
@@boshi9 So well said in such a beautiful manner ! As for every subject, there is multiple layers of subtility and this applies to clickbait titles : you might find the obvious "Pentatonic scales are NOT useful" (usually the youtuber will teach pentatonics but talking about squares/triangles) but famous other youtubers are much more subtle, their title is a clickbait without being it, as it does not reitarate the obvious strategy. So it is hard to accuse them and protects them from having a bad buzz. But honestly, 15 minutes videos that can be shortened in 5 minutes are frustrating. As you, I don't point Brett or anyone's guitar playing, it is just frustrating to get into a 15 min video, take time to concentrate, understand (if english is not one's primary language) and to get a mixed feeling at the end... But that's the game and everything started when YT monetized the videos, asking for longer videos in order to get more commercial slots etc.
@markleach44 жыл бұрын
Rhett, you knocked it out of the park with this video. Great job!
@andymarsal2 жыл бұрын
Jerry Cantrell is a famous single pickup guitarist
@47ravenlord4 ай бұрын
Dino Cazares of Fear Factory is my favorite example.
@Guitar92354 жыл бұрын
Great video! One thing I don't hear people mention enough is the fact there is less load on the guitar signal with one or two knob guitars (i.e. LP jr vs LP special). When Rhett mentioned single PU guitars are "brighter, more presents and more powerful" that's because there is less load on the overall signal from one or two knobs therefore you get more dynamic range when using the vol knob. Even double PU guitars with just master vol /& tone have more output compared to four knob guitars. This is a mod I suggest when someone likes there PUs but want more output from their guitar before buying and installing a hotter Pu. Also it can be reversed easily ;) Also my fav single PU guitar is LP jr! Thanks Rhett for the great content!!
@nick.raptis4 жыл бұрын
Aaaand Fender just announced a single bridge P90 telecaster 🤣🤣
"Heart Full of Soul" sounds great, almost darker than the original as goes your treatment of it, Rhett.👍
@jamesmarkham74894 жыл бұрын
P-bass exists as the most popular recorded electric bass of all time. Sometimes that one pickup is right for nearly everything.
@esposoman4 жыл бұрын
The last bass I bought was a used Fernandes with only a Musican style pick up and after a cleaning and a set-up it became my main gigging bass. One pickup, one volume and one tone knobs and that's all. Yesterday the guy who sold me hinted me to sell him the bass back.
@wegert14 жыл бұрын
HOLY SHIT RHETT!! Brilliant vid! The intro is amazing, and could have been the whole vid. Really grabs one my the balls/soul. Then you go on to deliver some potentially very dry information in a way that would keep any guitar player engaged. I've watched ALL your vids, this may be the best. You left me wanting a single coil guitar...and a wife :- ) Thanks, as always.
@stockholmsyndrome32184 жыл бұрын
Tom delonge fans unite.
@andyk97354 жыл бұрын
As Rhett discusses in the video, I was always lead to believe that having multiple pickups can dilute the signal to whichever one you happen to be utilising. This is because even when the other pickup(s) are not in use they are still creating a magnetic field that subtlety alters the tone.
@fluffytoaster4274 жыл бұрын
Rhett: *Researches and breaks down a relatively complex but incredibly interesting concept* Me, a dumb Drop D ape: "I understand but I'll probably need to be retold a dozen times to remember."
@jamesanthony79944 жыл бұрын
"a dumb Drop D ape" hilarious description. No offense either, I love Drop D!!
@zoso37454 жыл бұрын
No use to us hominids
@Guitar92354 жыл бұрын
Don't feel bad dude! Use that replay button ;)
@JHKNVY023 жыл бұрын
I would love to see a blind A/B test. Take a regular Tele, play and record the riffs along with the waveform(s). Follow it up on the same guitar, but pull the neck pickup, wire it for single, same riffs and record. Then see if it makes an audible change. Then follow it up by throwing it in the mix and see if the average or above average Joe can tell the difference. As always truly great video. Keep 'em going! Thank you for all the effort you put in.
@wesleyAlan91793 жыл бұрын
Yeah, that would be good, I'd be eager to watch it
@Teebone-lw6yb4 жыл бұрын
Lmao, I have 5 electrics and 4 of them only have one humbucker. It’s the only way to go!
@bniwa4 жыл бұрын
just haven't been into relic'd guitars...until now. that thing is pure magic. what a gift!
@gobigrey93524 жыл бұрын
Heart full of Soul can be a kickass song even today.
@K0rp03 жыл бұрын
I think the reason may not be what people think. I picked this up on 60 Cycle Hum, btw, but only in a general way. When contrasting the sound of a Squier Strat with a Squier Paranormal Cyclone, Ryan mentioned how the bridge pickup of the Strat wasn't affected by the Tone knob and hence it was brighter and sparklier. If I'm not mistaken this is because most electronic components add resistance to a circuit and I think they play a role as filters. So it might make sense to say that not wiring a pickup through so many components may introduce less filtering on the actual signal, preserving subtler partials and higher frequencies, therefore maybe responsible for the perceived added brightness and output. Now think about a one pickup guitar. It may have volume and tone control, but that's it. No switches of any kind. Less wiring overall - after all, more wire length is also more resistance. All those tiny (or not so tiny) dots of soldering tin. The simpler the circuit is, the less it will probably impact the original signal. It's a hypothesis, but I think it could be just as valid or work in parallel to any magnetic field on the strings.