laxu
Rock Star
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The Les Paul has the neck pickup marked "Rhythm" and bridge pickup as "Treble".
Jazzmaster has the "rhythm circuit" which turns on the neck pickup and a different set of potentiometers with a largely useless 50K tone knob so it sounds kinda dark.
I'm guessing this harks back to the time of early electric guitar when most players used a clean tone and guitar wasn't front and center, so a darker guitar tone let the singer shine through.
But do any of you actually use their guitars like this today?
A neck single coil can work just fine because it's inherently leaner and brighter, but a neck humbucker is IMO always too tubby and dark that I would never want to use it for rhythm on anything but a clean tone. I tried dialing my Mesa Mark V so that an overdriven rhythm tone worked on the neck pickup, but the bridge pickup then becomes icepick city.
Jazzmaster has the "rhythm circuit" which turns on the neck pickup and a different set of potentiometers with a largely useless 50K tone knob so it sounds kinda dark.
I'm guessing this harks back to the time of early electric guitar when most players used a clean tone and guitar wasn't front and center, so a darker guitar tone let the singer shine through.
But do any of you actually use their guitars like this today?
A neck single coil can work just fine because it's inherently leaner and brighter, but a neck humbucker is IMO always too tubby and dark that I would never want to use it for rhythm on anything but a clean tone. I tried dialing my Mesa Mark V so that an overdriven rhythm tone worked on the neck pickup, but the bridge pickup then becomes icepick city.