Shop the Guitars: Les Paul Studio - sweetwater.sjv.io/kOjarv PRS CE 24 - sweetwater.sjv.io/ranzmB Zemaitis SCW22 - zemaitisguitarcompany.com/products/scw22
The PRS SE is the ultimate bang for the buck. Bought mine 3 years ago and I'll never let it go. Stays in tune, including the G string, which is always a plus over a Les Paul.
Bought a CE 24 (American) two years ago. Got fed up with numerous Les Pauls that REFUSED to stay in tune. The PRS stays perfectly in tune even when using the vibrato bar. Extremely versatile so I don’t need to take a Strat along for single coil-like tones. Not exactly that Les Paul sound, but close enough. It’s a keeper!
I grew up with an SG around the house and learned on it and played it and when I could afford a new guitar, They all seemed weird and too close... sitting it doesn't matter, but the neck joint is at like the 20th fret, a Les Paul is 16th at the top so your arm sticks out farther and you don't solo against your body...does that make sense..?
My guitar that I started on (and still is my sole electric) is a Dean Gran Sport which takes some design cues from the SG (neck joint and bridge placement in particular) but has a slightly offset body. Thus, I'm most comfortable on the most polarizing guitars such as SGs and Fender Jaguars, but ironically I struggle to find my place on a Strat or a Les Paul.
@@noyd4172 I always wanted a Dean Cadillac when I was a kid...my buddy custom ordered a Rich Bich 6 string without all the electronics in '83, it was his and still is his main guitar gigging for 40+ yrs. badass
@@joeyd3324 All of the high-quality construction without all the confusion, sounds like a dream. I've played an Aria Pro II once that had BC Rich-style wiring (not sure it was an exact match) and while I liked the sound, I'm not sure in that short time I grasped exactly what the controls were doing.
Shop the Guitars:
Les Paul Studio - sweetwater.sjv.io/kOjarv
PRS CE 24 - sweetwater.sjv.io/ranzmB
Zemaitis SCW22 - zemaitisguitarcompany.com/products/scw22
The PRS SE is the ultimate bang for the buck. Bought mine 3 years ago and I'll never let it go. Stays in tune, including the G string, which is always a plus over a Les Paul.
Bought a CE 24 (American) two years ago. Got fed up with numerous Les Pauls that REFUSED to stay in tune. The PRS stays perfectly in tune even when using the vibrato bar. Extremely versatile so I don’t need to take a Strat along for single coil-like tones. Not exactly that Les Paul sound, but close enough. It’s a keeper!
I grew up with an SG around the house and learned on it and played it
and when I could afford a new guitar, They all seemed weird and too close...
sitting it doesn't matter, but the neck joint is at like the 20th fret, a Les Paul is 16th at the top
so your arm sticks out farther and you don't solo against your body...does that make sense..?
My guitar that I started on (and still is my sole electric) is a Dean Gran Sport which takes some design cues from the SG (neck joint and bridge placement in particular) but has a slightly offset body. Thus, I'm most comfortable on the most polarizing guitars such as SGs and Fender Jaguars, but ironically I struggle to find my place on a Strat or a Les Paul.
@@noyd4172 I always wanted a Dean Cadillac when I was a kid...my buddy custom ordered a Rich Bich 6 string without all the electronics in '83, it was his and still is his main guitar gigging for 40+ yrs. badass
@@noyd4172 I do know the Gran Sport...Cool looking axe...
@@joeyd3324 All of the high-quality construction without all the confusion, sounds like a dream. I've played an Aria Pro II once that had BC Rich-style wiring (not sure it was an exact match) and while I liked the sound, I'm not sure in that short time I grasped exactly what the controls were doing.
Moi,j'aimerais bien voir le pédal board utilisé pour le son....