Seymour Duncan JB VS DiMarzio Super Distortion - BRIDGE
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- Опубліковано 30 вер 2024
- Comparing two classic high-output passive humbuckers in the bridge position on my BC Rich Mockingbird.
3 Clean riffs
4 Varied types of lead
2 Riffs (high-frequencies)
2 Riffs (low-frequencies)
I prefer the blue shirt. Charcoal one is a bit too wooly.
The charcoal one is warmer. The blue one stands out more in a mix.
I was like #69 lol
So this is where we meet now!
@@LeivReed Folksters gone dad rock unite ✊🏻
Lmfao
This is how a demo should be done. Thanks man!
Great job.
yes , indeed great comparison 🙂👏👏👏
You are a legend for doing such a useful comparison. Now I have a better idea of what a Super Distortion sounds like.
Super Distortion is one of the all time greatest things ever invented! God bless Larry Dimarzio.
Amen!
Couldn't agree more
Take a Dimarzio Super Distortion and replace the ceramic mag with an Alnico 2 and smile ear to ear.
Damn right. Still my favorite pickup and I've been using them since 1985. I've woned a lot of Duncans, many JBs, but they don't have that special thing the Super D has. The Super D is also warmer to my ears. It cuts through without being brittle and chords really breath and roar and the leads sing. The only other pickups that come close are the Super 3, the Tone Zone, Air Zone, Norton and X2N, and they are all by DiMarzio. I rarely use a nick pup but when I do it's often the Air Norton, DiMarzio PAF 36 or PAF Pro. All great pickups. But the Super D is king. If I use it in a single pickup ax I set it up with a series/parallel switch and use the parallel for cleans. If it's got a neck and middle pup I add coil splitting. But I mostly play single bucker axes like my Hofner Shorty which has a Super D and totally screams. I don't pick or strum as aggressively as I did when I was younger and I love the power of the Super D to give added power to my playing.
@@TVoltGold comment but wow. I have not thought of this and I love the idea. Must try.
Both awesome. For me I prefer the cut of the JB that would work better in a context with a band. A lot of the Super Distortion bass would get lost with a bassist and drummer added. Still, I love the Super Distortion too. These two pickups will never die.
Always been a super distortion guy!
In general I preferred the thicker sound of the DiMarzio, it seems to be the more versatile tone. But if I was playing music that was more in the vein of the low-frequency riffs from this video, I would go with the JB. Those riffs cut through so much more clearly on the JB.
Clean:Seymour Duncan jb
Dirty:Dimarzio
Exactly
Yeah the dimarzio clean has that plastic sharp pick attack where JB is much smoother
@@firmans12 I like them both. I've used a number of DiMarzios, Duncans, EMGs and some rare brands. Both the Super D and JB have a lot of musical history under their belts. I find that the JB generally cuts through a mix a lot easier because of how amps work these days. It's no big deal to find an amp with ultra high gain these days, hasn't been an issue since about the mid 80s. I know that DiMarzios have this reputation as "pickups that cut through the mix" but it's not as true these days. JBs cut through better because they're designed more to work with distortion rather than kick an amp into distortion. Very different approach than the Super D. They have a smoother distortion, but can get very nasty while remaining clear at higher levels of gain than the Super Distortion. They also have much better harmonics. If you want a Duncan that just goes for the throat with crunch the Duncan Distortion really delivers. I just took one out of a Schecter because it was too mean for what I needed, so I replaced it with a JB. The Custom is a great balance of crunch and clarity. I recommend the Custom original which is ceramic for metal, the Custom Custom which has an Alnico 2 is also good for metal but not for chugging if that's your thing, because it's the loosest sounding of the Customs. But its very warm, sweet, and also has great harmonics. The Custom 5 is Alnico 5, very bright, and has a great crunch, harmonics, all that stuff. But I use the Full Shred more than any Duncan these days. It's got razor sharp crunch and attack and the warmth and sweetness of an A5 mag. It's like the Custom 5, but toned down on the brightness. It has a lot of treble but it's the kind you can work with unless you have a very bright guitar. Whichever pickup you choose always remember that your amps settings will shape most of your tone. You can have a great pickup and a great amp, but if your settings don't work it won't sound right.
3:31 This riff can only legally be played with a Super Distortion.
Or a Super 3 which I use. DiMarzio rules.
Totally agree, it sounds amazing.
I was thinking the same thing.
steve clark wrote it not phil
@@paddycoombes9455 It doesn’t matter who wrote it. It matters who played it and recorded it using a Super Distortion. That would be Phil.
The way I’ve long described the biggest difference is the DiMarzio humps your lo-mids and the Duncan humps your hi-mids. The difference in output is more apparent if you run an old school “British style” setup too, as the Super Distortion hitting the preamp hotter gives you more gain... nonetheless, the DiMarzio being hotter is likely why it sounds brighter overall, despite not favoring that end of the frequency spectrum.
Dimarzio SD really iron maiden and heavy metal 🤘
Considering how different they are spec wise (different magnet, number of winds, specs etc) I'd have expected them to sound totally different. Not happened.
Both models sound fantastic to me. I’d say if I were forced to choose a favorite, it would be the DiMarzio, but not by a wide margin.
Through an all tube amp is the best way to test pickups, I went from a jb to a sd and the difference was massive, the super distortion had better sustain and sounded thicker.
I like the Super Distortion. It's chunky yet tight on the bottom strings. I also love how leads have a cocked wah type sound.
I like to run my Duncan distortions through a Ibanez Tube Screamer... It gives me those upper Midtone spikes like a half-cocked wah pedal and increases the harmonic response as well.
They sounded very similar, but I thought the Dimarzio had richer harmonic content, and some sweet overtones.
That is due to the ceramic magnet
In this video the JB does it better for my ears. Especially when you were playing that lead part and it melted into feedback. And I’m a Dimarzio player. (36th Anniversaries)
JB is more musical at all 😊
Super Dist more like "chainsaw", what is no good
They sound almost exactly the same. Just goes to show that some guitarist obsess to much over gear. There are two quality categories with picks ups: Good-enough and Garbage. But for real the Dimarzio has a little more tightness and sizzle in the mids, but its the kind of difference you could tweak on the amp EQ.
Amp EQ and different pickups are a different type of EQ/sound, its very subtle but I agree with what your saying
But the subtle different might be bigger when it comes to cutting through the mix where you're competing for frequencies maybe...
@@ryananthony4840 That subtle difference shouldnt be depended upon via the pickup, maybe pedals, amps, or mixer settings could provide the edge..
The feel under the fingers is completely different. But that’s the limit of YT.
great comment, i loved both!
Not enough of a difference to waste money on swapping out pickups.
Either one....they both are legendary pickups.
Nice demonstration.
I like the bite of the JB....and the warmth of the Super Distortion.
They both do everything well....
To me they sound like the same pickup
there's a difference but it's subtle.
The Super Distortion is a little thicker sounding and is a little crunchier.
I don't know man, in my headphones it's a huge difference. I guess it depends on what type of equipment you're watching this video on. Cheers
I would say they do sound very much the same I agree completely. And dimarazio is not a name you here as much as Seymour Duncan. And I think it's why people have made up their mind on Seymour Duncan. I'm gonna give the dimarazio a chance this time. If Steve Via uses them trust me they are good.
They do.
Sweet. I always wondered about back to back comparisons with these two. I'm after a Super Distortion for one of mine but was thinking about putting a JB in it instead and if not, another Perpetual Burn like I have in another guitar because that thing sounds fucking magical :D
I've never tried the PB but heard good things about it
@@guitarist6494 I'd be interested to see/hear your thoughts if you manage to get one from somewhere from comparison :D
DiMArzio was always my favorite. Grew up with the brand. For me, nothing even sounds close, or better.
Same
Same! I've tried everything out there. I've been playing for almost forty years. Duncan was always a Johnny Come Lately. DiMarzio pioneered the replacement pickup, got it down to a science. I think Duncan is too hung up on mystique. DiMarzio is just more practical as a company. Their pickups are simply more useful to me and most players. They're a lot more fun to use. Duncans are really too flat, too narrow in spectrum. I switch pickups around in my guitars till it get it right. At the moment I've got everything perfect. Got an X2N and Super 2 in my Schecter; Norton/Air Norton set in my PRS; Tone Zone/Air Norton in my strat; Tone Zone/Virtual P90 in my Yamaha Pacifica; and Norton/Air Norton in my Yamaha Revstar. They all sound absolutely out of this world. I own some Duncans, and while some are okay, like the Full Shred, I find they just lack the broader, more complex tonal spectrum I get with DiMarzios. Also, DiMarzio customer service is world class. They are just wonderful people to deal with. I've been ordering pickups from them since 1986. They always get the order right and even toss in extras now and then like strap locks and the like. Great company. Hats off to Larry DiMarzio and Steve Blucher and everyone there who design and build such fantastic products.
@@angusorvid8840 X2Ns are a fricken beast. Also, could you break up your comment?
Ok. I'm buying the DiMarzio for my LP. This video was a final confirmation for me. Thanks!
Slight differences between the two, but not near as much as I would have expected. I already bought a Duncan JB for my current build, but was toying with the idea of going with a Dimarzio SD instead. I think this video convinced me I'd be happy with either one, so there's no point spending the money to buy a different pickup. Maybe on my next build I'll go with a Dimarzio SD just to change it up a little.
Dimarzio . . . . because I love to play Ace Frehley licks and I like to say "Diiiiimarrrrzioooooo"
Wow - the Super Distortion has great overtones. How did I make it through the 80s without one? Now I need one.
the wood of the guitar has much to do with it.. a denser wood found on Les Paul type of guitars would sound very different to a modern basswood Jackson, Ibanez rock type guitar with the pickup featured in the video.
Surprisingly articulate and not as hot in reality as they appear in spec.
Ace Frehley used them exclusively.
That's what I call Rock and Roll!
@@LFC-Star indeed it does. I have a Jackson with a poplar body which seems very similar to Alder and has the same density... a little on the Bright side but balanced. I put in a Duncan JB to replace the stock Jackson pickup and there was indeed no real distinguishable difference between the two and the JB just sounded too sterile (although I do like the upper mid Spike from the JB) ... I swapped the JB for a Duncan distortion and the low mid-tone hump of the Duncan Distortion similar to the super distortion made the difference and balanced out my guitar and now it sounds like a whole other animal. I like to run it through a Ibanez Tube Screamer if I want to boost those upper mids... this setup gives me the best of a tight low-end from the Distortion with the singing upper mid Spike like a JB.
The JB is more vocal and focused, holds it together better when cleaning up. The Super Distortion has some extra harmonic content, is nastier with more gain in the top frequencies. Jb for lead word. Super Distortion for rhythm.
I strongly disagree....the Dimarzio had cooler lead tones.
@@sallucido7859 same here! I replaced a stock Jackson pickup with a Duncan JB and they sounded almost identical. I loved the the JP fordleigh door but it had no balls with anything else in my guitar. It got swapped for a Duncan distortion and the better harmonic content and overtones with the Duncan distortion paired with the tighter low-end was exactly what I was looking for... this video shows me that I would have had a similar experience had I went with the super distortion. I like to run my Duncan Distortion through a Ibanez Tube Screamer, it brightens up the upper mid-tones and allows it to really sing with lead work so I kind of get the best of both worlds.
The smash soundtrack? I love it, was not expecting it
Which part is that?
@@timbuk1126 0:53
Always preferred The Seymour Duncan to the Dimarzio especially for those metal tones.
Good demo. I thought the Duncan had more definition. Both sounded really good. Nice job.
I’ve always preferred the Seymour Duncan jb, but that’s just me. Keep SHREDDING the axe ogre style!
Came in expecting to like the JB more, came out liking the Dimarzio with it's clarity.
JB has far more clarity LOL.
They both sound like great pups! Thanks for the demo bro 🎸🎸👍
This is a very good comparison! Definitely the same experience I had with my Poplar bodied Jackson Dinky... the stock pickups were not bad and we're both waist very similar to a JB but with ceramic magnets. It was recommended that I swap it for a actual Duncan JB so that's what I did and I honestly found almost no difference between the stock Jackson pups and the Duncan JB, overall I wasn't happy with the JB it was a bit too sterile for me. I was looking for more growl so I swapped the JB for a Duncan distortion and it made a huge difference... the super Distortion was my other choice but I was worried about it being too muddy in my particular guitar Since Poplar behaves a lot like alder.
DiMarzio hands down
Ace Frehley (super distortion) vs Tommy Thayer (JB)
Negligible difference.
Very subtle, but I'd say the JB is a tiny bit brighter. Both VERY good pickups...
shows how subjective this stuff is cause to me the JB sounded warmer lol
Great work and comparison!
Super Distortion was my first humbucker I ever played in my dad˙s Aria LP copy.
Wanted to love the Duncans but never gelled with any of them.
Nowadays Gravity Storm is my favorite bridge pickup.
I think the part where they most differed is in the high frequency riff, you can sort of distinguish the fizzy character of the top end of the Dimarzio in constrast with the nasal character of the SD, but even then in a mix those differences would be phased out completely. Great demo!
Dimarzio sounds very similar in my opinion but heavier. Seymour Duncan is clearer and cleaner in sound, so it has that Slash sound. I love the dimarzio though.
The JB in the vintage Kramer's is way better than the ones now. They say it's the same but it is absolutely not. Try one in a 84 85 Kramer, . Super distortion, the first, the best , the king.
Both great pickups, without a doubt. I've been using Super Distortion for a long time, but now I'm more a JB user, once I think they're a bit more versatile for cleaner and least agreesive tone.
I liked both PU's but the DiMarzio Super Distortion sounded a bit muddy in the mid to lower registry to my ears... of course I've spent many years playing loud guitar and burning out the higher frequencies of my hearing. lol I gravitate towards PU's that have more high end and single coils. ( *Great shoot out!* You did an excellent job playing the same riff comparing both PU's at the same volume!)
I envy your charvel sand dimas mexio model i cant find it its all sold out
Mine is the 2015 model. I prefer these over the newer ones as they don't have the little cut out to adjust the truss rod down the bottom of the neck (where it joins the body). But i prefer the newer model's pickup selector
I just bought a BC Rich Mockingbird from this video came from France on Reverb. My Mockingbird has a neck thru. Killer Guitar, the neck is wider than I normally like. Guess I have to get used to it.
First time ever i’m going against the JB. They’re pretty much the same tone wise, but the Dimarzio has that sweet low end to it
I have decades of experience with both pickups and I always prefer the Super Distortion and DiMarzio in general over Duncan. I find too many Duncans to be painfully bright. I find the Super D to be a great example of the DiMarzio approach to tone, especially with high output, distortion class buckers. I've tested both brands in real world situations and I'm always much happier with DiMarzio, and the Super D bridge and Air Norton or PAF 36 Anniversary neck are my go-to sets. They also sound great when coil split. I find the Super D gets a warmer distortion than the JB.
jb sounds cleaner and more balanced. super d sounds more mids and more saturation and bite. for me i prefer the awesome super distortion
Was hoping to here some pinch harmonic comparisons, since every pick-up handles them differently. Next video???
The only way I might use a JB is on a mahogany body through a Mesa Boogie amp (Mesa is on the bass heavy side). The JB is a good reference point, but there are better Duncan pickups- RTM, Screamin’ Demon, Pearly Gates, etc. For classic hard rock, through a Marshall, anyway.
The Dimarzio Super Distortion is great in almost every hard rock application, on any wood body, and through most amps... Cleans up not bad, either. On a darker sounding amp, though, no... Marshall amps? Absolutely, any day of the year.
kewl malibu Why don’t you enlighten us, then?
Awesome comparisons thanks a ton!
Excellent demo. Clearly shows the difference in sound between the two pickups. Great job!
JB all the way
I have both. A JB in an Explorer EXP 83 (The model without the pickguard, like James Hetfield) and a Super Distortion in a Fender Strat. I love 'em both. The Gibson has an alder body and maple neck with a rosewood fretboard and the strat has a poplar body (it's a mexican strat from 2005 iirc) and maple neck with a rosewood fretboard. The Super Distortion has a slightly fuller sound to my ears through my own rig, and it does so here as well.
I have both pups on different KC guitars and I do like both but the Dimarzio SD pup is very unstable in high gain mode and especially when used with a wah.
Overall, I like the JB4 when it comes down to it. It just has a better, fully saturated tighter tone in my opinion!
Very, very similar. Thanks for the great A/B demo. This is how is should be done.
Help me friends! What pot and cap use?? 250 or 500k pot? 0.22 or 0.47 cap? Thanks
I'm honestly not too sure about pots sorry man. Hopefully someone with more knowledge than me can help you out there
It's recommended to use Humbuckers with 500k pots, with 250k they may can sound too muddy
JB definitely has a darker tone. I like the clarity on the SD better.
both are excellent for their applications in hard rock and for lead guitar especially.
jb has more of a brightness to it, sd has a "sizzle" sound which is also nice.
would also say dimarzio is more compressed probably due to higher gain.
These are both great pickups and I've owned both. In my personal experience of recording and playing live, the JB just cuts through better. But I would actually go for the Duncan Distortion. It cuts through, it's tight, has screaming harmonics, incredible sustain, and can cover the ground from the sort of 70s classic rock I play to 80s traditional metal, and beyond.
The difference in tone between the pickups was LESS than moving a treble, middle, or bass controls on your amp 1 notch.
I couldn't for instance listen to a song and say " That guitar has a DiMarzio Air Norton in it"
My ears simply aren't that good.
Love the JB been a huge fan of it for years! But the Super Distortion is something very special! A lot more balls too which I like in a guitar tone.
Dam the Def Lepard sounds sweet w the Dimarzios.
Well that's exactly what Phil plays, so...
@@frossbog Phil's awesome and I've always loved his tone.
Seymour Brighter clean tone, so far.
The JB in my 85 Kramer pacer sounds better than the ones they made now. They say it's the same, but it's not. Try one if you get the chance. The super distortion is the king. Always has been, always will be. Try it with a PAF pro. Magic.
Loving the variation on the channel!
Both great. JB has that BAND guitar tone going.. SD has that solo artist tone
What does this mean😵💫
@@sinisterminister9920 I'm pretty sure he means "SD" as Super Distortion rather than Seymour Duncan.
JB sounds full bodied with plenty of chunk... Super D has a lot of treble bite.
If there is any difference, it's so minimal that it's barely audible. I would say "pick either one" for your guitar, because they sound evenly matched to me.
Both great pups. However, I've owned both. Super D won for clarity , response to pick attack way more dynamic.
Agree, totally ! that's really how a demo should be done, by far the best. and I've seen a loooot. Just one sample after another, quick to the point. Really enjoyed it! You really helped me made my the decission (DiMarzio ^^). Thanks dude ! :)
I would prefer a Dimarzio if I was playing through a rack or a Kemper type amp, I like the Duncan for a direct into a distortion into a jcm800
Dimarzio sounds artificially compressed while the JB sounds clear and open sounding. Dimarzio always sounds artificial and over fizzy around the notes… bumblebee buzzy……
3:16 80s rock riff when it sounds the best
Duncan was way better to me but for clean the Dimarzio was a lot more tame which is nice but then again I never play cleans on the bridge pickup super distortion had a lot of muddies when the distortion was on it at least for the lows
I ordered the DiMarzio SD for my LP Standard yesterday. This video just confirms my decision.
Man, that Riff at 0:52 isn't from Super Smash Bros Brawl trophy gallery?
It sure is!
I have a super distortion in my bridge pickup, and an off brand on in my neck, planning on getting a twin DiMarzio to put in my neck to match
DiMarzio SD are generally made to sound epic in guitars with large mahogany slabs such as a Les Paul style guitars.
Both sound killer. Have to go with the super distortion.
I'm a seymour duncar fan, but no bias. Idk why I like The Dimarzio SD, it's got more clarity especially on the drive signal, than JB which I think it's too crunchy.
I want a bc mockingbird, awesome looking guitar.
Similar but the super sounds a little raspier and brighter, the JB is more balanced
Rambut kan tumbuh...yg di olesi ya hitam...yg baru tumbuh kan gak di oles
It's not brighter at all....the Super Distortions base EQ is Very high bass, middle mids and low treble. I had to turn my bass down to like 9 o clock and treble almost to 3 o clock to get the same sound I got from both a Duncan Distortion and JB with both of those having the treble and presence at around 11 o clock. I think it depends on the wood of the guitar and the amp used. All of what I just mentioned is with an epiphone LP Custom and a Marshall amp. All 3 pickups tried on the same guitar for months at a time.
After using all kinds of dimarzio pick ups since the 80s i decided to try jb and pearly gates on my msm1 ibanez, im not going back
Seymour duncan are the best🤟
Both pickups sound amazing
I cant find differences 😦
In a mix they would sound identical. JB has a slightly more high end sizzle. I have both, so difference is really subtle.
Jb = nirvana
Sd = smashing
Jb very nice clean & dirt
Sd very nice dirt & clean
For my two hum... in guitar jb clean position 3 and sd position 1
lol the irony is that Kurt Cobain used a SD....
@@JayBruceWorld he had jb in his blue sonic colored mustang and sd on his jaguar
Super Distortion sounds a little more powerful under distortion . Slightly bigger sounding palm mutes but still really clear and crunchy . JB sounds good too but a tad less aggressive overall . Both good but the Super Distortion sounds better in my opinion
The super distortion sounded much more articulate ,m,but just a tad brighter than the JB
Dimarzio.
This is a coin toss type situation. Yeah they're slightly different, but neither is better altogether.
Superdistortion. It has that scream
Idk why but when you started playing Mr Brightside I burst out laughing
They both sound great, makes it hard to say which I like better withouth being in the room
Doesn't matter because you're using software instead of a tube amp.. They're both going to sound like ass