Paul Reed Smith Explains PRS Pickup Design | PRS Guitars

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 8 июл 2024
  • In this video, Paul pulls back the curtain on PRS pickups and explains the thinking behind our proprietary designs. He dives into the uniqueness of single coils and humbuckers, describes our constant desire to innovate, and plays through our diverse pickup range which offers musicians a palette of musical tones.
    00:00 - Introduction
    01:21 - Understanding Frequency Response
    02:44 - Pickup Parameters
    04:45 - Check out our pickup tester guitar!
    05:34 - 85/15 in the Bass Position
    06:08 - 635JM in the Bass Position
    06:53 - 58/15 LT in the Bass Position
    07:39 - TCI Pickup in the Bass Position
    08:12 - Narrowfield in the Bass Position
    09:02 - PRS' Pickup Design Journey
    09:40 - TCI Pickup in the Treble Position
    10:40 - TCI Pickup in the Bass Position
    10:58 - Wrap-up
  • ВидеоклипыВидеоклипы

Комментарии • 711

  • @danielwmwolf
    @danielwmwolf Год назад +410

    He is such a pickup artist.🏆🖖

    • @mathiasjapri
      @mathiasjapri Год назад +1

      he want to prove tone wood is hoax.

    • @vintagetubeamplifiers
      @vintagetubeamplifiers Год назад +6

      @@mathiasjapri Because it is!

    • @hydorah
      @hydorah Год назад +8

      @@mathiasjapri He's saying the opposite. He said the pickup is the microphone. Not the voice. Tonewood deniers say the pickup is the voice - and materials are irrelevant. He stops short of talking about tonewood as he knows this video is going on RUclips and would be lit up with rage if he said anything about it. He's a smart fellow

    • @sgt.grinch3299
      @sgt.grinch3299 Год назад +5

      Pick ups and speakers are the two components that have the most impact of your tone. If your speakers are junk you have no shot at good tone.

    • @godbyone
      @godbyone Год назад +2

      The wood gives the strings vibration s. So maybe it’s the the wood you are hearing. But the strings reacting to wood. The pick ups. Hear the reactions.

  • @thedevilinthecircuit1414
    @thedevilinthecircuit1414 Год назад +267

    Paul is a total guitar nerd and he makes no secret about it. He is also one of the nicest guys you'll ever meet. He remembers names like nobody I've ever met before, and he personally signs birthday cards for every employee. PRS factory employee here.

    • @thanhhuynh2044
      @thanhhuynh2044 Год назад +5

      The other day (a clinic in NL) a woman asked why there were no prs tours, especially when they were in DC/usa in a few weeks. He answered it was not possible (due to covid restrictions), but he offered her to contact him for a meet up upon arrival. For a personal meet up and when possible a personal tour. She asked for her husband. How much must the dude adore her?!?!😊

    • @trawl7880
      @trawl7880 Год назад

      Nice, good stuff. you think i can put Pauls pickups in my 35th S2. My most favorite ever. they sound awesome. I think the 35th anniversary copied Paul's gtr switching for the toggles. Keep up the exceptional work.

    • @paulcowart3174
      @paulcowart3174 Год назад

      Yeah he is like the one man show too Gibson had a lot of moving parts Leo was kind of like Paul too but he didn't even play guitar Amazing like two sides of the same coin Very cool

    • @harrisfrankou2368
      @harrisfrankou2368 Год назад

      I'm in Australia...I'd work there.
      I'll get to the factory one day.

    • @MainPrism
      @MainPrism Год назад +2

      Dream job..

  • @dankers12
    @dankers12 Год назад +42

    I love that explains this simply without talking down to us. What a class act.

  • @ChapelCollins
    @ChapelCollins Год назад +122

    I want a video like this of Paul explaining every aspect of a guitar. This is fascinating, very enlightening stuff.

    • @edcorneau7346
      @edcorneau7346 Год назад +4

      He's a great salesman just due to him being still so passionate about his work!

    • @BenMarvin
      @BenMarvin Год назад +2

      I would love that for a video series. He's like that cool uncle that always has lots of knowledge, good story telling, and you can learn something.

    • @voornaam3191
      @voornaam3191 Год назад

      Yeah, you start playing better gigs and they suddenly ask you to play in better bands, don't they? He just killed The Sultans of Dixy, huh?

    • @williardbillmore5713
      @williardbillmore5713 Год назад

      I want to see a video where Paul corrects his bullshit and explains that electric guitar pickups ARE NOT MICROPHONES!

  • @anime5h_m1shr4
    @anime5h_m1shr4 Год назад +62

    As an engineer that plays guitar, I absolutely love the frequency response graph. Best way to explain the differences between pickups.

    • @jpage5303
      @jpage5303 Год назад +1

      same! i do R&D and I love the research approach to it.

    • @williardbillmore5713
      @williardbillmore5713 Год назад +1

      If he had graphically illustrated their respective signal to noise ratios as well it would have given a much better picture of the sonic differences between HB and SC pickups. When the frequency response is weighted with a bunch of noise it can make single coil pickups a lot less desirable.

    • @markkeneson6806
      @markkeneson6806 Год назад +2

      As an engineer, do you ever wonder about the glacial progress of electric guitar design? For instance, we are still using 1/4 inch connectors that were designed in the late 19th century, and high impedance pickups with passive electronics. Of course, there are some guitars with active electronics, but they are far less common, and even they still use 1/4 inch connectors.

    • @williardbillmore5713
      @williardbillmore5713 Год назад +5

      @@markkeneson6806 It is the nature of guitarists to want the exact same instruments that their heroes play and played. Whenever Gibson or Fender try to modernize or improve their instruments they are thanked with sales slumps and bad mouthing.
      For example; Gibson could fix their head-stock splitting problem tomorrow by changing the way the head-stock is made by making the head-stock separately with through grain and putting it on the neck with a scarf joint. If they did that Les Paul sales would stop completely..
      "Jimmy Page never had a scarf joint on his LP how could I sound exactly like him on a LP with a scarf joint?"
      As long as "vintage tone " is considered sacred and the myth of "tone wood" prevails nothing on popular guitars will ever evolve.

    • @markkeneson6806
      @markkeneson6806 Год назад +2

      @williard billmore , thanks for the response, and I think you are right. It's unfortunate, but that's what the market demands. Look at bass guitarists, they have on-board active electronics and sometimes XLR connectors. I guess bass players are less obsessed with having the exact same instruments as their heroes.

  • @sixslinger9951
    @sixslinger9951 Год назад +94

    Paul is no joke. He really knows his stuff and the main reason why his company is one the biggest in the world now. I bought a new PRS Custom 24 back in 1992 and barely knew anything about the company. At that time, it was the most I ever paid for a guitar. 30 years later it is still one of the best guitars I've ever owned. The thing is magic thanks to Paul and his team.

    • @0megalul309
      @0megalul309 Год назад +9

      only took him 30 years to become a top 3 in USA, taking the fight to F and G who were around for more than twice as long.

    • @MainPrism
      @MainPrism Год назад +5

      I completely agree!!! I bought my first PRS Custom 24 in 2021 not knowing much at all about the company. Best guitar I've ever owned hands down... So good in fact I bought 2 more PRS that same year. Getting ready to purchase another one in the next few months. Love me some PRS!!!

    • @dancotterman1267
      @dancotterman1267 Год назад +2

      You are lucky to have that much money to spend on guitars. Gibson won’t change anything and are way overpriced. Still decent investment though. I like PRS including their imports. For playing and investing. Not bad. Nice to have the original inventor and owner still alive and running the company.

    • @soundpainter2590
      @soundpainter2590 Год назад

      @@dancotterman1267 It's a (( Strat o Paul )) how can you or anyone not see it ??

    • @paulcowart3174
      @paulcowart3174 Год назад +1

      Hands on all the way Like Leo Geniuses

  • @mauricerrr
    @mauricerrr Год назад +12

    This man deserves a lot of praise. He is one of the few people in this industry that never stops innovating while staying true to the heritage of the electric guitar. That is just something very special. Proud to own one of his instruments!

  • @Charismafire
    @Charismafire Год назад +280

    Paul is the Willy Wonka of the guitar industry. That man has ears like a German Shepherd. Incredibly nice first class guy as well.

    • @jitsroller
      @jitsroller Год назад +6

      Willy Wonka you nailed it.

    • @masteronone2079
      @masteronone2079 Год назад +2

      Sort of pointy and on top of his head? It doesn't show in the pictures.

    • @masteronone2079
      @masteronone2079 Год назад +1

      Also this is a great primer on how pickups work. There are things that you know instinctively but this begins to put some intellectual meat on the bones.
      I still can't se those ears, dose he gel them down, maybe?

    • @JTB--
      @JTB-- Год назад +4

      My CE 24 Semi-Hollow 2022 Whale Blue Burst with Satin Neck had a bottle of Fizzy Riffing Drinks in the gig bag

    • @fender0942
      @fender0942 Год назад

      Yes!

  • @yeserguitar
    @yeserguitar Год назад +20

    This is a 13 minute masterclass! Paul explained and demonstrated so well. Pickups and positioning is not easy thing to understand/hear for me, but this demonstration showed day and night difference. Beautiful content and Paul gave 10, and to my ears he got 9.9 back :)

  • @markitzero5934
    @markitzero5934 Год назад +12

    Paul is amazing, I love his passion. The way he retains so much excitement about his projects is a true inspiration. I think the wisest thing you can teach is that if you do something you love as a job it will never feel like work and he clearly loves what he does.

  • @michaelthomas9991
    @michaelthomas9991 Год назад +6

    Wonderful introduction to pickup design. Paul really should do them as a weekly series, including guitar body design. Great instructor!

  • @guitarmovies
    @guitarmovies Год назад +4

    Please put Paul on camera more often. He’s such an amazing wealth of knowledge, and it’s so fun listening to him.

  • @user-xu4rt4he4p
    @user-xu4rt4he4p Год назад +22

    85/15 are masterpiece, I bought my first PRS just because of their magical sound
    Now I’m totally a PRS fanboy
    Want more and more of your guitars and already ordered Horsemeat
    Keep going Paul! You and your team are genius wizards

    • @davidbaines7330
      @davidbaines7330 Год назад +2

      Easily the best sounding one in the neck position.

    • @greham
      @greham 11 месяцев назад +2

      It's interesting because it's one of the most replaced and disregarded pickup from PRS. Tons of Custom 24 players purchasing replacement pickups. Main argument is always: sounds is very thin.

    • @noworries12
      @noworries12 6 месяцев назад

      @@greham exactly... too trebly,soulless, 2-dimensional/no depth...a pair of DiMarzio Transitions solved the problem

  • @gregholmberg2
    @gregholmberg2 Год назад +8

    Finally, a pickup manufacturer talking about the frequency response curve of pickups!
    That peak he points out is the natural resonant frequency of the pickup. It's determined by the inductance of the pickup, measured in Henries. I wish pickup manufacturers quoted the Henries of their pickups--it's much more useful than DC resistance.
    The builder can control both the frequency and the height of this peak. I think it's important to realize that in all pickups, the frequency of this peak is well beyond the fundamental frequencies of the notes on a guitar. The fundamentals run from 82 to about 1100 Hz. Pickup peaks start at around 2000 Hz and can go beyond human hearing, but typically no more than 8000 Hz. So the peak is emphasizing overtones, not fundamentals. After this point, response falls off to zero.
    You can easily measure the frequency response of pickups yourself. All you need is an audio interface, some free software (like Room EQ Wizard), and Ken Willmott's "Integrator" device ($135).

    • @jonathankvex
      @jonathankvex Год назад +3

      I'm using Ken WIllmott's Integrator to do just that - I'm building a database to collect these frequency response curves for every pickup.

    • @qddk9545
      @qddk9545 Год назад

      @@jonathankvex Is that public?

  • @vinny5004
    @vinny5004 Год назад +7

    It would be awesome to have shown (or even release on the PRS website) the frequency response spectra for each pickup, so we can see quantitatively how they are voiced and compare output levels.

  • @spacepodi
    @spacepodi Год назад +8

    I imagine Leo Fender had that same drive for perfection of tone and the science behind it. Really impressive.

    • @Hickalum
      @Hickalum Год назад +3

      This would have been bread and butter to Leo Fender … He was first and foremost an electronics engineer. But he had an incredibly rare ability … he could listen to what people (musicians) wanted and turn it into reality.

    • @chrisl7949
      @chrisl7949 Год назад +1

      If it wasn't for Leo, PRS probably wouldn't even exist

  • @angusorvid8840
    @angusorvid8840 Год назад +1

    The pickups were one of the first thing I noticed about PRS when I first tried a Custom in '87. I then tried all the PRS at that shop in West L.A. and they ALL sounded great. Their pickups are perfectly matched to their instruments. Superb.

  • @ScottMcdonaldMusic
    @ScottMcdonaldMusic Год назад +6

    The university of Paul Reed Smith. Good stuff

  • @davegallagher7428
    @davegallagher7428 Год назад +5

    That was so interesting. Please do more primers about anything you want to enlighten us on. I have a grasp about pick ups that I didn’t have before. Many thanks.

  • @morelcompasstv
    @morelcompasstv 5 месяцев назад +1

    The TCI (Paul’s Pickup) and Narrowfield sound amazing! Like it’s the best of everything

  • @erickleefeld4883
    @erickleefeld4883 Год назад +3

    At 4:45, Paul takes out his test rig guitar: “So, what we have here is a guitar that we can stick pickups, slide them in and out…” - that’s the PRS guitar I want!

  • @joeabadier
    @joeabadier Год назад +2

    I look at a PRS as a G and an F- without their design mistakes.
    We are lucky that Paul is still here with us and is constantly looking at ways to make his guitars look, feel and sound better.

  • @beatlebarb64
    @beatlebarb64 Год назад +4

    I'm not a musician but I love music. Paul is such a genius in so many fields and a great teacher too. Love watching his genius at work!!

    • @soundpainter2590
      @soundpainter2590 Год назад

      What are you Good at ?? What DO you know ? OK, then that's where & What you should comment at. Make sense ??

  • @billwittman0504
    @billwittman0504 Год назад +2

    Paul, your always a joy to watch and we learn so much!!

  • @OldeDog_NewTricks
    @OldeDog_NewTricks 7 месяцев назад +1

    New to PRS, but I’m really loving what I see and hear so far.
    I personally don’t subscribe to, or understand the criticism regarding “mojo”.
    I think having a reliably consistent product is terrific. I don’t want to search through a bunch of the same model guitar looking for “the one”.
    I want to be able to look at a guitar that turns me on and know that visual aesthetic is the only difference between another guitar of the same model.
    That’s gold.

  • @leobonomoinspirationalclai7080
    @leobonomoinspirationalclai7080 Год назад +2

    Fantastic! Always knew it was more complicated than it appeared and it doesn't appear simple at all! Paul you are brilliant!

  • @jukruhar94
    @jukruhar94 Год назад +2

    PRS should produce THAT same guitar as a finished product. It would be a chameleon of tone. Imagine ONE pickup (TCI in this case), swapable between trebble and bass position, 250k/500k switch, high pass filter.. what a great idea.

  • @stevenkoppelkam643
    @stevenkoppelkam643 Год назад +7

    Fascinating, cant wait to truly see what Paul's been working on behind the scenes

  • @shanedaniels5191
    @shanedaniels5191 Год назад +2

    Fantastic video!!.. Love Paul's energy when he's describing things.. Not only can you hear,but you can see his passion for the craft.. 🙂✌️

  • @ScottDreyfus
    @ScottDreyfus Год назад +2

    15 more years sounds like music to my ears. Keep us rocking Paul

  • @Chris.1812
    @Chris.1812 Год назад +6

    This is exactly the video I’d always wished they would make

  • @homebrew1709
    @homebrew1709 Год назад +3

    I see Paul as a modern day Leo Fender: constantly innovating and never accepting yesterday’s technology as “good enough”. His passion and active involvement is what separates PRS from the “other two” big guitar brands who seem content to keep churning out instruments that have barely changed from 60+ years ago.

    • @dancotterman1267
      @dancotterman1267 Год назад

      Because he’s still alive and working. Leo’s time was well spent but he is sadly gone. Similar people except Leo didn’t play can you figure?

  • @IamMusicNerd
    @IamMusicNerd Год назад +7

    I have to admit, I was skeptical whether all the PRS TCI claims was mostly marketing hype, and I wouldn’t be able to actually hear much of a difference. But I have been pleasantly surprised just how good some of them sound. Both the 58/15 LT in my core, and the MEV TCI pickups in the Modern Eagle V sound even better than my favorite Traditional Les Paul. They never get muddy no matter what pedal or amp I put them through. Very well done!

  • @claudevieaul1465
    @claudevieaul1465 Год назад

    This is so enlightening!
    Beautifully explained *and* played too - no frills pure sound comparing.
    Thanks so much for taking the time to do this, Paul! 🙏😎

  • @trevpeeps307
    @trevpeeps307 Год назад +19

    He is a mad scientist. They’re one of the few companies where I prefer their newer models to the vintage ones because they’re just better

    • @0megalul309
      @0megalul309 Год назад +1

      since prs keeps their quality, unlike other companies newer is better but i like the old ones too since its cool to see how paul evolved from the early days.

    • @sixslinger9951
      @sixslinger9951 Год назад +1

      My '92 custom begs to differ ;)

    • @trevpeeps307
      @trevpeeps307 Год назад +1

      @@sixslinger9951 I had a 91 custom and it was a great guitar. I wish I still had it. My 594 is pretty great too

    • @benallmark9671
      @benallmark9671 Год назад

      @@sixslinger9951 you just keep telling yourself that if makes you feel better but you’re flat out wrong. Just a fact my friend.

  • @sedoyotec
    @sedoyotec Год назад

    Hi, Paul!
    Thank you for putting your enthusiasm and hard work on each small detail of the guitar.
    So nice to see how shy at the end he became, like a geek kid, speaking on his beloved topic.

  • @CosmicNed
    @CosmicNed Год назад +3

    Really enjoyed this explanation of how PRS pickups are voiced. My personal favourite is the 57/08 for classic rock styles, but the 85/15 is the most versatile humbucker for any style in my humble opinion…

  • @thomashogan1985
    @thomashogan1985 Год назад +1

    This is why PRS guitars are the best mass produced guitars in the world, his passion and knowledge are second to none for a company owner

  • @carliniguitar
    @carliniguitar Год назад +3

    Would love to see more of the graphs of frequencies. It is so cool how this stuff is able to be quantified and thus adjusted so precisely.

    • @williardbillmore5713
      @williardbillmore5713 Год назад

      He calls it a black art. That doesn't sound very scientific to me.

  • @petercarparelli
    @petercarparelli Год назад

    Paul is not only an artist, but he's a scientist and the marriage of those things has resulted in the music industry being given such an excited and passionate point of view on instruments. Paul's the man, would love to chat with him again someday!

  • @gamjammallota78
    @gamjammallota78 Год назад +4

    Simply superb. I'm sure glad that Paul has taken the realization of knowing he'd maybe never be a guitar God, to being the God of guitar tone. Just look at what his contributions were, are, and going to be. He's the Leo Fender and Les Paul of our time. BTW, my PRS/Doug Sewell HDRX-20 is heavenly. I am in the midst of upgrading my sweet PRS SE Custom 24 lefty with a custom adjustable nut as well as D'Addario Auto-trim locking tuning machines to make my guitar dream come true. PRS has helped make it all possible for me.

  • @williamrobinson7435
    @williamrobinson7435 Год назад

    Most illuminating! Congratulations to PRS on all these superb instruments. 🌟🎶👍

  • @thebiggianthead8364
    @thebiggianthead8364 Год назад +1

    Thank you for playing it with clean tones. Every idiot who thinks we can hear anything with distortion added needs to see this vid.

  • @robvanscheijndel
    @robvanscheijndel Год назад +1

    Great to see that his approach in developing pickups results in better products. He didn’t mention several other variables, such as the difference in output between humbuckers and single coils and the frequency response of our ears. In the end it is still our hearing and feeling experience that decides which pick-up suits the best. But with the systematically approach of designing pickups, he creates great sounding products for the most of us.

  • @awkipintee
    @awkipintee Год назад

    Very informative and I like the direction you’re going with that single coil tone, old and new.
    I played a PRS in a music store and the one thought that stayed with me was how very musical it sounded. Great video Paul. 👌

  • @jeffgerndt2813
    @jeffgerndt2813 Год назад

    Thank you Paul for your tireless work on improving the guitar. Mine is on order.

  • @HeathFoley
    @HeathFoley Год назад +2

    For many years the Dragon and HFS pickups in my 94 Custom 22 were my fav, but now my new fav are the 85/15's. I just love those pickups, they can do everything!

  • @allen5638
    @allen5638 Год назад

    As a new player, and student of the guitar, it amazes and humbles me the science and passion that this into building these things that resonate across so many genres, cultures and yet inexplicably ties us together. Thank you for the effort and I like many others will one day will experience that for myself and those to whom I can play for and to.

  • @andrewc9762
    @andrewc9762 Год назад +1

    This is great! More videos from Paul please!

  • @Voronguitar
    @Voronguitar Год назад

    A huuuuge thank you Paul to this video! Now I know why I love so much my 58/15LTs !!!! 😊 always good to see your explanation videos !!!!!

  • @WiPri0371
    @WiPri0371 Год назад

    I just learned more in a single sitting than I have at any other time. Man, he is a really good teacher.

  • @IraDuncan
    @IraDuncan Год назад

    GREAT explanation on pickups, Paul.
    I'm lucky to have built one guitar in my lifetime, and it was somewhat inspired by you. I'm itching to do another now after a 20 year break.
    I consider myself lucky to have met you at Bob Willcutt's 50th anniversary weekend a few years ago and everyone who has said you are incredibly kind and wise is absolutely right.
    Thank you for inspiring people continually.
    Godspeed.

  • @chaos4316
    @chaos4316 Год назад +1

    Thanks for sharing. I’ve been working in the custom shop of a guitar co for about a year now building pickups. It’s cool to see it laid out so simply. (When it’s definitely not simple!)

  • @aarons_guitars
    @aarons_guitars Год назад +5

    You guys should create a model that you can pop in/out pickups from behind the guitar and change them with a proprietary connector. You could sell a lot of extra pickups that way for people wanting more than one set for their guitar

    • @jackfriday31
      @jackfriday31 Год назад +1

      There's already a company doing this (Revv I believe). But I'd definitely be interested if Paul decided to make em. You know they'd be better in every way.

    • @athmaid
      @athmaid Год назад

      @@jackfriday31 pretty sure you mean Relish, Revv doesn't make guitars or pickups to my knowledge. Bold statement by the way. You make it sound like nobody could surpass Paul, but in reality PRS are being absolutely smoked by the newcomers

  • @jamesnelson1443
    @jamesnelson1443 11 месяцев назад

    Great video Paul!!!! Love how you keep us in the loop!

  • @swangdb
    @swangdb Год назад +3

    Paul did a little presentation on PRS guitars locally about the time the 57/08 pickups were released. There were a lot of PRS guitars at the presentation, and my favorite-sounding guitar was a McCarty with 57/08s. I eventually bought a CE24 Semi-hollow with 57/08 pickups, and it's my favorite humbucker guitar I've ever owned (I've been playing for over 50 years).
    I want to hear the 58/15 and 58/15 LT pickups, but I don't live near a store that sells PRS guitars. I suspect I'd like both models.
    Are the 58/15 LT pickups the same as 58/15 pickups but with fewer windings? If so, could you tap both coils of a 58/15 and, with a switch convert the 58/15 to a 58/15 LT?
    Just trying to figure it out.

  • @donbutler8760
    @donbutler8760 3 месяца назад

    I remember you sent me a whole box of PRS pickups around 1992. I couldn't find a neck pickup I liked for my PRS Artist..I thought that was so nice of you!

  • @TillyP
    @TillyP Год назад +2

    Every time I see a video with Paul I think, "man I'm glad I have PRS guitars" lol

  • @Robertkelleymusic
    @Robertkelleymusic Год назад

    I have been so excited to see what PRS continues to develop with pickups ever since the Silver Sky. Those Single Coils are among the very best! And the first time I played a PRS semi hollow with 59/09, I was blown away!… Cannot wait until the day I can own a Special Semi-Hollow!
    Keep ‘em Comin’!

  • @taborturtle
    @taborturtle Год назад

    I absolutely LOVE whiteboard Paul! I want you as my teacher in a class! I have so much to learn. I specifically watched this to learn about how you approach pickups, and I respect your opinion a whole lot! Thank you!

  • @user-nh4pb1mh9e
    @user-nh4pb1mh9e 6 месяцев назад

    I love my P.r.s. it only gets played for special occasions. It's 20 yrs old and pristine..I will never change the pickups.. I feel blessed that I own your product. Thank you so much for gifting us with your intelligence, and guitar innovation.

  • @StevenParente
    @StevenParente Год назад

    Outstanding!

  • @kroadster3249
    @kroadster3249 8 месяцев назад

    So clear so concise I enjoyed every minute of the video. Thank you Paul for sharing

  • @pierre6940
    @pierre6940 4 месяца назад

    Bonjour Paul, i just bought a beautiful 2023 Blue PRS SE custom 24/08 with TCI S. Thanks a lot for your amazing work!!

  • @NJSmithMusic
    @NJSmithMusic Год назад +4

    Love the narrowfield pickup. Reminds me of my favorite tele neck pickup tones

    • @TheEmac70
      @TheEmac70 Год назад

      I thought that too!

    • @glasseyes5844
      @glasseyes5844 Год назад

      It's jawdropping just how single-coil like they sound. Amazing pick ups.

  • @Furtheronmusic
    @Furtheronmusic Год назад

    Brilliant and enlightening video thanks Paul

  • @antonymaitlandsmith8758
    @antonymaitlandsmith8758 Год назад +3

    Thank you Paul. It is always a joy to listen to you explain your craft and I get real pleasure playing your guitars, they are pure magic. How about a Custom 24 with John Mayer single coils?

  • @magdowich
    @magdowich Год назад +2

    keep pushing guitar innovation Paul 🙌

  • @makiiii7276
    @makiiii7276 Год назад

    wow man... i grew up not having a father on early age, getting paul explaining things like that is like a bed time story for me. and i did learn a lot. amazing!

    • @prsguitars
      @prsguitars  Год назад +1

      Papa Paul is here for you, @makiiii. Sleep well.

  • @ElAvatarDelLuthier
    @ElAvatarDelLuthier Год назад

    Great video! a real library of knowledge here.Thank you!

  • @benmarshallproduction
    @benmarshallproduction Год назад

    Really interesting and informative. Thanks Paul!

  • @larryivymusic
    @larryivymusic Год назад +1

    Wow. This really is eye opening. This just makes me think of a time I met Paul and I was in a huge Emg nu metal phase lol really missed out on tone back then.

  • @BrentAdams
    @BrentAdams Год назад

    Thank You Paul!

  • @ajaykumargoel9398
    @ajaykumargoel9398 Год назад

    Yes please, more from Professor Smith!

  • @BoneyBobsTreasure
    @BoneyBobsTreasure Год назад

    Thank you, hugely appreciated.

  • @YMESYDT
    @YMESYDT Год назад

    I love how much we're getting to know Paul

  • @alasdairmunro1953
    @alasdairmunro1953 Год назад +1

    Thank you for an illuminating video! Keep exploring.

  • @smlkgitaris
    @smlkgitaris Год назад

    Thanks for the knowledge...
    God bless you. You're so generous to share the knowledge

  • @jparkerriffs
    @jparkerriffs Год назад

    this was awesome 🔥

  • @facurojas4477
    @facurojas4477 Год назад

    The fact that the guitar they use to test pickups has a heavily flamed neck just makes me love it

  • @joekyleboston
    @joekyleboston Год назад

    Dang, this is awesome! Thank you Paul.

  • @erichodnett4475
    @erichodnett4475 Год назад

    Paul thank you and the whole crew for everything. I don’t know where I would be without guitar and especially PRS..

    • @prsguitars
      @prsguitars  Год назад +1

      Thanks for the love @erichodnett4475

  • @z4570
    @z4570 Год назад

    Thanks, Paul. We can see that you "care" about your work as a guitar maker and the artist that you are. Thanks for such a great explanation.

  • @Strodav
    @Strodav Год назад +2

    Excellent video, thanks. Would like to see a video on how the pickup to string distance changes the Db vs frequency graph.

  • @thedave2156
    @thedave2156 Год назад

    Great video! Very informative. Thank you!

  • @mikesiemek8630
    @mikesiemek8630 2 месяца назад

    Best explanation ever! Thanks for sharing and taking the time to show how this process works!

  • @erik2446
    @erik2446 Год назад +1

    Great idea for a video! Thanks!

  • @richoz.
    @richoz. Год назад +1

    Hi Paul. Thank you for making the affordable SE line. I recently bought an PRS SE Starla, and it's a real thrill to own and play such a great guitar, one you couldn't afford before. Also thank you for your inspirational and insightful statements in every video and interview, really enlightening.

  • @adrianhjordan1981
    @adrianhjordan1981 Год назад

    Paul is the only guitar company owner that I would genuinely love to meet. There's a good reason my 2 main guitars are PRS!!

    • @ramonmoreno8014
      @ramonmoreno8014 Год назад

      Most are dead. Who wants to meet an investor group 🤣

  • @andrewbecker3700
    @andrewbecker3700 Год назад +1

    Glad he dropped this fact filled segment today. The timing is curious. There's been quite a bit of discussion recently about many of these topics. There's some quite frankly bad information out there regarding where the tone in a guitar comes from predominantly. The way PRS explains it, he doesn't take sides or bash the uneducated opinions of the RUclips masses. There are soo many things that effect tone to different degrees. To glom on to any single component and insist only that specific element of the rig is responsible for where your tone comes from, is just not accurate. You can buy all the fancy parts in the world trying to replicate someone else's sound. Why? Maximize what you have and rock out!

  • @cre8alotdesign232
    @cre8alotdesign232 Год назад

    AWESOME VIDEO, LOVED IT

  • @dangarris5309
    @dangarris5309 Год назад

    Thank you so very much Paul

  • @caincolesr
    @caincolesr 6 месяцев назад

    If I could pick any guitarist in the world to go hang out with for 30 minutes, Paul would definitely be in the top 5

  • @GOOSE-1334
    @GOOSE-1334 7 месяцев назад

    Probably the most informative video I have ever seem about pickups

  • @CraigHollabaugh
    @CraigHollabaugh Год назад

    This was awesome! Fascinated by what's driving your test setup ahead of the HP Dynamic Signal Analyzer. Your test jig guitar was clever as well. Thanks from Colorado.

  • @sheptoneguitarpickups
    @sheptoneguitarpickups Год назад

    Absolutely fantastic video. I've always dreamed to being able to sit down and create something just like this.

  • @WhaleBluePRS
    @WhaleBluePRS Год назад

    I want that guitar and a shelf full of PRS pickups in my recording studio! What a dream for matching tones to parts and full songs!

  • @periloustemple8290
    @periloustemple8290 Год назад

    Well done, sir - as usual!

  • @Doug5524
    @Doug5524 Год назад

    I love the explanation Paul gave I purchased a PRS standard in 2021 it is in antique white with 58/15 pickups this guitar has a great weight 6.6 pounds I find myself picking this guitar this guitar 99% of the time I have a Gibson standard, Fender Mexican, Fender Telecaster USA and I prefer the PRS on a daily basis great pickups thank you Paul and gang all the best from the Suffolk England.

  • @mellissadalby1402
    @mellissadalby1402 Год назад

    Mr. Paul is a very smart and talented Luthier and business man.
    While PRS pickups are very good, I think the most significant thing PRS brings "to the party" is their wood, how it is seasoned, matched and put together.
    Over the years I have come to find that PRS guitars are remarkably stable with respect to temperature and humidity, more than most if not all other brands.
    I have also never played a PRS that did not have perfect intonation everywhere on the neck on every string. Not all Guitar manufacturers can claim that.
    I think Mr. Paul is one of the greatest Luthiers of our time. A total guitar geek who just won't quit.