Watch this before WASTING MONEY on new pickups!

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 25 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 2,7 тыс.

  • @Diplomat440
    @Diplomat440 Год назад +214

    Your videos over the years have literally saved me thousands. With patience, I managed to get the best tone I've ever gotten simply by using 2 mics and taking the time to place them strategically.

    • @SpectreSoundStudios
      @SpectreSoundStudios  Год назад +51

      Thanks, Paul! Glad you’re getting results!

    • @aryehwiznitzer9060
      @aryehwiznitzer9060 Год назад +7

      Yeah - so much of the online music community revolves around what you "have" to buy to get a better sound. No doubt it does help to have different guitars/pedals/amps, etc to try out new things. It might even inspire you to write better music in some cases. But you really don't ever "need" more than the basics of a few reliable (affordable) tools.

    • @squirelova1815
      @squirelova1815 Год назад

      Aha: "Strategery..." -G.W Bush

    • @DjSharpey666
      @DjSharpey666 Год назад +2

      What microphones did you use?

    • @Diplomat440
      @Diplomat440 Год назад

      @@DjSharpey666 using a pair of sm57s

  • @theborg4751
    @theborg4751 Год назад +155

    Theirs a hack to making your new pickups sound better ...leave the price tag on ..works every time

    • @syntaxerror9256
      @syntaxerror9256 Год назад +7

      Hack 2 ....the more shiny the pickup the better it is

    • @mdargusch
      @mdargusch Год назад

      ​@@syntaxerror9256I seap all my avtives for EMGs in black chrome. 😂
      Please don't tell my wife!😢

    • @Fafa_Sauce
      @Fafa_Sauce Год назад +2

      There's*

    • @urbanobstacles
      @urbanobstacles 7 месяцев назад +2

      ​@@Fafa_Sauce Their* isn't a person alive who likes you

    • @Fafa_Sauce
      @Fafa_Sauce 7 месяцев назад

      @@urbanobstacles there*

  • @NShomebase
    @NShomebase Год назад +41

    All the drastic changes made by speaker, microphone, and placement aside, I definitely had a preference for the tone of the Crossfire Alnico pickups.

    • @Pyriander
      @Pyriander 11 месяцев назад +5

      They were loudest, wich usually is, what people choose do find sounding best. Maybe not this time…

  • @murdahorse
    @murdahorse Год назад +21

    I've been following you for a couple of years now and this is by far my favourite video you've done. Guitarists really need to see this. I can't believe how much effort goes into endless discussions about this pickup vs that pickup being essential for the ultimate chugging sound. Last year I bought an aftermarket pickup for the very first time and put it into my Jackson guitar, I was surprised by how little difference it actually made to the tone. People must be really kidding themselves once they've spent all that money

  • @jasonthielman
    @jasonthielman Год назад +11

    As someone who plays clean 90% of the time, and rarely plays with heavy distortion this is really helpful.
    I am shopping for a guitar to keep in drop C and it makes it much easier to not have to worry about pickups so much.

  • @scottg8660
    @scottg8660 Год назад +157

    The pickups do sound different but it's very subtle compared to the other differences in speaker and mic placement. I think the pickups accentuate one specific detail in one's playing style. Definitely the speaker, cab, and mic/mic placement are by far the biggest effect on tone. Great vid!

    • @6stringstorulethemall967
      @6stringstorulethemall967 Год назад +23

      And you won't hear the subtle difference in a full mix and much less live

    • @StrawDogsPu
      @StrawDogsPu Год назад +11

      @@6stringstorulethemall967 you wouldn’t, but I suppose subtle differences can positively effect your practice. Really does just come down to the player and what they want, I’d love to see a video on bass pickups through a D.I. but Idk if that’s Glenn’s market as much lol

    • @jimbofet
      @jimbofet Год назад +5

      Yeah, differences are there, but nothing beyond what can be achieved with EQ. I decided long ago to not worry about the pickups in any of my guitars and get a good EQ pedal, something most players forget to (or procrastinate on) adding to their board. Saves a ton of cash and worry to use one pedal to rule them all. That said, I like the Alnico, if I had to pick one.
      Edit: I want to be more clear: an EQ pedal at the front of the pedal board, before most other pedals, shapes the sound of the guitar early in your signal chain, effectively compensating for any issues your pickups might be causing. It’s more practical than buying replacement pickups. My EQ pedal is also Midi switchable with 128 presets, so I can have custom tones for every song (or different tones within a song). You can’t do that by swapping pickups.

    • @morbidmanmusic
      @morbidmanmusic Год назад +1

      If you continued with that logic on everything your song would have issues... logically.

    • @Anjohl
      @Anjohl Год назад +1

      @@6stringstorulethemall967 ding ding ding! So many guitarists evaluate things based on their "bedroom tone"; when the in the mix tone will be completely different!

  • @nathangarton7381
    @nathangarton7381 Год назад +342

    Got a challenge for you: Have the pickup and tone wood discussion live with Adam (Nolly) Getgood, Paul Reed Smith and Tim Mills (Bare Knuckle Pickups). These three guys have built significant careers on chasing the things that you're attempting to debunk. I'm interested to hear how they respond to your points.

    • @mohitrahaman
      @mohitrahaman Год назад +38

      Idk why I watch SMGs videos. its fine that you can make your stock pickup sound good, but some aftermarket pickups actually make a difference. Always need a bag of salt when Glenn tries to demistify stuff with a semi serious tone, unlike his "ProTools, the best DAW" type of video.

    • @MrMockigton
      @MrMockigton Год назад +53

      not so sure about nolly. he built his career on the v30 - and his signature sound is exactly that. you can almost certainly recognize nolly-mixes by the guitar sound. people pay him for that: so that their mixes sound like nolly mixed them. afaik he is not too big on tone wood and pickups himself.
      just my two cents: i had 2 guitarists come in for a guitar recording session, we used 4 different guitars with 4 different pickups. after reamping, noone remembered what guitar was used for what and could definitely tell no difference in tone at all.

    • @abandoned-mines-novascotia
      @abandoned-mines-novascotia Год назад +71

      @@mohitrahaman I think the point is that pickup differences are SOOOO small and irrelevant for hi-gain stuff, that it's not worth worrying about. Any difference you think you may get from another pickup... you can simply get with your existing pickup. Just tweak mic placement, and there is always EQ in the DAW too. PS: People watch SMG videos because Glen is the Mythbusters of home recording.

    • @kriswhite91
      @kriswhite91 Год назад +26

      Because they have to sell stuff, and marketing is the way to do it.

    • @therealone1288
      @therealone1288 Год назад +8

      @@abandoned-mines-novascotia yeah for high gain not so much. Crunch and cleans definitely

  • @primovictorian
    @primovictorian Год назад +88

    The main message I took away is that unless your pickups are busted, there are a few other things you should be checking that would have a bigger effect on your tone

    • @NWTMasterWolf
      @NWTMasterWolf Год назад +15

      Exactly. It seems to me the only real change is when you have absolute junk and replace it with something decent at least and then it's mostly clarity IMO.

    • @Bob-of-Zoid
      @Bob-of-Zoid Год назад

      Well, he didn't have to change the pickups at over $100. Stronger or longer springs $2 + shipping if you don't know you can find wall anchors to take them from for under $1 each at any hardware store if they don't have just the right ones in their spring selection for even less! Foam from any old packaging would have done the trick too, although some types of foam hold their strength better than others over time.

    • @chrisparker5278
      @chrisparker5278 Год назад +5

      @@Bob-of-Zoidwhat are you on about‽

    • @Bob-of-Zoid
      @Bob-of-Zoid Год назад +1

      @@chrisparker5278 "Read and understand"! It's not up to interpretation, and all words are used to their correct definitions! Sorry, I can't teach you how to read and understand in a few replies, you need to get that education elsewhere, like a school.

    • @sparella
      @sparella Год назад +1

      @@Bob-of-Zoid Perhaps you could clarify exactly which spring(s) you're referring to? Sometimes undereducated plebians like myself require additional context.

  • @thewebhead6977
    @thewebhead6977 Год назад +78

    I noticed a massive difference in chord clarity and tightness/note definition between my old set of Air Norton/Tone Zone vs. a Bareknuckle Juggernaut set. It was definitely worth the investment for me, but you're right, sometimes the differences between them are minuscule and proper EQing can help out!

    • @Dm3qXY
      @Dm3qXY Год назад +6

      i have noticed an improvement in clarity in my sound (and also playing, because we react to what we hear, playing wise) even by learning to tweak a low cut EQ on my raw signal before the effects chain (i play guitar via Reaper, with plug-ins); if the slight difference you hear made you react different to it, and you fine tuned your technique around that, on the fly, then maybe that's what you're actually perceiving, a bigger change that is the result of what you started with a small change.. to me, some of those small flavor nuances count quite alot.

    • @fernandolopes2544
      @fernandolopes2544 Год назад +2

      Bkps is something else. The difference is huge.

    • @thewebhead6977
      @thewebhead6977 Год назад +2

      @@fernandolopes2544 it's true! I have the Juggernaut and Ragnarok sets. My one gripe is that I have to get a DI box for my Rag equipped guitar because it overloads basically everything! Haha

    • @LilBoyHexley
      @LilBoyHexley Год назад +4

      I think the question is could that difference have just been down to a preferred default EQ? Like, was it actually impossible to get a sound you liked out of the other pickups, or did the new ones just sound more to your preference out of the box on your particular setup.
      Pickups can sound different to be sure, different output levels and EQ, but when actually tested- particularly with gain -it seems like you can ultimately get most humbuckers to sound pretty similar with EQ and gain adjustments. So like yeah, if you just drop in new pickups you'll get a new sound, but when you bring distortion into the mix and start turning knobs it seems like the question becomes pretty muddy.
      It's just I've listened to a lot of A/B testing and it just seems like picking out an objectively inferior pickup is tough.
      The reason I'm dubious is most people swapping out their pickups aren't A/B testing and trying to get pickups to sound close to eachother, they're dropping in new pickups and saying "do I like this?". Which is valid, but not accurate as to how different the quality between pickups actually it.

    • @DrMurdercock
      @DrMurdercock Год назад

      did 600 bucks in pick ups really justify the price though? Honest....@@thewebhead6977

  • @mainquest_official
    @mainquest_official Год назад +3

    I found your channel by doing my general music and recording tricks research. I am not your standard metal enthousiast (I love some hard rock, nightwish, viking metal here and there) but your content is so valuable. Thank you for being so honest and taking the time to make these videos!

  • @mophead7759
    @mophead7759 Год назад +33

    in my opinion the differences are so minimal the only reason i could see for swapping pickups is if a pickup doesn’t work or is a cheap microphonic pickup. this video actually definitely helped me actualize how to achieve certain tones without having the prospect of new gear that wont change anything shoved down my throat. definitely going to start investing in better speakers and microphones now! thx glen, this video was super helpful as usual

    • @gilbertotoledo1421
      @gilbertotoledo1421 Год назад +7

      Don't forget aesthetics. Nothing wrong with changing your regular humbuckers for rail humbuckers or EMGs if you think they look cooler and that's it.

    • @spodevids
      @spodevids Год назад +1

      I recommend auditioning pickups using direct pre-amp in on reference speakers, or studio headphones. The major difference is going to be the harmonic content, and the resonance at the low pass knee. Having more extended harmonics is going to give you more flexibility with your clean tones.

  • @brendansisco490
    @brendansisco490 Год назад +51

    I think it would be cool to see you do a comparison of High to Low output pickups with similar characteristics, then get 2 pickups that are around the same output but are supposed to have very different characteristics and see which has the biggest difference, all from the same manufacturer. Dimarzio has ratings for EQ and Output for all their pickups.

    • @gnarlantlers70
      @gnarlantlers70 Год назад

      Turn down your volume knob on your guitar little bit by little bit and compare. That will be damn near identical to a pickup shootout.

    • @sparella
      @sparella Год назад

      There is a good demonstration video of one pickup with under-, normal-, and over-wound taps going to a switch, so the ONLY variable is the number of turns, iow coil resistance: 5.81K, 6.93K and 8.52K. ruclips.net/video/mMjfqGJy5bI/видео.html

    • @bradleyard4195
      @bradleyard4195 Год назад

      @@sparella That's not a good demo, as he has each pickup in a different position on the guitar, which makes a big difference in tone in and of itself. If he was comparing them all in just the bridge or neck position, that would be valid.

    • @sparella
      @sparella Год назад

      @@bradleyard4195 There is only one pickup installed in the guitar.

    • @brendansisco490
      @brendansisco490 Год назад

      @@gnarlantlers70 Depending on the guitar and the volume pot you have it that may or may not work, some cheap pots roll off tons of high end when you roll the volume down. But that's why we test, we could all speculate on that working or low and high output pickups being a bigger difference in how it reacts to an amp or pedals, that's what we do tests for, i think it would be a cool test to do.

  • @ravenslaves
    @ravenslaves Год назад +103

    I've said it before, Metal stands out as a genre where dynamics are pretty much eliminated. Which is where you hear the most differences from any instrument, of any kind. Turn up the gain and crank a keytar or accordion and you'll get there too.

    • @murrayguitarpickups9545
      @murrayguitarpickups9545 Год назад +13

      You are the smartest person here i think

    • @somethingelsedoesmatter
      @somethingelsedoesmatter Год назад +6

      When I was a kid, I had drums but no guitar yet. I recorded a cover of We Will Rock You, and for the solo, I ran a mic through a Boss HM-2 and recorded me playing an approximation of the guitar solo on a small, old organ. It sounded so good - very similar to a guitar. I was surprised how close I got to the real solo, considering I didn't know how to play organ, either. lol
      Edit: wow, I am feeling my age - my memory is not quite what it used to be... I must not have used an HM-2 because I didn't actually get one until I had a guitar. I must've just placed the mic right inside the organ to overload the capsule to create the distorted effect.

    • @strychen
      @strychen Год назад +6

      Mainstream metal.. (fill in with everything else you said)
      As a stoner/doom metalhead, it's a different story.

    • @murrayguitarpickups9545
      @murrayguitarpickups9545 Год назад +4

      @@strychen I love MUFF!! I get so bored with the mainstream metal sound give me a big fuzzy doomy stoner sound

    • @strychen
      @strychen Год назад +1

      @@murrayguitarpickups9545 all the noms, my brother!!!!! I own every model of muff. Muff is life!

  • @ehdforlife
    @ehdforlife Год назад +7

    I finally got to hear how little the pickups don't really matter. I think the only thing that really matters is clarity, and whether they feedback or bit.

    • @metalprophetPerkins
      @metalprophetPerkins 10 месяцев назад +1

      Other than something just being terrible most pickups are very usable.

  • @TheExoticXD
    @TheExoticXD Год назад +6

    For me consistency and reliability are the most important for me. I have guitars with pickups that sound beautiful clean or even with light gain, but sound weak and not great with high gain and vice-versa. It's usually why I stink with EMGs. They sound consistent and sound good both clean and dirty. While I can hear slight differences in most pickups, it's not the end of the world if an 85 in the bridge sounds different then an 81 in the bridge to me if they sound good. Although one thing that I always wanted to know is if pickup covers change the tone ever so slightly. Great vid Glenn!

  • @MetalHeadProductions
    @MetalHeadProductions Год назад +5

    Changing pickups doesn't get that massive shift, no, but it does make a difference for sure. Comes down to what sounds and feels good for the player. I don't want my guitar to fight me, I just want it to hit the amp the way I want, and pushes certain frequencies the way I want. Fuzz can also be really picky about the kind of pickups.
    My last large pickup shootout I made sure to let everyone know the differences won't be massive, that it comes much more down to the amp, cab, speakers and mics. I also showed clean, crunch and high gain to show how it pushes the amps. Never would I ever say pickups are going to be a massive make or break for tones.

  • @JensLarsen
    @JensLarsen Год назад +46

    Great video! I have to say that changing pickups on one of my guitar really made a huge difference, but of course, I don't do a ton of power chords with distortion in my playing, so that difference would maybe not come across here.

    • @BoltRM
      @BoltRM Год назад +4

      This is why when a RUclipsr compares pickups, I want to hear clean tones rather than distorted.
      Stressing that he is referring to heavy metal distortion, when saying pickups don't affect tone, might be an important factor going forward.

    • @mortusdominus
      @mortusdominus Год назад +3

      @@BoltRM If you run a clean tone, no compression, outside of a mix, in a quiet environment you will hear all sorts of things. Warmoth even did a video comparing steel to nickel frets and you could hear a difference. But who plays like that? So it only really matters what you can hear with the gain, effects, and whatever else, in a mix. Only thing I want to see is the pickups put on a scope and see the graph.

    • @dumpedcabledumpedcable116
      @dumpedcabledumpedcable116 Год назад

      @@mortusdominus a lot of people play solo electric guitar.

    • @niklev8465
      @niklev8465 10 месяцев назад

      Everybody can hear a huge difference when swapping pickups. It didn't cross your mind that for the last test he's using the same pickup to prove he was right. Changing the eq of the amp, a very little bit, to make you hear a very small difference. Everybody that did swap pickups know this test is fake, and the guy too.

  • @The_knife_master6661
    @The_knife_master6661 Год назад +61

    I would love to see you do a experiment with passive vs active pickups see if we could tell a difference!

    • @yourmetalgod69
      @yourmetalgod69 Год назад +14

      Active pickups tone shape using the active circit so there is a 100% difference there is no point in this. the biggest issue you hear with them is the compression fron the circit which has or can be overcome.

    • @sparella
      @sparella Год назад +2

      Use a long enough instrument cable and the passive pickup will lose all highs while the buffered pickup won't.

    • @petegaslondon
      @petegaslondon Год назад

      Thing is there's so many variables - a passive just drives a pot and a length of cable - an active depends on the electronics, which can be inside and outside the PU - a fair bit of EQ etc can happen there .. People use the term "compressed" about actives, particularly EMG's .. Wonder if we could x-ray one to see if theres actual compression in the circuitry?

    • @jeremiahcooper3172
      @jeremiahcooper3172 Год назад

      Sonic Drive Studios has one that does a comparison of various active and passive pickups in the same guitar

    • @damiengreen28
      @damiengreen28 Год назад

      yet me save him the time, yes, you can.

  • @Grindermetalhead
    @Grindermetalhead Год назад +1

    I just spent 2 hours arguing about the significance the pickups play in overall guitar tone with several dudes who tried to convince me that hundreds of dollars they spent on their Bare Knuckle pickup sets was the best purchase they ever made and that it made all the difference in the world. Guitar players, man.

  • @StaticR
    @StaticR Год назад +58

    probably would be a good idea to rank all the pieces in a signal chain based on how much they do or don't affect the tone, from "tonewood", strings, picks, pickups, cable, amp/tubes, speaker, cab, mic and whatever else I missed alongside what kinds of changes can be expected and a demonstration for each for us to see/hear how the changes play out.

    • @felderup
      @felderup Год назад +6

      jim lil did that stuff, glenn could have him on, that might be cool... patreon him some airfare.

    • @ThrashingBasskill
      @ThrashingBasskill Год назад

      The problem is that there are way to many variables for a standardized testing process. Even comparing strings in the same guitar is absolutely useless because A. you don't always strum the strings in the same way and B. about 0.0000000% of people will have the exact gear in the same exact room as you do while doing the test so it would only prove that there IS maybe a difference but not to which extend.

    • @nobnobnobnob
      @nobnobnobnob Год назад

      @@felderup I think Glen already did that here

    • @felderup
      @felderup Год назад

      @@nobnobnobnob it looks like.

    • @FairyCRat
      @FairyCRat Год назад

      I feel like as a general rule of thumb, the later it comes in the signal chain, the easier it is to get a big difference by changing it.

  • @SkeledroMan
    @SkeledroMan Год назад +15

    Having blades instead of pole pieces on a pickup does make a difference though, especially when you're doing bends. Makes the magnetic field more even so large bends get picked up better, especially on the neck pickup.

  • @jerwolf8961
    @jerwolf8961 Год назад +32

    I’ve found that I can affect my tone much more with a relatively cheap EQ pedal. My cheap EQ pedal also has an output level adjustment with a WAY wider range than anything I’ve ever experienced swapping out humbuckers.

    • @Dram1984
      @Dram1984 Год назад +8

      A 10 band EQ pedal basically eliminates the need to have different guitars.

    • @mcinen67
      @mcinen67 Год назад

      In my pedalboard, all 3 distortion pedals have their own eq pedal, but they share the same overdrive pedal that is placed in front. The signal flow becomes: od > distortion > eq

    • @kronabus199a
      @kronabus199a Год назад

      Too many people sleep on an EQ pedal. One amp, a good boost, a 10 band EQ, and a couple of cabs/speakers/IR will get you in the ballpark of a lot of your favorite tones.

    • @Sevetamryn
      @Sevetamryn Год назад +1

      EQ - widely underrated ... has also great effect to overdrive / distortion and you can try pre / post.

    • @nunes1907
      @nunes1907 Год назад

      @@mcinen67 why? I mean, od + distortion... Can't you get the same result using only distortion+eq? (yep, I may sound like a noob, but I'm not afraid to ask... 🙂)

  • @paulmdevenney
    @paulmdevenney Год назад +15

    I would actually love to see this detail with a few more pickups (Seymours ofc), and for cleanish tones too. I get that "this is a metal channel", but there are plenty of clean/pseudo clean sections interspersed through the world of metal songs. In general though, as long as your pickup isn't doing something weird you can always EQ it

    • @jtu2434
      @jtu2434 Год назад

      He needs to try cheap as shit pickups too.

  • @MrSJPowell
    @MrSJPowell Год назад +1

    As you called it, the obligatory "The higher your gain is, the less the guitar itself matters, and the more the amp, speakers and mic do" is obligatory. Which yes, was your point.
    I know high gain is your thing, but I would love to see these played at different levels of gain, to run the gamut from clean to edge of break up and into metal. It would be interesting to see at what volume level they break up, and if their edge of break up or clean tones are notably different. Once again, high gain is your bailiwick, but it's just one part of that sound landscape. It would be interesting to see if the "hotness" of the pickup just means that they break up at different levels of gain, rather than actually signifies a change in tone.
    Finally PRS has been talking about how their TCI pickups notably changes the EQ curve of the pickup. It would be interesting to see that pickup, along with a few other popular 3rd party pickups tossed in there to see if pickups by different companies might sound different.

  • @lorenzocaliani1st185
    @lorenzocaliani1st185 Год назад +85

    There's definitely a much more noticeable tonal difference in moving around mics/swapping cabs than having different pick-ups!

    • @murrayguitarpickups9545
      @murrayguitarpickups9545 Год назад +14

      I offered Glenn two extremely different sounding humbuckers for free no strings attached but he refused, he's just click baiting! Pickups make a huge difference IF you turn the gain down...notice he didn't do a clean demo?

    • @6NZTrucking
      @6NZTrucking Год назад +15

      @@murrayguitarpickups9545 incase you haven't noticed this isn't a channel about clean tones and all that we are solely based around metal and heavy music not pop 👍

    • @murrayguitarpickups9545
      @murrayguitarpickups9545 Год назад +12

      @@6NZTrucking So why doesn't Glenn just say this only applies to metal? .....because this test is absolutely useless for comparing the dynamics of each pickup which is where the real tone difference is! No...just drown everything in gain till it all sounds the same! This is why people think metalheads are morons

    • @dejaeviz
      @dejaeviz Год назад +10

      @@murrayguitarpickups9545 People think metal heads are morons ? when i was in school it was the smartest kids that were metalheads.
      Why does Glenn have to SAY something about his channel that has been apparent for years ?

    • @6NZTrucking
      @6NZTrucking Год назад +6

      @@murrayguitarpickups9545 because it doesn't matter what genre it is clean or wirh gain the biggest influence on tone is the speakers/cab or impulse responses. You can argue all you like but pickups and amps play a minute role in the whole picture.. no one thinks metal heads are morons besides boomers and close minded people such as yourself 🤣

  • @brandonbryson3317
    @brandonbryson3317 Год назад +11

    I’ve always noticed small not noticeably different tones with pickup swaps. Especially in the mid gain and cleaner tones. Sometimes it’s worth it, sometimes it’s not. Biggest difference I found was when I swapped the burstbuckers out of my Les Paul…sounded very trebly and then I put a 59/custom hybrid and it had way more balls and a thicker and more aggressive sound.

  • @godzillazf18
    @godzillazf18 Год назад +4

    So I'm listening to this on my Adam Audio T7V and I notice a difference between 2 pick ups or so but it's not enough to make a sizable difference. Cabs, mics and mic placement make a huge difference for sure. great work.

  • @mohitrahaman
    @mohitrahaman Год назад +2

    0:45 that's Keith Merrow, playing "Pillars of Creation" sick riff!

  • @Lutzifer31337
    @Lutzifer31337 Год назад +2

    i ve changed pickups in many guitars and mostly for hotter ones. So i always got the "loud is more good" response. But in the last few years i noticed that the pickup changes did not do much, sometimes even preferring the cheap ones, because of the clearer picture and more dynamic nature in the less hot ones. Thanx for making your point in a fun way :D

  • @nicholasmullins3693
    @nicholasmullins3693 Год назад +8

    You pretty much brought up the same difference that I heard. When you mentioned that one pickup had some more twang. Transient response is the biggest thing I noticed there, along with of course how hard it was pushing the amp.

    • @michaelmoore7975
      @michaelmoore7975 Год назад

      Yeah, the one that he said had twang...was the Duchess. It's actually a P-90 single coil, or a P-94 to be precise. The P-94 fits humbucker routing, the P-90 doesn't.
      I guess he didn't realize it.

    • @michaelmoore7975
      @michaelmoore7975 Год назад

      @@DerSilvano The 1st clue was the pole pieces down the middle instead of offset like regular humbuckers.
      It wont let me post a link, so see if this works.A company called Cream T. They got magical string amplifiers called Duchess P90.
      They reverse engineered 1963 335 ES pickups and made Duchess. But not a typical P-90. It's made to fit into a regular humbucker routing. Technically, that makes it a P-94. A regular P-90 is longer than a humbucker routing. The reason I say is because Gibson made the 1st P-94's a few years back, being more economical to have 1 less routing setup. But Cream T calls it P-90, prolly because it wants to avoid confusion or maybe copyright, trademark, or Gibson thuggery.
      But to be sure, it _is_ a single coil.
      EDIT:
      It wasn't a 1963 ES 335. It was the pickups from a 1961 ES 330 they reverse engineered.

  • @JamesDierken
    @JamesDierken Год назад +6

    Hey Glenn, just thought I'd mention that there are noticeable differences in output and clarity when pickups are wired differently (i.e. serial, parallel). For an experiment, I rewired a humbucker (which are normally in series) to parallel, which made the sound a lot twangier and the output became a lot lower, somewhat akin to a single coil. But regardless, finding a good set of speakers is still the most important key to your overall sound.

  • @DudeMcGuybro
    @DudeMcGuybro Год назад +9

    I can hear significant differences between the ceramic and the PAF, the Duchess just sounds like a hot single coil, no doubt. The ceramic has a lot more high end, scooped mid range. PAF's have a huge bottom end, and are more pushed in the lower mids. Blindfold me, and smack me in the head with a bat, and I promise I could still pick these out in a muffled room.
    Granted, changing speaker, or mic if you're recording is going to make a bigger difference, but I'm not going to act like pickup choice isn't a major component in the final tone.
    All I know, is that all of this shit still matters more than tonewood.

    • @gdawgs101
      @gdawgs101 Год назад +1

      Agreed. Glenn loves huffing his own farts

    • @onerandombruh
      @onerandombruh 5 месяцев назад +2

      Tone comes from the dust specks that hide on guitar's mini cavities.

  • @CascadianExotics
    @CascadianExotics Год назад +6

    So, this does confirm a long time suspicion of mine that there isn't much difference in voicing within a range from XYZ brand...just different output and gain characteristics. Would definitely be interested in seeing a shootout between a similar flagship passive pickup from different manufacturers (ie: Duncan TB1 vs EMG H3 vs DiMarzio PAF Pro). Thanks for everything you do for us, Glen. And have a happy New Year!

    • @Asmogrim
      @Asmogrim Год назад

      Yes, I came to ask the same thing. If the pickups, wood, strings, etc don't do much to change the tone, what would vary the tone between models and brands? The way the electronics are wired?

    • @CascadianExotics
      @CascadianExotics Год назад

      @@Asmogrim honestly, there really isn't much to a pickup beyond a copper wire wound around a magnet. Obviously, there are variables that can be manipulated here, hence my curiosity. But, I've found that the material composition of a $1 capacitor on your tone potentiometer has more bearing on your overall tone than your wood, strings, and pickups combined.

  • @defkross
    @defkross Год назад +38

    I've noticed a bigger difference between active and passive, but with the active you influence the signal with some amplification. Great video as always. I have to listen to random people play guitar all day, people's fingers sound more different than anything else.

    • @benjaminaristotleboes3157
      @benjaminaristotleboes3157 Год назад +4

      He's got a video debunking that too with different guys playing the same setups and same riffs.....

    • @behulls
      @behulls Год назад

      @@benjaminaristotleboes3157 which video is this man? I've searched but can't find it.

    • @benjaminaristotleboes3157
      @benjaminaristotleboes3157 Год назад

      @@behulls Here ya go!!!! You're welcome....

    • @benjaminaristotleboes3157
      @benjaminaristotleboes3157 Год назад

      I won't say I necessarily agree with the method or riffs used doing this but here it is.....

    • @defkross
      @defkross Год назад +2

      @@benjaminaristotleboes3157 I don't think I would say debunked, we are talking about talented players. Sometimes when you try to eliminate too many variables you can skew your results. He does prove the point which is you don't need to spend a ton of money on gear to sound great.

  • @thombat999
    @thombat999 Год назад +15

    Thats very interesting. Im a newbie and this blew me away! I really thought there was a big difference until your big reveal. Thank you for this. This is a perfect example of why experience matters knowing how things work and why a great sound guy is essential.

    • @SpectreSoundStudios
      @SpectreSoundStudios  Год назад +9

      Thanks! I’m glad you found this useful! What would you like to see next?

    • @Dram1984
      @Dram1984 Год назад

      @@SpectreSoundStudios 500k sub tit reveal. :p

    • @thombat999
      @thombat999 Год назад +2

      @@SpectreSoundStudios I refuse to be your Butthurt of the Week bid (altbough I do find them funny) and your miniwar with Gibson is sorta dead on and funny too, but my 2019 Les Paul classic is pretty awesome.

    • @mech14Nine
      @mech14Nine Год назад +1

      @@SpectreSoundStudios How about a video about dialing in guitar EQ for Mixing/Mastering? I am having a hard time deciding how much low and high to cut, and what makes for some good compression settings :) How bout some tips on things look for?

    • @adityaa953
      @adityaa953 Год назад +5

      @@SpectreSoundStudios Active vs passive pickups!

  • @dispersemedia
    @dispersemedia Год назад +3

    The type of magnet also usually dictate the number of wire turns, which I believe has more effect to the frequency response than the magnets. Off the shelf pickups rarely stray away from that. Therefore, the only way to have a significant change in tone is to have a pickup custom made. But then, there is very limited (physical) space to play around with the number of windings. So unless you actually change the physical size or shape of the pickup, a custom wound pickup would still be not too different from off the shelf pickups.

    • @sid35gb
      @sid35gb Год назад

      Custom pickups if you’ve got money to burn have at it. You can buy over wound and under wound pickups. As for space they can use a different gauge wire if they want to fit more turns in the same space. The differences in tone is limited and you can shape your tone with pedals an EQ pedal which will be more potent then any pickup. The biggest change is between types so single coil, P90 and humbucker. Try a P90 a proper one like a dog ear shape or soap bar shape they help with really heavy tones.

  • @guitarandgames1386
    @guitarandgames1386 Год назад +80

    I love everyone in the comments huffing on glue and screaming "NO MY PICKUPS HAVE TO MAKE A DIFFERENCE, I PAID 200$ FOR A DIMEBUCKER IT HAS TO MAKE ME A BETTER PLAYER"

    • @gilbertspader7974
      @gilbertspader7974 Год назад +7

      It's gotta be the shoes 👞.

    • @guitarandgames1386
      @guitarandgames1386 Год назад +4

      @Gilbert Spader nah man it's the tone screws in the 3000$ pedal

    • @chrislariviere3669
      @chrislariviere3669 Год назад +5

      Ooooof, the Dimebucker.... Slapping Dime's name on that was an insult 🤣

    • @kenjincapers
      @kenjincapers Год назад +1

      Meanwhile I'm just happy I finally have a humbucker to install single coils and metal are uh tricky. Especially cheaply made single coils. (See near microphonic)

    • @gilbertotoledo1421
      @gilbertotoledo1421 Год назад +2

      Meanwhile the Wilde L500XL (Dimebag's actual pickup) can be bought new for like 60 bucks.

  • @markmanbeck5210
    @markmanbeck5210 Год назад +7

    I’d love to see a video on bass pickups, even something budget friendly like the Ibanez soundgear series has a three band eq and a boost and it would be really interesting to see a breakdown of how it actually works

    • @JaredNash13
      @JaredNash13 Год назад +2

      I had been thinking about this. I could totally be wrong, but there is a substantial difference between a Dingwall Combustion and my Yamaha 5-string. I had considered buying the pickups from the Dingwall because I am a hardcore Nolly fan, but looking at this video, it might not be worth it!

    • @rhitosparsha
      @rhitosparsha Год назад +2

      @@JaredNash13 that Dingwall tone is awesome, but I believe it's a combination of the extra long scale length combined with the fact that Nolly mostly uses the two pickups in series, which gives it that signature bite. I don't think it's easily achievable with something like a J bass.

  • @Choji11
    @Choji11 Год назад +7

    Loved this video, especially when you basically showed all the ways big name manufacturers might change the tone of the pickups in their own shootouts. I think it's been mentioned but I'd be interested to see the difference in active pickups vs. passive. Will active pickups give you more clarity or is the only benefit the added maintenance of swapping a 9 volt every 6 months. We now see that passive pickups won't make a significant difference in tone, but will active?

  • @danielleohallisey4218
    @danielleohallisey4218 Год назад +4

    Gleeennnnnn! I really want to hear this test with clean sounds. Not arguing anything at all; just appreciate what you’re doing and wondering how much it applies to different situations. Thanks for the great work and happy fucking New Year!

    • @bobbykoalaproductions
      @bobbykoalaproductions Год назад

      He’s gonna say “that’s not metal”
      Meanwhile the biggest metal bands in the world are known for having great low gain or clean tones

  • @southernpanda33
    @southernpanda33 Год назад +1

    The only edge of breakup we get on this channel is Glenn’s voice.

    • @SpectreSoundStudios
      @SpectreSoundStudios  Год назад +1

      Wrong. ruclips.net/video/CdeqqfTW3_Q/видео.htmlsi=GeVrf85LdhOacenf

    • @southernpanda33
      @southernpanda33 Год назад

      I meant need but fuck it, I’ll let the typo stand 😂😂 cheers, Glenn.

  • @StephGV2
    @StephGV2 Год назад +1

    Pickups are inductors. Like flyback transformers which enhance phase and ferrite core chokes that cancel it.
    Pickups enhance and cancel frequencies. Sometimes I'm sure, by engineering them to enhance and cancel frequencies or make peaks and valleys occur at specific places in the spectrum.
    Pickups with the same spools, magnets and winding spacing because the same gauge wire is used, have the important ingredients homogenized within the same manufacturer. If that's the case here and the difference is number of windings, that might account for why they don't sound *substantially* different. The pickups coming from the same manufacturer isolates a variable that exists when pickups come from different manufacturers.
    A million OD pedals tells me that guitarists generally don't agree on what good "tone" is. I think I'm just as likely to get good tone from a $20 pickup as a $350 custom wound pickup. Also I wire my humbuckers with a parallel switch and get a whole different frequency response with a whole bunch of frequencies cancelled and enhanced.
    Why don't more guitars have a switch for neck and bridge in series for a humbucker of humbuckers? On the guitar I have wired that way, it is really good for metal. And really good for clean to crunch in the same song without a pedal. Guitarists do not take advantage of all the tone opportunities a guitar can produce.

  • @johnkirk6980
    @johnkirk6980 Год назад +5

    Although the differences in the pickups are small and different mic techniques could probably achieve the same results, I did feel that the alnico pickups have more clarity to the ceramic ones, which in my opinion does change the tone.

    • @SpectreSoundStudios
      @SpectreSoundStudios  Год назад +7

      Sure. VERY slightly. Not really what one should be worried about when recording guitar.

    • @DrBRockstar2000
      @DrBRockstar2000 Год назад +1

      @@SpectreSoundStudios Exactly -- it's all about the SPEAKERS AND MICS!! 🤘🤘🤘

    • @andremagnani
      @andremagnani Год назад +1

      That's literally just a change in output though... Just turn your gain dial one way or another.

  • @digiscream
    @digiscream Год назад +7

    Tone isn't the only reason to change pickups, though (mind you, having a neck humbucker that's slightly single-coil-y even under gain, like the SD '59, is actually my preference). Pickup output levels _do_ matter - especially in a live context, where you may find that pickup with higher output gets you to the level of distortion on a maxed rhythm channel and you don't want yet another pedal to tap-dance on. That's often the case with Soldano-style amps, for example.
    If you really want an eye-opener, try Lace Sensor Duallies like the Red/Blue. With both coils on, it's a humbucker. With just Red, it's a different-sounding humbucker (really). With just Blue, you'd swear you were playing a high-output Strat.

    • @groper6793
      @groper6793 Год назад +3

      Thank you, finally someone who know something

    • @groper6793
      @groper6793 Год назад +2

      @skratchrapture agreed, the 59 is a favorite neck position pup. That Dave Murray lead solo sound ! But ol loud mouth here will tell you it does nothing for your tone. His inexperience as a player has really been shining lately as he believes he has become a scientist lol

    • @digiscream
      @digiscream Год назад +1

      And, of course, there are other reasons - for example, high-output pickups often involve stronger magnets, which pull harder on the strings and often result in reduced sustain. Cheap ceramic and neodymium pickups are sods for this, so pickups with weaker magnets but more windings in the coil can combat this to a large extent, but they're usually more expensive.
      Conversely, if you want the high output but your pickups have to be too close to the strings to get there, pickups with stronger magnets that can sit further away might be a good solution.
      Too many people focus on "tone" as the only reason to change pickups. The reality is that there are a whole host of practical reasons to do so, and not all of them involve "tone" (and "tone" doesn't even just mean "EQ", as seems to be the assumption here).

  • @killergrooves2438
    @killergrooves2438 Год назад +14

    This is my favorite video you’ve done. I had no idea that just moving the mic position alone would make such a big difference in tone, let alone all the other things you did. You just saved me potentially thousands of dollars on pickups and a ton of time soldering. I hate soldering.

  • @cskaplan
    @cskaplan Год назад

    Great comparison, thanks. I did want to let you know that something significant did change. When I turned up the volume on my headset the sound noticeably got louder!

  • @fallenshallrise
    @fallenshallrise Год назад +1

    Different pickups do sound subtly different to me but as guitarists we need to ask ourselves why so many guitarists swap or "upgrade" their pickups but so few have an EQ pedal first in the chain on their pedalboard. Grab a Boss GE-7 and you get "hotter" pickups if you want, or more "articulation" or more "warmth" - your signature pickup sound is at your fingertips - no soldering required.

  • @richardh7982
    @richardh7982 Год назад +4

    I have a guitar with custom pickups from Peg City Pickups. One thing that's different from any other guitar I own Is the higher strings are hotter than the lower ones. This helps lead parts cut through when playing a combination of rhythm and lead. It's a great sounding guitar.

    • @luca4352
      @luca4352 Год назад +2

      You get the same effect when putting the top poles closer to the strings. That doesn't make your pickup special, no offense..

    • @RX120D
      @RX120D Год назад +1

      You sure the side of the pickup under the treble strings is not closer than the side under the bass strings? A tilt like this will result in exactly what you describe with any pickups.

    • @xngr
      @xngr Год назад

      Just out of interest: Have you checked the pick-up height? Maybe it's slightly angled towards the higher strings?

    • @richardh7982
      @richardh7982 Год назад +1

      @@luca4352 Nah it's special, no offense!

    • @luca4352
      @luca4352 Год назад +1

      @@richardh7982 Ok

  • @myopicautisticmetal9035
    @myopicautisticmetal9035 Год назад +9

    I have gotten into Wilkinson pickups recently, they sound great and they're dirt cheap!

    • @martin-1965
      @martin-1965 Год назад

      Couldn't agree more. I go for the more expensive versions rather than the cheaper "M" series, as they just - when it comes to single coil strat style guitars - have, for want of a better word, better definition . I also love the Vintage range of guitars and Trev Wilkinson's hardware is ace and so cheap while always being good value and quality.

  • @JanXD
    @JanXD Год назад +6

    Of course you won't hear differences between a PAF copy and another PAF copy, or a Super Distortion and something similar. But you can definitely hear a difference between some completely different types of pickups, like a Seymour Duncan Invader (really high output, very low resonant peak) and a Fishman Fluence Modern Ceramic (really high output and "pre-shaped" tone because of an active preamp). The Fishman has significantly less low end.
    Some pickups can also have a big impact on the response to your playing, compare an EMG 81 to a Lundgren Black heaven and you'll notice that the EMG will always kinda have the same output level while the Lundgren will get much much quieter if you play with less force.

    • @SpectreSoundStudios
      @SpectreSoundStudios  Год назад +1

      That seems to be the consensus. Has anyone actually MADE that video, showing us exactly what happens in that sort of situation?

    • @JanXD
      @JanXD Год назад

      @@SpectreSoundStudios I could make that video on response/dynamics, my plan would be getting a cheap guitar and wiring the pickups straight to the output, because actives and passives would need different electronics. It will take some explaining why I need another guitar and a few weeks or months because I currently have a lot to do though.

    • @DrGand
      @DrGand Год назад

      @@SpectreSoundStudios Yeah, the one you referenced in the beginning of the video.
      Keith Merrow in the description of his video "As before, I used the same guitar, same amp tone, same mix, and same riffs. All of these pickups would most likely sound great if I were to dial in the amp according to how the pickup reacts to the guitar. But, for the sake of consistency, the amp settings are exactly the same on every clip so you can hear the tonal variations between them IN THIS GUITAR."
      Sonic Drive Studio also did a high gain pickup shootout ruclips.net/video/BpudhuzqOX0/видео.html
      Are the differences worth spending $80 on a new bridge pickup for a metal player? Yeah if the guitar's proprietary pickup sounds muddy or doesn't have enough output, sure. But if a guitar comes stock with a good sounding pickup already then no probably not.
      It's definitely possible for pickups to sound like shit though; shoutout to Jackson's "duncan designed" and CVR2 pups. Luckily most dont.

    • @Komatik_
      @Komatik_ Год назад

      @@JanXD Doing that would be a good contribution for sure. Remember to be very precise with pickup placement - as Jim Lill's air guitar video showed, even small differences in pickup distance from the strings has huge effects on sound.

  • @RedHeadGuitar
    @RedHeadGuitar Год назад +1

    Grrrrrreat video! I love how you fooled us over and over again, my smile was getting wider and wider, I knew right from the beginning what was going on. :D I learned this by pure coincidence when I was playing guitar for pfff...a year? Fun story goes like this: I walked into the practice room and saw my guitar teacher brought a fancy guitar over to the music school (I think it was some Framus). I asked if I could try it out and he allowed me to. I plugged it in (50w 1x12 Marshall JVM combo, I remember that...good stuff), dialed in some high gain tone (because more gain is more cool for a 15 year old, ya know..) , started playing some very uninspired riffs and discovered the guitar had an extra little switch. Played around with that and after a very short while asked what the switch was doing, because the difference was pretty underwhelming. A little bit of a shift in the high end but 95 precent of the tone stayed the same. My teacher kindly replied "This is a coil split and it's a very nice thing on cleans or light drive, but in the realms of high gain, pickups matter much less than you think, unless they're not totally muddy or noisy." Man, this advice has probably saved me a lot of money over the last two decades.

  • @crackermcfoxie7797
    @crackermcfoxie7797 Год назад +2

    What about the feel and inspiration in the player. People say that can't hear the difference or it does not matter in the mix, but as a musician. you react and play differently, when changes "small or large" happen. Such as the feel of an amp, when it is at lower distortions; compared to having higher gain. Same with the pickups. The Duchess had a single coil bite to it. More of a open twang or harsher top compared to the crossfire alnico. That extra twang that you're not use to hearing, can lead you down a different musical and playing path. maybe it inspires more pull offs or finger picking.

  • @rishaBh_c
    @rishaBh_c Год назад +8

    There have been so many channels that I've unsubscribed from because I felt like I've "grown out" of their content. But this is one channel I always find myself coming back to 👌🏻😂!! Keep doing what you do Glenn!!! Cheers!
    This is coming from a bass guitar/blues/rock electric guitar player.

  • @mateuszw5194
    @mateuszw5194 Год назад +8

    I would love to see active/passive comparison. For some reason I am always disappointed with actives when i try them and eventually change them to passives.

    • @SilentNightBodomNight
      @SilentNightBodomNight Год назад

      I want to see that too. However, I always find myself choose active lol.

    • @ryanbwags
      @ryanbwags Год назад

      Back in the day Actives were supposed to give you better clarity and more punch since the powered preamp would hit the front of your amp harder.
      I don't think that's the case anymore with a lot of new passive pickups with more consistent wiring methods and modern amp technology. I think It's just down to preference. I've never liked the way actives felt to me. I hate words like this but passives feel more organic and a little more real.

    • @kneztm
      @kneztm Год назад

      I agree.
      The difference is probably just the amount of gain difference though.
      (My solos seem much smoother on my actives compared to the passives)

    • @chadvarney26
      @chadvarney26 Год назад

      I made the mistake of saying something similar a couple years ago in a comment and I was deluged with butthurt comments. I had people actually arguing with me over what sounds I liked. They tried to tell me that I didn’t really like what I liked. It was hilarious

    • @hawshimagical
      @hawshimagical Год назад

      the lesser-known EMG fat 55 pickups sound just like a passive pickup. just use whatever pickup works for you honestly, its not a big deal

  • @ryanAcumming
    @ryanAcumming Год назад +4

    Cool video. Would be interesting if you made a video on trying to get an EMG 81 to sound like a single coil pickup with just EQ and maybe some other processing if its even possible. Would really like to use the same type of pickup for everything to keep things simple, not to mention I have that pickup in a few different guitars. Feeling that might be great for clean parts

  • @kistophe
    @kistophe Год назад +1

    I love ya Glen but I feel all this video proved was that 4 similar passive humbuckers from the same company all sound similar. Even then, I felt they each definitely had a slightly different flavour to them. Your point about the speaker, mic and placement being more impactful is certainly spot on, but you also confirm that having pickups that improve clarity and output is important. I think the only way forward is a better test involving a wider variety of pickups. Maybe EMG v SD v Fishman v Bareknuckle v Cheapies. However I'm aware of the logistical and financial issues surrounding that test. On a personal level, I replaced the cheap stock pickups on an Ibanez for EMGs and it's a much better instrument for the switch.

  • @TheAxe4Ever
    @TheAxe4Ever Год назад +10

    I never changed a pickup for a “massive tone difference”. They DO make a slight difference. It’s more for fine tuning your tone instead of using it as a building block. I knew Glenn was up to his normal fuckery in the first 3 tests. 😂. Because I never heard that kind of tone shift from a pickup change. That’s up to my amp (no…not the power tubes) and even more, the speaker. But what it does do for me (I can only speak from my own experience and no one else’s) is the feel of the guitar through the amp. And yes…..feel is a thing.

    • @groper6793
      @groper6793 Год назад +1

      This guy doesn’t take feel into consideration. He’s set on telling you he hears no difference

    • @SilentNightBodomNight
      @SilentNightBodomNight Год назад +2

      Yeah I don’t know where he’s getting the whole “massive” emphasis from. When I commented on a video weeks ago, I said actives vs passives have subtle but obvious differences. He replied and asked if I had any evidence to back that up. And that’s where I suggested he do a video about pickups. But yet he didn’t incorporate into the element what I asked. He just compared different passive humbuckers, which to me I already knew didn’t sound much different as if you compared it to an active humbucker (again like I said an EMG).

    • @martyshwaartz971
      @martyshwaartz971 Год назад

      @@groper6793 tbf he’s a recording engineer. Sound is the be all end all.

    • @groper6793
      @groper6793 Год назад +1

      @@martyshwaartz971 so he should stick to recording and not trying to prove professional guitar players wrong by saying wood, pickups, and a players had has no influence on tone. He’s f’d up.

  • @guitartonetopia
    @guitartonetopia Год назад +12

    Pickups definitely make a difference, but they're to refine the last 5% or so of your tone. Many are similar in spec too, but I hear a huge difference between a vintage PAF and an EMG. If you're building your tone from scratch, worry about the more important stuff first

    • @2hi2dye
      @2hi2dye Год назад +2

      I can hear a pretty substantial difference in pick ups. I'd love to feed into what Glenn says but I think I'm missing something...? When I swapped out a J90c for a Dimarzio x2n in my Model 2 the difference was massive. So what am I hearing if its not the pick ups?

    • @jeffreyquinonez8964
      @jeffreyquinonez8964 Год назад

      @@2hi2dyesounds like you’re hearing a change in the pickup sound 🤷‍♂️ lol

    • @Superman-pn1rx
      @Superman-pn1rx Год назад +3

      @@2hi2dye do you make A - B comparative with recorded samples of your guitar?
      Is the only way to really note if there’s a significant difference

    • @SoloSabbath
      @SoloSabbath 11 месяцев назад

      @@2hi2dye New strings, different strings, output/volume changes, different amp settings, or maybe nothing at all since by the time you switched it you had no recorded reference of what it sounded like before. Next time record a riff in your DAW and use the same signal chain on both pickup sets - probably won't hear that difference you think you remembered. Source: I have an $800 pickup set in my guitar and I don't think they sound "better" - they actually sound worse than the cheap stock pickups I replaced.

  • @brutesmagootes3996
    @brutesmagootes3996 Год назад +14

    I only mess with passive pickups, so I can only speak to that, but they can absolutely sound different from each other. Does it make you play better? No. Does it completely transform your guitar? No. But it still remains a fact. Just like WHERE the pickup placement is on a guitar makes a difference.

    • @milamber319
      @milamber319 Год назад

      cool. i look forward to your vid demonstrating that.

    • @brutesmagootes3996
      @brutesmagootes3996 Год назад

      @@milamber319 Just because I don’t have a video for it doesn’t me make it untrue. I don’t have a video that shows I breathe, nor will I make one, so am I wrong when I say I do? If you think that there is ZERO tonal effect between different pickups nor where they’re located in the body then you’re either new to guitar or you’re beyond help.

    • @skaldlouiscyphre2453
      @skaldlouiscyphre2453 Год назад

      @@brutesmagootes3996 Where they're located is easy to demonstrate massive changes. No one will dispute that, so nice red herring.
      Whether or not different pickups will make a significant difference on how your guitar sounds is much more debatable. 'Can' is the most important word you used.
      Yes, they can make a difference, whether or not most people will notice is another question. Odds are, they won't.
      Whether or not the average player will notice seems to be inconsistent. Many of us won't necessarily notice if a blind test is conducted.

    • @milamber319
      @milamber319 Год назад

      @@brutesmagootes3996 well Glen has a vid showing what you just said is untrue. So who am I going to believe. The vid showing its untrue with evidence or the anecdotal comment of someone saying it is true?
      If you want someone else to believe you you need evidence.
      And as Glen showed. Single and humbuckers are different. Where they are located are different. Noise rejection are different. Tone changes between the same type? Nope.

  • @DoktorRS66
    @DoktorRS66 Год назад +2

    I remember the first time I changed pickups was in a Frankenstein P Bass, and I got EMG's, not because I thought I'd get a drastic tonal improvement but because the stock pickups were noisy and EMG's are solder-less. I did notice improved evenness from string to string, and increased volume, but it's still a P Bass.

  • @JC-fj7oo
    @JC-fj7oo Год назад +1

    Reminds me of a quote from Jimi Hendrix's tech. He basically said he tried a ton of other pickups and found that the only difference was more windings gave more output with more bass, and less windings gave lower output with less bass. He spent a bunch of time fiddling with finding the perfect balanced winding resistance and it was exactly what comes stock on a Fender... After that he stopped fiddling.
    And just to top it off, if you really want control over your guitar's voicing, bass levels and output: BUY AN EQ PEDAL! You can pick them up for like $30 bucks. And even the cheapest one will do more for your tone than a pickup swap.

  • @Mr.Goldbar
    @Mr.Goldbar Год назад +5

    I did hear the difference in every single test. I knew already that it's not gonna be huge and all about the fine details, and that to me is worth it.
    For the big difference I'd change the speaker, but if I found my favorite speaker and the perfect settings and something is still not right I'd get new pickups, especially if I'm looking for a different output.
    What is for sure is two things.
    1. The placement of the pickup is more important than the pickup itself. Even a few millimetres can do a real shift in the tone and that's especially important when choosing which coils to use in splits.
    2. The Dutchess did sound different, but that's because it's a P90 in a humbucker housing, therefore a single coil.

    • @JustinLesamiz
      @JustinLesamiz Год назад

      Oh you and your magical ears, listening to a compressed RUclips video. Sure, you really heard a difference.

    • @Mr.Goldbar
      @Mr.Goldbar Год назад +1

      @@JustinLesamiz if that's called magical ears I wouldn't argue with that :)

  • @raytorvalds3699
    @raytorvalds3699 Год назад +7

    In my experience, I can make most pickups sound pretty much the same under high gain. Even my Tele can do metal if I hit it hard enough.
    It's in the cleaner tones where I find to be more difference between pickups.
    Sure, mic/placement and speakers make more difference but it's the sum of parts. As small as some parts can be.
    Edit: Your playing has become sick, Glenn! It does inspire me to me practice more. Cheers!

  • @lydfar2392
    @lydfar2392 Год назад +4

    From 30 years experience in producing and mixing metal music. I can confirm that everything on this channel is true. When it comes down to metal, it does not not matter: guitar woods, pickups, tubes, amplifier etc. It's just variants of noise and most bands sucks anyways... With other music genres, it's a different story, of course... 😄

    • @JasTheGoose88
      @JasTheGoose88 Год назад

      Yeah you've definitely spent that ammount of time and effort mixing and recording a genre you hate. We all believe you, dude. You definitely didn't just leave this comment because you hate metal or anything...

    • @lydfar2392
      @lydfar2392 Год назад

      @@JasTheGoose88 I was just just kidding... Joking with the main theme of the this series. Lots of irony and sarcastic comments in the video... 😃

  • @Augrills
    @Augrills Год назад +2

    The only pickup I’ve ever swapped was a strat bridge for a hotrail. I think the only big difference for humbuckers with high gain is if you go from a cheapo to something decent quality. But once you have something quality, it doesn’t make sure to keep changing it

  • @andrij.demianczuk
    @andrij.demianczuk Год назад +2

    Honestly, I do switch pickups when I get a new guitar, but usually it’s to keep all of my guitars within a similar output range. That way it actually makes them more similar rather than different and easier to EQ when I’m switching out guitars all the time. I tend to use shawbuckers in all of my guitars .

  • @neilduty8448
    @neilduty8448 Год назад +3

    After 45 years of guitar playing and searching for my signature sound this video has blown my mind thanks so much for debunking the myths and keep up the stirling work

  • @tinted_7475
    @tinted_7475 Год назад +5

    This is really interesting but I still would like to see the difference in cheap pickups something from an entry point squier or epiphone going up to a seymour duncan or dimarzio. This is really good at showing if you already have a nice guitar with boutique pickups that you need to change other parts of your rig before you swap pickups but I think the difference between cheap and expensive pickups would be interesting to see. Also if you found a a way to test a set of actives vs passives would be interesting that's always a discussion for higher gain genres.

  • @stratotele12
    @stratotele12 Год назад +4

    I have an honest question. How come all humbucker guitars don't sound the same? If tonewood doesn't matter, if pickups don't matter, then why in the world does a Strat with a Humbucker sound different than a Les Paul with a humbucker. Scale length? Ok, ok, maybe. Then why does an SG sound different than a Les Paul? Pickup placement? Maybe, I've never measured them, so maybe the pickup is in a different spot. Then why don't all Les Pauls sound pretty much the same? I'm not disagreeing with your conclusion that speakers are the best investment for sound change, but I've played several Les Pauls and some of them sound pretty different through the same amp.

    • @DragonToad7378
      @DragonToad7378 Год назад

      Keep in mind each guitar is using different pots and other components in the wiring along with the pickups. Each of these have a similar measured rating but might not be the same as another guitar. The only way you can truly test what you are describing is to have a setup wired with some kind of quick disconnect for pickups that is entirely contained outside the guitar body. That way you can test the pickups with the identical wiring in each guitar. I have not seen anyone do this yet and have contemplated trying it myself.

    • @DragonToad7378
      @DragonToad7378 Год назад +1

      PS…I also forgot to point out that when using high distortion amps the subtle nuances that most people claim to hear from pickups tends to get lost.

    • @stratotele12
      @stratotele12 Год назад

      @@DragonToad7378 Agreed, at some point distortion compresses the sound so much that touch related dynamics are almost gone.

  • @zackbaron2777
    @zackbaron2777 Год назад +2

    I personally noticed a pretty substantial difference between the ceramic and alnico. I really like the last one you showed in the video. So many factors go into tone. I personally find pickups to be a large part of it. Density of wood also makes a difference. I have found over the years that I prefer an alnico 2 in the bridge and a 5 in the neck. I also like doing a series/parallel push pull. Very good video.

    • @SpectreSoundStudios
      @SpectreSoundStudios  Год назад +2

      Watch. ruclips.net/video/CdeqqfTW3_Q/видео.htmlsi=GeVrf85LdhOacenf

  • @janhanson6296
    @janhanson6296 Год назад +1

    Hey dude, it was awesome to see you investigate this one.... although if i could offer some constructive criticism, i think you may have tested the least important variables inherent to pickups. ultimately the only thing the magnet is responsible for is field strength (which should only affect output) the material it is made of is electrically irrelevant, like people arguing pointlessly over paper/oil caps vs mica etc. I think some more interesting variables would be: number of windings, winding radius, pole piece spacing, pole piece size, covered vs uncovered. And while it may still turn out to make too small a difference to be important it also may not as the impedance of a pickup (as with a speaker or any other kind of inductor) is a frequency dependant complex value (complex as in x+iy not as in complicated), on a seperate note; given that active pickups have small preamps in them there could also (potentially) be eq circuits tacked on and by extension larger differences between different active pickups (or not who knows).
    in any event thanks Glen its always good to get people questioning their assumptions about what is important.

  • @BeanDogStudios
    @BeanDogStudios Год назад +4

    I wonder how Keith Merrow got all those pickups sounding more different from one another than all of my guitars do, with different pickups, woods, scale lengths and strings gauges.

    • @saflex1
      @saflex1 Год назад

      EQing or different amp settings for example. And because wood, strings and scale length make no tone difference

    • @static_motion
      @static_motion Год назад +3

      @@saflex1 Strings and scale length (assuming constant tuning pitch) absolutely do influence the timbre of the sound.

    • @BeanDogStudios
      @BeanDogStudios Год назад +1

      @@saflex1 pretty sure he claimed to have used the same amp settings for all the pickups. Must have a setup that massively amplifies tiny differences.

    • @MickH60
      @MickH60 Год назад +2

      Probably because they DO sound different....

  • @adammieloch8487
    @adammieloch8487 Год назад +5

    For anyone interested in pickup comparison videos, this is a great source: m.youtube.com/@mikestamper
    Clean chanel is where the differences are obvious. But yeah... with cranked distortion, not so much.

  • @wouldukindly8628
    @wouldukindly8628 Год назад +5

    There was definitely a tone difference between the pickups. What next Glen says different microphones wont affect tone?

    • @nisterror
      @nisterror Год назад +1

      🤦‍♂️

    • @MickH60
      @MickH60 Год назад

      I think the biggest problem fo a hell of a lot of people is the way they hear things, heard most people try and sing, It's nauseating. I'm an ear player, I have friends that are taught players, great players, that struggle to tune a guitar without a tuner, I've NEVER used a tuner, I hear chords as a group of notes, not a whole sound, my point is, a lot of people listening to this video won't pick up the differences in sound between the pickups, I thought the differences, when Glen finally stopped fucking around, were quite big....

    • @bobbykoalaproductions
      @bobbykoalaproductions Год назад

      @@MickH60 Yep, and also notice how similar the pickups are besides the P90, he’s playing all low notes and power chords and doesn’t turn the gain down or experiment with fuzzes or EQ

  • @Themis781
    @Themis781 Год назад

    That is a brilliant idea...the hot swap out pickups. I first saw this brilliant idea over 5 years ago when I stumbled across Relish guitars made in Sweden. Absolute genius. I love your videos. Straight to the point. You make it entertaining Glenn. If it wasn't for you and your channel I would not have learnt what I now know about recording metal. I am only an amateur but all the knowledge you share is gold. Thanks dude and all the best for the new year. Have a great 2023 \m/...

  • @HughJaeness
    @HughJaeness Год назад +2

    Ahhhh i love it when Drunk Glenn gets in front of a camera.

  • @epistaxis1395
    @epistaxis1395 9 месяцев назад

    Agreed completely!!! Only difference I’ve ever notice with high gain was active vs passive. Only swap I’ve done and noticed a difference was putting a EMG 85 in the bridge instead of the 81. Lot darker and muddy

  • @ehoc42
    @ehoc42 Год назад +5

    Changing pickups isn’t only to change your recorded tone, it’s also a feel thing. Amount of compression, string separation, etc. Oh and obviously they’ll be great tone differences not at high gain :).

  • @gdawgs101
    @gdawgs101 Год назад +4

    Me: Changes pickups, notices the differences in frequency responce and appreciates the difference in sound.
    Glenn: "No you didn't, you're stupid"
    Me: Ight then 🫤

    • @josephclark5965
      @josephclark5965 3 месяца назад

      I agree but disclosure, I don't do ENTIRE sessions with full distortion. I turn it back in *areas to make the rest stand out more (Kinda like Metallica used to do)
      And I'm no expert in mixing. I have less time for setup or anywhere near the equipment and options. Or remember exactly what effect every move will have, like GF does.
      I just take advantage of the things I'm confident in. (Light V dark pickups or which works with MY speakers. Even which PU's still cut thru better once other instruments are added. Dylan TT explained why that happens in a vid. It was true in *my situation. Some PU's have frequencies that just disappear in *MY setup)

  • @maddog7012
    @maddog7012 Год назад +6

    I think it really comes down to quality of the pickup. If your guitar has really cheap chinesium pickups, a basic quality brand pickup will sounds way better. I've gone though a few pickups and didn't notice much of a difference until I had a really cheap guitar that I put a good pickup in and it really made the tone a lot clearer even distorted.

    • @maltebergman5242
      @maltebergman5242 Год назад +1

      Yep, also passive/active are pretty different in my experience. At least EMGs are very flat and stale compared to a passive Seymour Duncan, maybe Seymour Duncan's active pickups are better though. But I doubt you could swap same brand passive humbuckers of the same output level and get a bigger difference than just tweaking an overdrive a bit.

  • @capacitiveguitarresistance
    @capacitiveguitarresistance Год назад +1

    there is a significant difference when changing pickups but speakers amps and position of mics is much more significant and pronounced.

  • @phunniguy
    @phunniguy Год назад +4

    So my comment got deleted or something, so I'll just drop this video of Keith Merrow testing a ton of pickups here, instead of only four that Glenn tested:
    ruclips.net/video/KbRlcdNHYDM/видео.html
    And also, EQ before distortion is NOT the same as EQ after distortion, so pickups do make a difference in how the amp reacts to your playing.

  • @shanelaing4402
    @shanelaing4402 Год назад +2

    Absolutely loved this video. Different approach to testing. You got me each time with the changing cabs and mics 😂
    Well done. ❤
    Thank you 🙏

  • @paulcarpenter2807
    @paulcarpenter2807 Год назад

    Hi Glenn , greetings from the UK . Thanks for the pickup demo the biggest surprise really was the difference between speakers / mics and mic placement . Good job carry on 👍

  • @jasonb8797
    @jasonb8797 Год назад +4

    That was freaking awesome and I can hear the meltdowns! After seeing how you can change your tone, do you have any recommendations for mic and speaker combos? I'm a drummer that dabbles in guitar, so please excuse my ignorance. Keep on making these outstanding videos!

  • @Leonhart72metal
    @Leonhart72metal Год назад +14

    Hey Glenn, you should check out the Seymour Duncan P-Rails, it’s not so much about tone but about versatility (Single coil, P90 and Humbucker on one pickup)
    Also, would be cool to see a video on Fishman Fluence vs EMGs

    • @6slayer6sam62
      @6slayer6sam62 Год назад +1

      I suggested the same a few wk ago. I plan on getting a set. They seem totally different than any other pickup how you can run them in series or parallel, or split them. Kind of a swiss army knife of the p.u. world i think!

    • @leviathan_is_me
      @leviathan_is_me Год назад +2

      Don't forget the triple shot pickup rings with them or your wiring job will be a nightmare.

    • @Leonhart72metal
      @Leonhart72metal Год назад +1

      @@leviathan_is_me they do help, but I installed mine with 2 on/on/on mini switches, works fine as well

    • @6slayer6sam62
      @6slayer6sam62 Год назад +1

      @@leviathan_is_me look up Gary Heibner's review of them, it's really good. He's using a push pull method...looks complicated, but that's how i'd want it i think.

    • @mohitrahaman
      @mohitrahaman Год назад

      Mike Stamper does those very well

  • @evilrobotchris
    @evilrobotchris Год назад +3

    I think the spectrum of what an engineer is thinking of sound wise is very different than what a guitarist thinks of. There is still a sound difference with different pickups, and the guitarist is going to think of their sound in the room. Anything after that is studio magic a lot of them take for granted. Whereas an engineer is going to look at the end result of the recorded sound and aren’t as fixated on the minutia of the different steps to get there when they can get more significant results from a basic EQ, let alone all the stuff they’re actually going to do to get to the final product.

  • @trenceraponer
    @trenceraponer Год назад +1

    I just put a Duncan custom sh5 and a dimarzio air Norton in most of my guitars. The Duncan is a nice vanilla pickup without much going in any direction of extremes. The air Norton has a specific sound I can recognize anytime I hear it, and it sounds great clean. I don’t ever try anything else anymore.

  • @greenman717
    @greenman717 Год назад +1

    Pickups with great note clarity, proper intonation with saddle adjustment and nut slots set right, fresh strings and great speakers. That's literally all you need to focus on for an incredible tone

    • @gibson2623
      @gibson2623 Год назад

      And it doesn t exist. LoL

  • @aspegiic
    @aspegiic Год назад +4

    Once again, almost everybody can hear the big differences. Not many can hear the more subtle stuff, that’s why it makes a bigger difference to those who have a better ear.

    • @nisterror
      @nisterror Год назад +1

      🤣

    • @bobbykoalaproductions
      @bobbykoalaproductions Год назад +1

      @@DerSilvano It depends on what you’re using in your situation. Of course people aren’t gonna hear the subtle difference between pickups when you compress the signal with a shit-ton of gain. Get a DI, or a tone with low-ish gain, compare a single coil or a p90 to a humbucker with both neck and bridge, you’ve got your tone shift, put a shit ton of gain on it through the same chain, and they sound the same.

    • @aspegiic
      @aspegiic Год назад +1

      @@DerSilvano if the person chooses to because it makes a difference to him yes. If it doesn’t make a difference don’t spend the money. The only one who it will make a difference to is to the musician who notices the difference or not. I don’t condemn either way. It’s just that to say you don’t hear a difference is one thing, to say that it doesn’t make a difference is just arrogance. Because you are saying you have the same ears as the best musicians and if you don’t hear it, nobody else does. Going back to the pickups, if you wanna spend because it makes a difference to you, go ahead. If it doesn’t make a difference to you, don’t spend the money, I bet it’ll sound good too.

    • @bobbykoalaproductions
      @bobbykoalaproductions Год назад +2

      @@DerSilvano I'm talking about metal too, there is tone shifts with pickups changes with high gain too. Instead of using just tube amp gain to compare pickups, especially single coils p90s and humbuckers, try using a fuzz pedal instead or sometimes solid state mid/high gain tones and you'll get much different results interchanging those pickups. Especially if you’re playing more than power chords. Tone is just the overall sound, whether it clean or muddy. Different pickups make tone more versatile. Many metal guitar players/engineers record at lower gain than you might think they do.

    • @aspegiic
      @aspegiic Год назад +1

      @@DerSilvano evidence shows it matters, to a lesser percentage. And that is what I am saying, those more sensitive and with better ears that small percentage makes a big difference. Just because you or I don’t hear it doesn’t mean others don’t. And that’s OK

  • @xerodelacroix5552
    @xerodelacroix5552 Год назад +4

    Glenn is deaf, confirmed.

  • @0riole11
    @0riole11 Год назад

    OK Blues guy here, and I know this is a Metal channel, but I have always agreed with you on this point. The pickups do sound different, but not to the point where an EQ change or a clean boost in front of everything wouldn't achieve. I have changed pickups in 3 of my 14 electric guitars, 2 were going to different types of pickups, Humbucker to Wide Range and "Dual Coil P90 style" to P90, one was just changing out very dull sounding cheap pickups to something that worked, the last was swapping a 2 wire humbucker for a 4 wire, so I could split the coils when needed. With pickups I've found the height adjustment can make a more significant change than changing humberkers of the same construction type. I am looking change out some humbuckers for P-Rails, but again it's for coil spiting functionality on a gigging guitar, so as to be able to reduce the amount of guitars needed at gigs

  • @JG52Gutted
    @JG52Gutted Год назад +1

    I just changed a Seymour Duncan Invader to a Black Winter and can hear the difference. Same guitar, same strings, same pickup height, same amp settings. Recorded some chugging and put them back to back in cubase on a loop. The Invader is noticeably flubbier in the low end when palm muting. Whereas the Black Winter is more crisp and defined.

  • @danbag0815
    @danbag0815 Год назад

    This video is pure gold ! I mistaken it with another video, that's also pure gold. This content is one of a kind.

  • @larmerguitars
    @larmerguitars Год назад +2

    There's definitely a difference between how the pickups sound albeit minor, however I think that differences in how they react to things picking dynamics, sustain, degree of vibrato, etc (i hate calling it a feeling but a feeling, lol) are what causes a lot of people to chase a specific sound through pickup selection. Riffs are probably the best control for most players but solos or super dynamic sections may highlight more of the unique characteristics of the pickups. I could be dead wrong, that's just how I generally view certain guitars that I own (some just sound and play a bit chunkier than others, some are more buttery and lend themselves more to lead playing).

  • @NOISWRX
    @NOISWRX Год назад +1

    Once again an honest and true demonstration on guitar tone, Bravo Glen! Speaking of tone: (with the Iommi guitar sound episode in mind) how about an episode on how the Geddy Lee/ Chris Squire Rickenbacker bass sound is created, Speak of iconic sound which gives a guy an instant... well... you know... What speakers/amps/effects do (did) they use? Would very much look forward to another enlightening video! And yes... i'm a bassplayer.. as well as a guitar player. Cheers!

  • @DanCooz323
    @DanCooz323 Год назад

    Bought a Charvel DK24 with a Full Shred in the bridge, and it was a little ice-picky. Swapped the AlNiCo magnet out to a ceramic for $3, and swapped out the allen head screws for Fillister screws for $5. Made an absolute difference; shrill highs smoothed out and a bunch more bass response. THAT is the type of investment I like to make! Doesn't hurt that I rewired it all too: Bridge humbucker-bridge parallel-both humbuckers-neck parallel-neck humbucker.
    Super versatile guitar, with $8 in mods.

  • @NeinFeline
    @NeinFeline Год назад

    You were on 70K tons on 2020, Brother.
    Was cool seeing you aboard and glad you had a memorable time 🤘🧐🤘

  • @RodVonLongrod
    @RodVonLongrod Год назад

    I own an Epiphone Riviera P93. It comes from the factory with metal pickup covers. Taking them off improves the tone. It was noticeable for me. I tried using plastic covers on them but like them uncovered as my pinky likes to grab on to the edge of the bridge pickup when I pick. I think once the metal covers are off they sound fine. No need to upgrade.

  • @Grili561
    @Grili561 Год назад

    Over quarantine from 2020-2021 I spent a lot of time and money trying out pickups from many different companies. I don’t regret it, because I learned a lot about guitar setup/wiring etc. I no longer concern myself about pickups unless they are actually broken. Also, I no longer ask other musicians/guitarists which tones they prefer; instead I ask regular folks with zero music experience.