Aren't you the guy who just recently based his judgment on the worth of peoples' experience, based solely on their taste in music? Maybe lead by example.
Of course it's a good thing b/c it's eroding the absolutism ("inherent bias") that I find self-defeating. I'm basically agreeing by pointing out the flaw in thinking it has to be EMG's, or mahogany, or neve or mesa or whatever when keeping an open mind will lead you down different and occasionally better paths.There is nothing self-defeating here. It's a personal revelation. Experience after experience slowly eroding away inherent bias. In the real world, most call this a 'good thing'.
Well, I was never much of an '81' guy, but I did have an appreciation for 85s and 707s, the latter of which I've had in my main personal guitar for several years now. The problem is that I keep hearing their undesirable characteristics whenever they're recorded. They always seem to have this flat, compressed sound, no matter how they're run. Sure, passives may take more work to seat in dense metal arrangements, but the end results usually end up being more sonically pleasing to me. I don't like to compromise whole mixes just for the sake of one element... EMGs always force me to do that.
There are only so many times you can have that experience before you stop trying to see the shades of grey, save yourself the heartache and just say 'screw the actives'.
On a sidenote you guys really ought to hear the guitar sound we're getting on an album that's being tracked here right now. '59 in an all-Mahogany guitar, Rosewood fretboard, no paint. It's absolute bliss. I don't think there is a single unpleasant high frequency in the raw sound. I'm trying to get Studio Fredman onto the reamps, to do it absolute justice.
Did you use it in bridge or neck position?
I've got a ESP M-II with JB in bridge and 59 in neck and while the JB is fucking awesome the 59 is very weak... might be something bad with it tho, I'm always going for the JB
Did you use it in bridge or neck position?
I LOVE emgs, always have, always will.
I don't think they sound sterile and undynamik at all (especially not with the 18 mod).
But I've recorded great tones with passives as well.
Although 90% of my guitars are emg equipped I still have some passive guits as well, I was never 100% exclusive.
But I've never been a fan I the JB tbh, always thought that it sounds like a great rock pickup, but I never liked the grainymess and mids in a metal context. I absolutely hated the JB that came in my USA jacksons always made the guitar sound "hardrock".
The first time I ever liked the JB was in Sneap's Edwards V, sounds great in that guitar (the V is a bit thinner than the regular Gibson one).
iPhone post, ignore te mistakes
To me what matters the most is that an artist is happy with their sound, and that they feel it conveys what's in their head. For me as an artist, switching from passives to EMG 707s and 85s helped me find the sound that was in my head back in 2004. I will probably always use active EMGs in my main guitars (although I also own guitars with passive Duncans, DiMarzios, etc.)
That said, I love passive pickups, and it really comes down to what's best for each individual project, song, or part. One of the most annoying things I've seen go on with this and other forums (with pickups and other categories of gear) is fads. It seems every few years, the majority of users on a particular forum decide that one gear option is somehow objectively better sounding than another option. It's all about finding the right tool for the job - gear recommendations are great, but use them to explore and find your own sound! Sometimes that quest takes years and lots of experimentation (as Ermz has done to arrive at his newfound preference.)