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One or both of these guitars may be up for sale. There was an interested buyer asking about them on the forum, so I made the video to share with him. Since it's somewhat educational, I figured I might share with the rest of yous.
There's a recording glitch around 1:10 where you hear both tracks simultaneously. I didn't notice until I was mastering (some attention to detail), and by then it was too much work to fix. Also, I accidentally labeled both videos as L7s. Woops.
That's it. Don't have much to say about the comparison. The Epiphone sounds eppy and the Gibson sounds gibby.
It's not a "this vs. that" video. If you want to comment on your preference, feel free to do so. If you do, please also give some specific descriptions of what you hear.
Sorry for encouraging cork sniffing. It beats huffing glue, I guess.Last edited by omphalopsychos; 02-11-2018 at 12:12 AM.
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02-10-2018 10:29 PM
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The L-7 sounds sweeter and more to my tastes, but the Epiphone sure has some volume and punch.
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you also have them mislabeled in the video, apparently.
the epi sounds more compressed and directional, the gibson sounds a little more full and broadband. epi was warm and middy and could probably be heard from space. depends on the context and need, but i'd probably reach for the gibson solo and the epi in a group or crowded mix.
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Two great-sounding instruments! I would be hard-pressed to tell them apart in a blind test. In this case. the Epi seemed to have a slight edge in the sweet midrange department, with the Gibson having a tad more "cut." I would be really hard pressed to decide which of these truly fine instruments to part with. The confounding thing about archtops is the player has the worst seat in the house, unless you pull a Robert Johnson and corner-load. Thank goodness for microphones and media!
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Absolutely no comparison. The Gibson blows it out of the water, so much sweeter so much fuller, more radiant sound.
Confession: I own the 1937 L7, for me it’s the perfect fingerpicking instrument.
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Originally Posted by feet
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Originally Posted by NSJ
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Originally Posted by omphalopsychos
Gibson made a reissue of the 1934 version , but alas they are NOWHERE to be found used, now.
I’m surprised they nemer reissued the Maybell Carter guitar with identical specs . That’s as ironic as they come, eh?
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Originally Posted by NSJ
Didn't they make the 34 reissue X braced? Seems like it would have a distinct sound from the original.
Anyway, here's my take on the two.
The Gibson has a brassier quality. At lower volumes, this brassiness translates to greater complexity. The Gibson suits chord melody very well. What's interesting is that the Gibson can get plenty of volume, but that brassiness translates to harshness at an ensemble volume. With the Gibson there's also the phenomenon that you get when playing a large x braced flat top. You get huge bass, but also lots of treble. Since this is an archtop, there's still plenty of mid range, but when I get up onto the 1st and 2nd strings, the sound is quite a bit thinner than the Epiphone. But man, that bass on the Gibson. It's massive. Wonderful studio guitar.
The Epiphone is extremely focused and even. It's dry. It's blunt. It doesn't have the bass of the Gibson and it doesn't have the sparkle either. There's something woodier and fundamentally darker about the Epiphone, I think. When comping at a louder volume, it stays cleaner much better than the Gibson. You don't get the "clank, clank" of the Gibson. You get the notes you're hitting at a high volume. It's nice to know you can crank the volume without losing your tone. If you're into clean amps, you know what I mean. The balance across the frequency of the Epiphone is also something to marvel at.
It's funny the comparison that comes to my mind between these two is like EQ settings in your car. Do you pump the bass and treble for a "wow" effect? Or do you slightly emphasize the mids and tame the bass and treble to emphasize clarity and evenness?
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Nicely done -- thanks for taking the time to make and post the vid!
Originally Posted by omphalopsychos
Originally Posted by NSJ
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Epi sounds more mid-rangy. I prefered that sound
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Originally Posted by omphalopsychos
There are two things I have found out to be true that I strongly believe in: number one—-The cardinal sin of playing guitar these days is playing ways too loud. We live in an era were playing loud is considered a supreme virtue and an expression of musical intensity. I believe nothing could be further than the truth.
Number two: if you’re playing electric guitar in a given room, you could pretty much play any electric guitar, amplification is the great equalizer, making a lot of guitars pretty much sound like loud guitars, and all the individual elements of each particular instrument tend to lose their particular qualities.
The true expressive qualities of an instrument reveal themselves in much more quieter settings.
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Originally Posted by NSJ
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Originally Posted by NSJ
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Originally Posted by omphalopsychos
This reminds me of the story my teacher told me when he was playing in Sinatra’s big band for some concerts. He had to use the volume pedal, because when comping, Sinatra absolutely HATED the sound of the magnetic pick up . Obviously, when it was time to take a chorus, , he had to turn the volume pedal up
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Originally Posted by NSJ
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Originally Posted by oldane
That's very interesting. I've never played any Strombergs and I've only ever played one D'Angelico. I'm planning to take a trip to NY in the summer and hope to play more examples of both.
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Originally Posted by NSJ
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Originally Posted by NSJ
1- playing loud as awesome. fact. but since i play a lot of electric, and guitars with a fair bit of air inside them that matters. the interplay between guitar and amp and volume and the literal and figurative feedback you get from a loud amp- awesome. why i do it. otherwise, it just isn't the same. yes, even clean.
2- i can tell mine apart, but they are all wildly different (on purpose, to avoid redundancy). but i run into this with acoustic guitars, wherein i've tried a bunch of different pickup systems in them. you spend all this time getting them sounding great a safe home volume and as soon as you turn up to a decent gig volume- instant ass.
so while the true nature of guitars are revealed at lower volumes, the tens of thousands who show up to the stadiums to hear me can't tell.
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Fantastic analysis.
And, I think somebody replied a while ago on another thread, but it turns out the '34 Reissue is NOT x-braced. I have definitely been guilty repeating that wrong info, so I figure it's especially incumbent on me to help correct it.
Originally Posted by omphalopsychos
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Originally Posted by campusfive
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Originally Posted by campusfive
Vintage Guitars Info - Gibson archtop vintage guitar collectingLast edited by KirkP; 02-12-2018 at 08:55 PM.
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Originally Posted by KirkP
Actual 1930s Gibsons a truly unique place. Unless I magically win the lottery and find a great '28 L5, I'll happily keep my '37 L7.
Lord knows Gibson have come up with some hairbrained schemes to sell strange looking guitars. But sadly they never could reproduce their 1928 L5.
It just means there's no market for it, except for isolated idiots like me.
Samick Jz4 update/upgrade
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