by JimN » Sun Aug 29, 2010 1:31 pm
Kipper / Peter,
If you look directly above Ecca's left hand in the photo above, you see two cherry SGs hanging from the upper rack. The one to the left is a reissue of the original early 1960s "SG Standard", all of which were fitted with a Maestro Vibrola tremolo unit. In my opinion, it is the only historically "correct" version of the SG Standard. Note the pickups mounted direct to the body instead of to a scratchplate and the small scratchplate fitted on the treble side of the body. Note also the trapezoid inlays, the same as those on the more familiar Les Paul Standard. Of course, the SG was originally meant, and was sold, as the "Mk II" Les Paul. There is a "TV" version in white next to it on the left.
The guitar next to it to the right is the current version of that guitar, misleadingly sold as the "1961 Reissue". It has most features more or less correct, but the Maestro trem is missing and a "stop bar" tailpiece is fitted instead. No SG was ever made like that in the 1960s. That "Reissue" is a spoiled ship - a reissue of something that was never issued in the first place. However, the difference in price between that one and the correct one next to it is absolutely astounding - the "61 Reissue" can be bought for £1250 - £1300, but the correct version costs at least £1000 more!
In the mid-sixties, the original SG range was "face-lifted", and all models were fitted with what you could call Fender-style scratchplates with the pickups suspended from them rather than being securely fixed to the body. The production style has varied a little over the intervening four and a half years, but the "fixed to the scratchplate" method still holds sway, as you can see on the SG Standard that Ecca bought in the USA.
For playing Shads music, and as Ecca implies with his references to the dirty tone of his SG, Gibson humbuckers cannot be recommended. You need pickups with less output (á la Fender) and preferably with a single-coil construction which gives a more focused, clean and (where required) metallic tone. For that reason, If you are enamoured of the SG (a seductive guitar, no doubt about it), I'd say that you should look at the real SG Special model. Current SG Specials have humbuckers - and that is not, I suggest, what you need. The original SG Special was fitted with two P90s (single-coils). They tend to be expensive on the s/h market (as do all vintage guitars these days), but they are at least available new - as the recent "SG Classic" reissue. Some SG Specials were fitted with the short Maestro Vibrola. A Special with P90s and a Maestro is probably the nearest thing to a Fender that Gibson did at the time. Not really like a Stratocaster, but near enough - perhaps - to a Jazzmaster or Jaguar. And, of course, consrtruction methods vary, as with the SG Standard (direct pickup fixing / scratchplate mounting).
But... you're talking a lot of money here - probably up around the £1800-2000 mark.
Another way to do it would be to buy a secondhand Ecca-style SG Standard (like the one he holds in the picture) and retro-fit P90 pickups in humbucker-sized cases (there are loads of good ones to choose from) and mayber either a Stetsbar or Bigsby trem. Perhaps even a Maestro unit or good copy/replica (they are about).
On the other hand, it would be a lot less messing about to buy a Fender...
My 2p-worth.
JN
Last edited by
JimN on Thu Sep 02, 2010 8:47 am, edited 3 times in total.