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RocketRalf

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A fellow forumite kindly asked me what I thought about my Silo, so I decided to make my impressions public for all of you to read, discuss and add:

I can't really compare this guitar to other MMs because I haven't tried any others through a quality amp. I bought mine sight unseen, knowing of the flawless Quality Control of Music Man. What I can say is it is one of the most confortable guitars ever. Both the neck and the body are smaller than the usual, but I'm fairly tall and have big hands and neither is an issue to me.

In terms of sound, this guitar is designed to be whatever you want it to be. The stock pickups are very dynamic, low output. I get all my distortion from an all-tube pedal (Damage Control Solid Metal), which is plenty, so I don't mind the low output, and being a trained classical musician fulltime, I appreciate the expressiveness they allow. The name of their game is versatility.
I have found I prefer not to dime the distortion on the pedal, it can be too much and will take away some of the nice qualities of the bridge pickup (the sweet singing tone and the expressive dynamics). On the upside, you get a huge sustained and screaming yet always controllable tone. On the downside, it is not the most articulate, and for fast metal runs in the low strings there are better choices.
The neck pickup will cope though anything and will do neoclassical, prog, jazz, you name it. It always retains this musical, vocal quality which I love, yet it might not be for everyone.
If I had to say where the pickups excel, it would be cleans. Any position of the 5 way selector will produce the most amazing, musical cleans I have ever heard.

Now as I said before, the idea of the design is that you can turn it into anything you want. Just build an alternate pickguard assembly and in minutes you'll get any guitar tone you want. The pickugard comes attached to the body by a special connect (molex?) so no soldering is required to change it!
Slap some EVOS on it, and you'll get almost exactly a JEM, except for the ebony board and the Floyd. Slap some EMGs and headbang on all the Metallica or numetal you want. Put some DiMarzio Areas to go from Malmsteen to Gilmour. Or any other single pickup of your choice (though 24 frets won't provide the optimum position for the neck single coil).

The reason I got this guitar was because I wanted a quality guitar that would last me a lifetime, be easy to use (I got a hardtail) and, because it would be my only guitar, was able to play any genre. I think I got all that in spades. If I were able to choose again, I might have gone for a trem, now that I know that MM's are fantastic, and maybe a cooler color. But this was the only one I found in stock when I was shopping. I don't regret it one bit!

Oh the picks! They've been posted before, sorry, it is all I've got:

G5.jpg

G4.jpg

G3.jpg

G2.jpg

G1.jpg
 

threeminutesboy

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nice review, you make me want to play one again (I have only tried the silo in shops) mine was all white with a maple neck sooooooooooooo sweeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeet
 

jamminjim

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May 25, 2006
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Grand Junction, Colorado
A Hardtail Silo.....mmmm ...mmmmm..mmmmm. Yummy looking.

Nice review. I always thought the single coil on my Silo was stellar. And yes, it is a three pin miniature Molex conector.
 
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RocketRalf

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A Hardtail Silo.....mmmm ...mmmmm..mmmmm. Yummy looking.

Nice review. I always thought the single coil on my Silo was stellar. And yes, it is a three pin miniature Molex conector.

Yes, the single coil is very good too, and provides the strat tones whenever you need it. I'm just not wired in my head to use it, maybe because most of my influences use an HH setup. If I do use it, it's almost always as an alternative to the neck pickup, be it for more cutting, brighter cleans, or a slightly more articulate lead tone with distortion. I guess if I played in a band I'd use it more.
 

RocketRalf

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Beautiful guitar, nice purchase...ok I want sound clips!

I'd love to but I can't! I'm currently living (studying) in London, while I had to leave my guitar back home in Venezuela :(

The guitar is not a new purchase BTW, I acquired it in 2006. Just the review is new ;)
 

Raz

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Sep 3, 2004
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Location
Ottawa, Ont.
I'd love to but I can't! I'm currently living (studying) in London, while I had to leave my guitar back home in Venezuela :(

The guitar is not a new purchase BTW, I acquired it in 2006. Just the review is new ;)

What? That's like leaving your child behind, man! Can you hear it as it calls out to you, play me, daddy come home!
 

skerwo

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Aug 5, 2008
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Bavaria, Germany
What a superb looking silo, I love the colour combination of the body and the pickguard. Really good review, too.


Rainer
 

dhalif

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Jun 6, 2010
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409
Location
Singapore
i notice alot of the silos i see online are ones without matching headstock.. what are your guys views on matching or non matching? curious i ordered mine with matching headstock
 

threeminutesboy

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May 11, 2003
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i notice alot of the silos i see online are ones without matching headstock.. what are your guys views on matching or non matching? curious i ordered mine with matching headstock

with maple I can go either way, with RW fretboard I like it matching unless this is an all RW neck then non matching is a must (ditto for roasted neck)

a non matching headstock advantage is that you can swap neck easily ;)
 

RocketRalf

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Dec 10, 2007
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Location
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The reason might simply be that non-matching is cheaper.

To me it depends on the color. I hate white headstocks for example. For black I don't mind. I like solid blue or red headstocks on maple boards. I don't like burst headstocks. Plus a natty headstock is more classic and thus goes better with a burst body IMO. Also I would avoid to put a solid finish on a nicely figured (birds-eye, flamed) headstock.
I could go on and on trying to explain my tastes for matching headstocks and then find a nice guitar that breaks my own rules and still like it :)
 
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