Eilif
Well-known member
The owner of a local music store was generous enough to lend me his own, personal EVH to take home and try out for a few days. (I asked if he had an Axis to try out, and this was the closest thing he had.) So I spent about four hours over the past couple of days playing with both my Luke and this EVH through my Marshall AVT50 combo. I played with both neck and bridge pickups, in both clean and distortion channels, to try to gain a familiarity with the different sounds produced by the two guitars. My picking sucks, so I limited myself to mostly just playing major chords.
Compared to the Luke, the EVH (and by extension, the Axis, I'd guess) seems warmer, fuller, and louder, with more balls...but muddy.
Compared to the EVH, the Luke is cleaner, more crisp, but also somewhat sterile, not unlike comparing a recording on CD to vinyl. And the Luke has some nice single coil sounds that the EVH couldn't come close to reproducing.
The Luke can growl with its bridge pickup, but it's like standing in front of a huge speaker, listening to a digital recording of a lion roaring, whereas the EVH is like standing in front of a real lion.
I'd appreciate any comments regarding the above, which will help improve my understanding of the differences between these instruments in particular, active vs. passive pickups in general, and single coil vs. humbuckers as well.
Compared to the Luke, the EVH (and by extension, the Axis, I'd guess) seems warmer, fuller, and louder, with more balls...but muddy.
Compared to the EVH, the Luke is cleaner, more crisp, but also somewhat sterile, not unlike comparing a recording on CD to vinyl. And the Luke has some nice single coil sounds that the EVH couldn't come close to reproducing.
The Luke can growl with its bridge pickup, but it's like standing in front of a huge speaker, listening to a digital recording of a lion roaring, whereas the EVH is like standing in front of a real lion.
I'd appreciate any comments regarding the above, which will help improve my understanding of the differences between these instruments in particular, active vs. passive pickups in general, and single coil vs. humbuckers as well.