Played the wee beastie at band practice on Thursday; interesting experience.
The Lace pup sounds exceptional with modulation which I ...er... never use.
As per Lawrence's intention, it has less highs than I'm used to which completely changed my place in the mix. Although there was plenty of volume, I couldn't hear myself in the sense my sound wasn't where I expected it to be. ( Does that make sense to anyone but me?) There are two and sometimes three guitars going so sonic space is really relevant for us.
It produces better distortion than any of my other guitars but once again, it's down in the mix. It made me think of Daryl Stuermer playing with Phil Collins.
Boosting it for a solo usually resulted in way more than I needed so I still need some driving practice. I get the impression of a pickup that switches from clean to distortion or quiet to loud rather than changing progressively.
At this point, I can see Lawrence shaking his head and saying WTF Slowy?
Sustain is amazing. Even at lowish volumes a chord will hang on for ages before morphing into feedback. Very cool.
As promised, there's some neck dive but not badly. The point of contact between right forearm and the guitar is amazing. Usually I feel some pressure over time from the binding edge but this one caresses my arm. It's the most comfortable guitar I've ever rested my arm on.
For me, the neck is minimum size. My fretting hand was starting to ache after 3 hours but 70% of the necks out there do that to me anyway. Most folks won't see an issue at all.
I wanted something to challenge my habits and this is definitely doing the job. Just off for a session with Band #2 which is more a recording than gigging outfit. Keen to hear how it fits in there.
Oh and the real surprise, I jammed with an acoustic guitar/singer last week. I plugged into a Wampler Pinnacle of all things, turned the guitar down and fingerpicked. It sounded great. Who would have thought.......
![Crazy :crazy:](./images/smilies/icon_crazy.gif)
Beyond a critical point within a finite space, freedom diminishes as numbers increase. This is as true of humans as it is of gas molecules in a sealed flask. The human question is not how many can possibly survive within the system, but what kind of existence is possible for those who so survive.