Heavy Les Pauls Made The Best Music

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  • čas přidán 29. 08. 2024
  • Baxter and Jonathan discuss why some of the best rock and roll was made on heavy Gibson Les Paul and why your bass player never complains about the weight of his bass!
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Komentáře • 332

  • @andrewpartington7274
    @andrewpartington7274 Před rokem +43

    “Good tone is heavy and hard to carry” - Tom Bukovac

    • @joshuajkoplin
      @joshuajkoplin Před rokem +2

      I think he meant amps when he said that.

  • @216trixie
    @216trixie Před rokem +31

    I always loved heavy guitars and basses, but now that I'm an old man I love my SG.

    • @DragonSlayer-hw8wl
      @DragonSlayer-hw8wl Před 2 měsíci +1

      I am not so tall, so I love my SGJ 2013 (weight about 3kg)!

    • @216trixie
      @216trixie Před 2 měsíci

      @@DragonSlayer-hw8wl Yes!

  • @davedobson9801
    @davedobson9801 Před rokem +23

    I had a 1970 LP Custom that weighed close to 11 pounds. That guitar is a tone monster, even with the not so high output pickups it has. Wish I hadn't sold it.

    • @DDWyss
      @DDWyss Před rokem +5

      I wish you had sold it to me.

  • @smelltheglove2038
    @smelltheglove2038 Před rokem +17

    I got a wah-wah pedal yesterday. First time I’ve ever really got down with one. I played for 8 hours straight. Didn’t even smoke a cigarette, couldn’t be bothered to go outside(bong hits were taken though). My lower back hurts today. I was kinda standing on one foot the whole time.

  • @FWRXTER
    @FWRXTER Před rokem +7

    My 82 Les Paul weighs in at 13.5 lbs. An absolute beast to wield.

  • @ericsmith7287
    @ericsmith7287 Před rokem +7

    YES! Billy Sheehan is a stud bassist. His work with Mr. Big and DLR is spectacular as well.

  • @corneltanassy2965
    @corneltanassy2965 Před 11 měsíci +2

    My 68 Les Paul weighs 10lbs 13 oz. It was a Mike Ladd custom build, at least the pickups (double screws on each pickup), also neck and bridge wired out of phase for “greenie tone”. Still in love with it.

  • @charlesbrown-ik2yu
    @charlesbrown-ik2yu Před rokem +3

    I have a 1976 Les Paul Deluxe, and a 1980 Les Paul Custom...BOTH are "boat anchors" but a nice neoprene 3" wide strap takes care of that issue, quite nicely. And, they are both "tone monsters" Norlin era be damned. Love 'em!!

  • @deeno1114
    @deeno1114 Před rokem +2

    I’m got an 82 custom at 12.5 lbs and am 80 custom at 11. Love ‘em heavy 🎸🤙

  • @Wildman9
    @Wildman9 Před rokem +7

    My 76 Les Paul Custom weighs close to 13 lbs. And I believe it sounds even better than my 2015 Paul. Of course you got to consider your pickups , on my 76 they are DiMarzios creams . My newer Paul has 57 classics . 🎸

    • @mkenific
      @mkenific Před rokem

      I have one LP with the 57s, but the Burstbuckers in my Traditional sound much better. Though I love the 57s on my 335.

    • @timnewman1172
      @timnewman1172 Před rokem +1

      My 78 Standard has DiMarzio Cremes and was heavy as hell, it must've been the shag carpet fumes...

  • @nicholeroyer6387
    @nicholeroyer6387 Před rokem +5

    I love my 11 lb Les Paul, however as a petite woman ii is honestly very fatiguing to play it for long stretches. At 5 lbs I can practice on my 59 melody maker all night without feeling it. My playing improved because I could practice for longer.

  • @jeremy_p
    @jeremy_p Před rokem +4

    My main guitar is a 2003 Gibson Les Paul Standard (50s) in Heritage Cherry Sunburst. It weighs in at 10.8 pounds!

  • @tonepilot
    @tonepilot Před rokem +5

    My 2014 Les Paul Anniversary Traditional weighs almost 10 pounds and it’s my favourite Les Paul from years of playing them. I’ve sold all the other ones which were all weight relieved. Lightweight guitars for lightweight players. Haha

    • @Drmidnight-dd6tw
      @Drmidnight-dd6tw Před rokem +1

      Tonepilot, you talking about Ingvai Malnsteen, Jimi Hendrix, Eddie Van Halen, Steve Vie, ect. They all played lightweight guitars.
      Name of great guitarist who played the Less Paul.
      Page mainly recorded using a Tele.

  • @surfgod509
    @surfgod509 Před rokem +2

    With effects these day's....just in the mind.... dial in .... Any tone under the sun with any guitar...

  • @wirthwhilemedia
    @wirthwhilemedia Před rokem +1

    Thanks Derek, for noting the work ethic and non complaining of bass players!

  • @surinderpunia2804
    @surinderpunia2804 Před rokem +5

    Just another reason to hit the gym! To be able to lift my Les Paul.

    • @anthonypanneton923
      @anthonypanneton923 Před rokem

      yeah - because that's what music is all about.

    • @odallard
      @odallard Před rokem +1

      Well, Petrucci did it 🤷🏻‍♂️

    • @zoltantoth2227
      @zoltantoth2227 Před 2 měsíci

      A strong core is key in life in general.

  • @bradconklin2878
    @bradconklin2878 Před rokem +1

    Hi,
    I bought my 1st "real" guitar in '78. A 1976 Les Paul Custom in wine red with chrome hardware. My gigging guitar back in the day. Weighed it recently: 9lb 6oz. It's tone and feel is worth every oz.

  • @bluzzjazz
    @bluzzjazz Před rokem +2

    So, my heaviest guitar is a 79 KM cherry SB Les Paul. It weighs around 10 lbs as I recall. Maybe 10.2. Contrast that with my 72 Deluxe Goldtop, which is a full 2 lbs lighter. It is a very noticeable difference when holding both. The 79 was part of the first run, because it had the Custom-Made plaque behind the stoptail. It absolutely delivers on the tone and sustain from the creme bobbin HBs.

  • @jimwoodard64
    @jimwoodard64 Před rokem +4

    I have three Les Pauls from 2019 to 2021, so no weight relief, and all of them are under 9 pounds. My heaviest guitar of late was a Tele Deluxe that was almost 10. Certainly not the average, but it does happen.
    I picked them all up at a local store except one, and I didn’t care about the weights. I do3 to 4 hour gigs standing while playing and singing harmony and lead. I’m 59 (this May), and I e been at it for decades. Also not the norm.
    All that said, just because one person or even a group has an experience does not mean you will. Do what’s right for you.

  • @aprilkurtz1589
    @aprilkurtz1589 Před rokem +1

    I play bass and the weight doesn't bug me. I had an instructor tell me to wear my strap at the end of my shoulder, on the bones of the joint, because bone takes the weight better than tissue. I've taken that advice, and have never had any neck or shoulder problems or pain.

  • @Surge_LaChance
    @Surge_LaChance Před rokem +3

    The average weight of vintage Bursts is around 8.5 lbs. These are the most sought-after Les Pauls, and they inspired all that came after. You are correct, the "heavy is better" came from the 70s boat anchors (not just Gibsons either).
    Fast forward to today, when most Gibsons - Custom Shop included - have gotten heavier overall. I noticed this over the past few years. I can only assume that promoting the "heavy is better" mantra will help find these new boat anchors a loving home... just not mine, lol.
    Specifications have become more important due to internet purchases and it totally makes sense. I like to know what I'm getting, even when it's hands-on. That's part of the reason why Fender CS instruments are cool because you get the Floor Traveler.
    Even with a damaged shoulder, I am not a weight snob - there are a few ways around the discomfort of a heavy instrument. My lightest Les Paul is a Studio that weighs 7.8 lbs. It's the most resonant electric in my collection - including my Custom Shop Reissue.
    (My heaviest instrument is a MIM Fender Cabronita Precision Bass @ 9.3 lbs.)
    I traded in a gorgeous '17 Traditional Plus that weighed 9.75 lbs for my '17 R8/CC29 that weighs 8.5 on the money. I couldn't handle the weight of that Traditional... if it was a pound lighter I would've kept it. The difference between a heavy bass and a heavy guitar of the same weight is due to the distribution/balance of weight. That's why I don't mind a heavier bass.

    • @avivpinto4013
      @avivpinto4013 Před rokem

      Bernie Marsden 's beast is 4.5...

    • @tonekilltech
      @tonekilltech Před 11 měsíci

      Just in case anyone stumbles on this comment, don't spread this misinformation. The "average weight of vintage bursts" is not 8.5 lbs. If we're talking legitimate bursts, 1958-1960 Les Paul Standards (not conversions, not special/juniors, not customs, and especially not reissues/replicas/post '60 Les Pauls), less than half of them are under 9 lbs and very few are under 8.5 lbs. Most of them are between the high 8s and high 9s, and I'd bet a chunk of cash that if there were consolidated records of all their weights (there's not), the average weight would fall somewhere north of 9 lbs. The idea that 8.5 lbs is the "perfect burst weight" is some internet mythology that gets passed around by folks that haven't had their hands on a burst, let alone enough of them to make that assertion. Talk to some folks who have owned and played multiple bursts and see what their favorites have weighed. I'll bet if you average those numbers it'd come in over 9 lbs too.

  • @wrobinson1702
    @wrobinson1702 Před rokem +2

    I play live (standing) 2-3 hours/set, 2-4 times/month, with a Fender Jazz bass Marcus Miller edition (10.1 lbs) and never 12:07 even think about it. I’m 64 years old, and have done that for decades

  • @andyhightides
    @andyhightides Před rokem +2

    I find that heavy lp's are more resistant to squealing at higher gain, but lighter lp's are easier to coax desirable feedback at lower gain.

  • @willheines4
    @willheines4 Před 3 měsíci

    My '81 Custom is 9.90lbs. Love it. Warm&fuzzy.

  • @MichaelBLive
    @MichaelBLive Před rokem +3

    Yes. Bass player's use wide straps to mitigate the weight.

  • @wrobinson1702
    @wrobinson1702 Před rokem +2

    Yep-bass player here. My Fender Jazz Marcus Miller edition weighs 10.1lbs. No big deal.

  • @Big_Dumb_Animal
    @Big_Dumb_Animal Před rokem +4

    I started out on resonator banjos, so whenever someone says a guitar is heavy, I have to laugh a little inside.

  • @robertlewis8024
    @robertlewis8024 Před rokem +3

    Like you said, each guitar is unique. The weight only really matters if it's TOO DAMN HEAVY!

  • @mcampbell5158
    @mcampbell5158 Před rokem +2

    I am 99% sure that all of the guitarists who had heavy guitars would have still made the same songs with a lighter guitar. It is 95% person and 5% guitar when it comes to the real genius players.

  • @WillyWonkenobi
    @WillyWonkenobi Před rokem +3

    My Gibson LP standard weighs 11.5 and it rings like a bell

  • @BlindTom61
    @BlindTom61 Před rokem

    My ''74 Standard is 9.2lbs. Sounds great. Back in that (my) day, we added brass stuff. Tail pieces, nuts, even knobs. That was THE thing back then.

  • @curtisbell409
    @curtisbell409 Před rokem +3

    So true, Heavy is best!!

  • @AS__77
    @AS__77 Před rokem +2

    I once picked up a Gibson Les Paul Deluxe at a Guitar Center that weighed every bit of 12 pounds. Awful. BUT everything lighter than that is fine 😂😂

  • @AmericanVetMusic
    @AmericanVetMusic Před rokem +2

    I have a Les Paul Standard and Strat that weigh a metric ton but I could care less! They are gorgeous and easily make the best tones. 😊

  • @AndiKravljaca
    @AndiKravljaca Před rokem +2

    I absolutely love a heavy guitar. There's some mojo to how they make me feel when I play - like I can be extra careless and play with energy. I don't feel like I'm breaking it. Maybe that extra energy is what subconsciously translates to a better tone. I find myself 'babying' light guitars a lot more whereas I play a heavy guitar like I stole it.

  • @johnwillcoxon1509
    @johnwillcoxon1509 Před rokem +1

    My first real good guitar was a 78 LPC, i never weighed it, but it was heavy, wish i still had it. I currently own, and love, a 2003 epiphone elite, modded with pearly gates pickups, sounds glorious, and weighs just over 11 pounds. A lead ingot wrapped in mahogany.....

  • @sweetdrahthaar7951
    @sweetdrahthaar7951 Před rokem +2

    I asked to see a Tele with a Bigsby that was at the very top row in a Guitar Center years ago. A guy went up a ladder to get it and as he was coming down the ladder he handed it to me and I almost dropped it. The thing was heavy enough to anchor a cruise ship. I handed it right back and said that will never work. It may have been the one, but I don’t care😂

  • @bradleejaymz
    @bradleejaymz Před rokem +1

    I had a 10-11 pound Epiphone Les Paul that sounded great, sustained great, played great, but every time I played it I pulled a muscle in my back. Basically sitting down, keeping it balanced, and lifting my right leg to stomp on pedals is what did me in. It made me sad to own it because I couldn't even play it without pain. Sure I could workout more, but I know I wont :-). Now I have a Gibson LP Standard that is just under 9 pounds. It sounds great, sustains great, plays great, and no more pulled muscles. By my experience, weight had nothing to do with the tone, sustain, etc., but I did discover that I seem to prefer a pain free guitar playing experience. Conclusion, I seem to like lighter guitars.

  • @NinerFourWhiskey
    @NinerFourWhiskey Před rokem

    When I started playing in the late 70's/early 80's, adding weight was all the rage, brass nuts, even brass plates to install on the headstock, adding Grovers, etc. Everyone said "tone is heavy". But... I have a 60th anniversary '60 Sunburst custom shop, 8lbs, one piece mahogany, it is incredible. I've seen the list of weights of vintage bursts, they hover around 8.5lbs. None of my basses weight 10lbs and I have 3.

  • @JoeR203
    @JoeR203 Před 6 měsíci +1

    I have a Les Paul copy by Dillion Guitars. It weighs around 11 pounds and sounds great.

  • @glenlapwing8468
    @glenlapwing8468 Před 2 měsíci

    I got a 73 standard new in 74 & weighs in at just under 13lbs! Endless sustain-had now for 50 years

  • @nedsdonutshop
    @nedsdonutshop Před rokem +3

    Subconsciously, all guitar players are drawn to a guitar that is exactly the weight they were when they were born.

    • @benlogan430
      @benlogan430 Před rokem +1

      Damn my kids gotta get an 11 lbs guitar now?

  • @markcarey8178
    @markcarey8178 Před rokem +1

    Ian Faith:
    "Certainly, in the topsy-turvy world of heavy rock, having a good solid piece of wood in your hand is often useful."

  • @broken927
    @broken927 Před rokem +2

    "He ain't heavy, he's my Les Paul."

  • @davegallagher7428
    @davegallagher7428 Před rokem +1

    IMO I think there are a lot more senior guitar players like myself who are starting to have physical issues that necessitate having as light a guitar as possible. I didn’t care about weight until a few years ago when I missed three months of work with neck and shoulder problems, and I was unable to play.

  • @alexwoolridge94aw
    @alexwoolridge94aw Před rokem +1

    Heaviest guitar I've ever played was a Fender USA Strat. My Les Pauls don't weigh much at all and they're awesome. My 61 Jr weighs like 6 pounds and sounds killer. I opt for the lighter guitars if possible. Heaviest guitar I own is a Gibson Explorer and it's still comfortable and maybe a little heavier than my Les Paul Traditional.

  • @Dasrocknrolla
    @Dasrocknrolla Před rokem +44

    There is no such thing as heavy gear, just weak players.

    • @guitarprepnplus1
      @guitarprepnplus1 Před rokem +9

      Wait till your 60 plus with a bad back.

    • @archer4556
      @archer4556 Před rokem +4

      Pain is just the weakness leaving your body...

    • @sparkyguitar0058
      @sparkyguitar0058 Před rokem +1

      @@guitarprepnplus1 63 and wouldn't trade my 10+ lb Paul for nothing. Heck my Dr Tech bass is weigh heavier. And it only has 4 strings, should be lighter.

    • @timnewman1172
      @timnewman1172 Před rokem

      ​@@archer4556 not if you are past 50...

    • @archer4556
      @archer4556 Před rokem +5

      @@timnewman1172 After 32 years in the military carrying a 65+ lb rucksac....body is strong and guitars are light.

  • @brianlegg6009
    @brianlegg6009 Před 9 měsíci

    I've heard that Marty Stuart's original Parsons/White B-Bender Telecaster weighs about 14 lbs. I recently got a brand new Epiphone Standard 60's Les Paul which weighs 9lbs 11oz and that feels pretty chunky to me. Hats off to Mr. Stuart (who is in his early 60's) for playing that thing constantly since 1980 and still going strong.

  • @fernandoreynaaguilar1438

    Well, Yes. Absolutely.

  • @electricurinal
    @electricurinal Před rokem +1

    I have a 2022 Les Paul Classic that weighs 9.8lbs. It's a hoss. I only play it sitting down these days, so it doesn't matter. It has infinite sustain enough to make Nigel Tufnel not want to touch it. Playing it at a gig for 3 hours is gona leave a mark on your back... but I've never done it with this guitar.

  • @TheMrMRsmoke
    @TheMrMRsmoke Před rokem +3

    Cork sniffer quality content

    • @jasondorsey7110
      @jasondorsey7110 Před rokem

      The weight difference really shines through a 65 deluxe with matched rca tubes from the same production run, and don't forget your vintage herco picks

  • @livekaos
    @livekaos Před rokem

    I confirm, the first electric guitar I’ve played was a Les Paul custom from the 70s or maybe late 60s and it was the best. When I bought my first electric guitar I used the Les Paul as a template. The guitar was heavy and sounded wonderful

  • @donnieyon8658
    @donnieyon8658 Před rokem +1

    What's up Jonathan Love you guitar playing bro

  • @davidjanzen5728
    @davidjanzen5728 Před rokem +8

    Hear we go again let's all do a full flip again ,heavy is best,tubes not solid state heavy strings not light,u watch,every CZcams guru starting with rhett will push this whole line of thought after deep solesearching while channeling the gohsts of the great ones for five years and then once again flip,oh , don't forget bufferd vs no bufferd pedals,huge big decisions to be made their!!!!

    • @jpalberthoward9
      @jpalberthoward9 Před rokem +5

      It's all just an excuse not to practice and apply one's self to the task at hand. It's so completely lame, it's just a spoiled brat syndrome.
      "I can't play unless I have my __________, and my_______ , and the _________ has to be adjusted to precisely ________ ." Perhaps those who make all of those lame excuses have no music in them to begin with. Frank Zappa got it right: "Shut up and play your guitar"

  • @ohioridercinci2495
    @ohioridercinci2495 Před rokem +1

    I agree, but it was also that they were played thru 50 to 100 watt amps screaming loud. There is an acoustic coupling that can occur, think old Ted Nugent's endless feedback. Riding to the point od feedback, there is a sustain and resonance that I just cant seem to hear from the models trying to reproduce them. Also, it is kind'a funny some want a light guitar, but very heavy strings!
    TO Note: I had a 60 black lp that came free from the front strap. My hands were putting a record on to practice with. The guitar fell down and the back strap point hit right on my big toenail. cracked it in half, and the army doctors had to remove the whole toenail. ...... memories lol. I was halfway thru swing it to the wall, when i realized it was my "guitar" and slowed and saved it.
    This was back in 1977, germany while I was in the army. Record was probably one more from the road, Lynyrd

  • @davidmiles533
    @davidmiles533 Před rokem

    I have one of the new Pro II Strats in ROASTED PINE. Lightest guitar I’ve ever owned and maybe it’s the new pickups but this sucker sings! I have a severely damaged neck and playing standing for me ended about 5 years back. I’ve learned to sit with everything and not have it effect how I play. I figured Skunk Baxter can do it, so can I. Guitar weight will never stop me from owning something. Hell, I have a PRS McCarty 594 10 top that’s HEAVY but it is what it is.

  • @benlogan430
    @benlogan430 Před rokem +1

    I’ve gotta have a lite guitar because of a car accident. But, my heavy LP does sound the best! I play three to four hours a days so weight matters to me.

  • @johnsilver8059
    @johnsilver8059 Před rokem

    Balance is more an issue than weight by itself. While I’ve never heard a guitarist complaining about the neck dive on Firebirds, many bass players hate the Thunderbird because it’s notorious for neck diving. The great benefit of replacing big heavy tuners with Hipshot light weight tuners is not just reducing the weight overall, but reducing the weight at the end of the neck.

  • @victorycrosby4896
    @victorycrosby4896 Před rokem +1

    I bought a guitar made by a local Luther a red oak explorer....it's a bit heavy but it's awesome....also a pecan strat,,,a teak strat and a walnut strat.....all local by the same maker......there unique and sound like strats.

  • @craigskoney1627
    @craigskoney1627 Před rokem

    Part of the reason an old 70's Les Paul is heavy is the lead shielding cup over the controls. That thing probably weighs a pound on its own. My old friend's 'Paul was a '70, if I'm remembering correctly. It had to weigh 12 lbs. It had the lead cup.
    I had a Stingray that was north of 12 lbs. I sold it, because 4 sets with that thing killed my shoulder, even with a really good strap.

  • @lfscrazy
    @lfscrazy Před 5 měsíci

    The best sounding Strat I ever had was a 70s, weighed nearly 11lb. It was so full of mids, with tight lows that it could eat a Les Paul for breakfast and still have room for an Explorer. My current 8lb Strat is amazing but a totally different guitar to that 11lber.
    My favorite Les Paul was 9.3lb. the heaviest Les Paul that I've owned. My current Les Paul is 8.8lb. It's the most resonant and 'sweet' sounding Paul that I've owned but does not have the chug of the 9.3lber.

  • @sixbladeknife44
    @sixbladeknife44 Před rokem

    My R8 is 8.3 Lbs and my bad back is damn grateful for the light weight. It happens to sound great too.

  • @andresj89
    @andresj89 Před rokem +3

    Heavy is the tone

  • @wewin03
    @wewin03 Před rokem +2

    It’s not so much the weight for me but the balance. I have an SG that had severe neck dive. And a Les Paul so bottom heavy you cannot play it sitting down because it wants to flip up. I never have had that problem with Fenders. The balance makes it way more playable for me.

    • @smelltheglove2038
      @smelltheglove2038 Před rokem

      I absolutely love my gibsons, they sound amazing… nothing beats the contoured body of a strat. Leo was right in the money with that one. Plus when you look at it from the side, it looks like a super car or space ship or something. Those lines are so beautiful to me. Maybe I just have a heightened appreciation of design or something.

    • @Surge_LaChance
      @Surge_LaChance Před rokem

      I don't have a balance issue with my Gibsons (I don't own an SG ,lol) but I have encountered neck-dive on Fender basses. The worst offender is the Tony Franklin Fretless Precision. The 70s tuners, Hipshot Xtender, and ebony fingerboard makes them horribly off-balance. The solution is to install vintage-style Gotoh Res-O-Lite tuners (GBR640). I have them on 3 of my Fender basses (sometimes the Custom Shop uses them). Problem solved!

  • @stewieiommi
    @stewieiommi Před rokem +1

    I have about 35 guitars, mostly Gibson Custom shop and USA. Before hating, I'm in my 60's. There came a point in life that to have another guitar, I no longer had to trade or sell the one I was playing. I accrued these guitars over decades. I think the type of music you're playing has a lot to do with how much tone difference you hear between one and another. I've always played heavy rock with lots of gain on the amp. How a guitar responds to your input is another thing, and there seems more variance in my guitars in that regard, and making one favored over another.. I have several single cut LP's, Standard and Custom, all heavy but some less so. I have a dozen SG's, three ES models, etc. I was a Pat Travers fan in the late 70's and duped his pair of buckers on a '65 Melody Maker and that guitar killed. If owning all of these guitars has demonstrated one thing to me of which I'm fairly certain, I believe fatter/heavier necks may have a great deal to do with sustain, if not tone as well. My Tony Iommi SG has a baseball bat for a neck (yes it neck-dives like mad), and is still sustaining from the last time I played it. Compared to all the other SG's, it has a thicker, fatter, more LP-like sound. (And a few others have his Gibson signature PUs, so it's not that.) I'm always happy with any of my Gibby's when I pick them up. I think we tend to obsess over things that may have a placebo effect.

  • @PeterMoore350
    @PeterMoore350 Před rokem

    My Solar GC1.6 T-FAB and GC1.6 FRC single cuts have a nice weight to them.
    Been playing for nearly 50 years and these Solar guitars are the best I’ve played. I have 5 now and want more !!
    Cheers from NZ 😎🎸🤘

  • @johnolivares987
    @johnolivares987 Před rokem

    I have 9.5 lb les paul standard and a 10 lb les paul classic, love them both, weight was never an issue when I got them

  • @between2guitars331
    @between2guitars331 Před rokem

    Winery Dogs was one of the best shows I’ve seen in forever!
    My Les Paul is 10lbs. It does come with a special kind of weight relief called an SG.

  • @kisschicken
    @kisschicken Před rokem +1

    My Les Paul is 11 pounds. This video cheered me up.

  • @rowbags3017
    @rowbags3017 Před rokem

    Weight definitely was an issue back in the '70s - to the point where people would say you weren't a "real" guitarist if you weren't happy playing a 12 or 13 lb Les Paul all night! The sheer weight was the all important "rite of passage". I never bought into the bs and jumped at the Gibson "The Paul" when it was released, because it offered far better build-quality than Strats of the period and was a sensible gigging weight.

  • @Johnny6666
    @Johnny6666 Před rokem

    Dan Hawkins of 'The Darkness' actually had weight added to one of his Les Pauls by having lead fishing sinkers secured in the chambers. He dubbed the guitar 'The Codfather'. The man is a genius! :) (Check out his Marshall demo videos - absolutely breathtaking tone.)

  • @marh415
    @marh415 Před rokem

    Winery Dogs mention, my absolute favorite! 🙌🏻

  • @DDPAV
    @DDPAV Před rokem +1

    Gibson started doing weight relief in the '80's, pretty sure people were tuned into the weight issue long before 2008..... On the GC thought though, now that a lot of people buy online, there's no side-by-side in-person comparison they can make so they take internet lore as advice. Personally I'll take my 2020 9 lb standard over my '76 12 lb Norlin era standard for many reasons, weight being one of them.

  • @WalkenDead
    @WalkenDead Před rokem

    The bursts just levitated in front of you and played themselves.

  • @kcsvantasticvoyages9729

    I have some boat anchors that sound fantastic. Do like light ones as well. I really don’t care as long as it sounds good!

  • @patrickkem689
    @patrickkem689 Před rokem +1

    I had a custom once that was almost 12 lb and it played great but it was a heavy
    Guitar.Does anybody remember the Queen album Jazz with fat bottom girls. Mine came with a poster of a nude all girl bicycle race.
    And Queen were in the stands! Oh yes those were good days along with heavy guitars.

  • @DDWyss
    @DDWyss Před rokem

    My Les Paul is right around 9 pounds. I haven't weighed it with a special scale, but I've weighed myself with and without the guitar on my bathroom scale, and there was a 9 pound difference. I find that it's less strain on my shoulder and back if I leave the strap very long and low with the neck at a steep angle. There's something about the guitar sitting low and resting against my hip instead of my mid-section that makes it more bearable. At any rate, I think weight is more of a nuanced issue than most people think it is. People want there to be just one answer but there's not.

  • @MrJosephSeely
    @MrJosephSeely Před rokem

    The first "Electric" guitar I played was a Fender P Bass. I sort of expected the weight. When I first tried my hand at an actual "Electric Guitar", it was a borrowed 57? Gold Top LP with a Bigsby, I did not expect it to be as heavy (heavier?) as the bass, but I accepted it as part of the deal and assumed all electric guitars were supposed to be heavy. Then I went to buy one and came across a 1968 Norma, 3 single pups, kind of a Strat styling. I could not believe how light it was compared to the LP, and it sounded significantly different. I've played S-styles since and LPs just weren't a thing to me, 50 years later they still aren't. However...
    I was considering a 'BlackTop' Tele and was really surprised how heavy they were. Now I own a Vintage Modified Tele, with the psuedo-WideRange humbuckers. Even with a belly cut and arm relief it weighs in at almost 10 pounds! It doesn't sound like my Strat and it doesn't sound quite like an LP. Playing rhythm in a Blues-Rock band I could switch back and forth and get different tones as needed. Does the weight matter? I think to a degree it does, I know I play them differently. I strum the Strat and chop at the Tele.

  • @timnewman1172
    @timnewman1172 Před rokem

    My 1978 Les Paul Standard weighed a ton! It was a great sounding and playing guitar, but I still don't miss it...

    • @timnewman1172
      @timnewman1172 Před rokem +1

      My parts-built Telecaster weighs 7.25 lbs and does pretty much everything the Les Paul did... once I figured it out, I really didn't need Les Paul anymore.

  • @imijofsoul-ajimiexperience7164

    We weighted all those guitars on the wall Saturday, 489 lbs!

  • @glencooper1091
    @glencooper1091 Před rokem

    I had a nut from Reverb open a case to return a nice guitar because his scales read it to be 10.88 ounces heavier than mine did.

  • @F800GSJay
    @F800GSJay Před rokem

    I recently had a 10lb Gibson Korina Explorer…that thing was a CHONK! Was super resonant though.

  • @IAmChrisR
    @IAmChrisR Před rokem

    I had a '76 Tele Deluxe that was so heavy, it could've been a boat anchor. I just had a Swamp Ash replacement body built for it, and it's lighter, and sounds better. Original was probably a heavy Northern Ash. Note: I didn't ditch the original body for the weight, but rather the giant neck route where the neck would regularly shift in the pocket and knock me out of tune. So new body: more comfortable, sounds great. Maybe I'm imagining it sounds better because I'm enjoying playing it again, but I don't think so.

  • @CaptHiltz
    @CaptHiltz Před rokem

    I've built a few guitars out of various materials. One of them is my heaviest at around 9 to 10 pounds. I used two Cherrywood cabinets doors stacked on top of each other, shaped it like a skull and it's almost as big as as an ES-335. It's very mid range sounding so not something I could use for every song at a gig. I think it sounds that way maybe because of the wood type but also the size, weight and denseness. P.S. it has a single bridge humbucker.

  • @MrDanalaimo
    @MrDanalaimo Před rokem +1

    2008 is about the time the Boom generation started feeling its age. I always look at the weight of guitars and amps

  • @EdHeinzelman
    @EdHeinzelman Před rokem

    I never cared until this issue kept coming up on line. So I weighed the family. The 2001 Tele Am Std and 2019 LP Studio Tribute are both 7.8 lbs, the 2011 Tele 1952 reissue is 6.8. The basses? Gibson EB-0 is 6.6, the 2013 Epiphone EB-3 is 10.00 and the 2018 Fender Jazz is 8.4. I will stick with my usual mo when shopping...does it look cool, does it feel good, does it sound great?

  • @charlesbolstridge3871

    Or the things I noticed in the last 20 years is that more and more players have kept playing throughout their lifetime, where when I was a kid in the 70s 80s either you played kept at it but more of my friends that I grew up playing with stop playing so they were old men holding guitars. And I know my back by the time I reached in my forties I needed to go to something lighter I didn't want to

  • @cmh6122
    @cmh6122 Před rokem

    Bought a LP Artisan 4 days after my 22nd birthday and did not notice its weight, but 45 years later the fact that it weight better than 13lbs very much limits its play time.
    Spent some time as an artilleryman so doubt I could here the difference. Weight only matters to me as a comfort issue. My daily player is a feather-weight acoustic parlor. Times change.

  • @mkenific
    @mkenific Před rokem

    I'm an old man still playing out constantly in a cover band having a ball. I have a very bad back. I've had fusion surgery, and I will always have a cage in my back. Although every gig I swear at myself when we are done but I just can't NOT play my LP Traditinal. I play rhythm, and the sound of that guitar is just better to my ear than any other guitar I own. 10 lbs is a lot for me to use, but I still do.

  • @vinigriffith2683
    @vinigriffith2683 Před rokem

    Those new weight reducing straps work pretty good.

  • @jonathanray4598
    @jonathanray4598 Před 7 měsíci +1

    I put a steel plate in my les paul tribute and back filled it with wood and it weighs 18 lbs...it will totally blow any modern Gibson made today including a R9 custom shop model! Weight is better for tone!

  • @clockwork914
    @clockwork914 Před rokem +1

    You haven’t lived until you’ve played a guitar made from a solid block of brass while standing.

  • @alanagottalottasay997

    TVL and a few select others have that “earn it” mindset, it’s not supposed to be everything is about comfort and making everything easy and coddling….love that mindset cuz it takes dedication commitment to their craft….fuck yes….

  • @spacelab2756
    @spacelab2756 Před rokem

    I’ve found that having a wide strap makes all standup playing more comfortable. Don’t go cheap on the strapo.

  • @triplelindys
    @triplelindys Před rokem

    I picked up even a Player Plus Strat to try out and holy crap...that thing was heaaaaavy.

  • @blaiseutube
    @blaiseutube Před 11 měsíci

    Bassists don't complain.
    We stand and hold the world on our shoulders. Like Atlas.

  • @fredtirbo4411
    @fredtirbo4411 Před rokem +4

    Yeah man , gonna get a concrete LP because you know , sustain man. (places gun to head)

  • @thejuggernaut5327
    @thejuggernaut5327 Před rokem

    Thank you for the Bass shout out

  • @rjlane3475
    @rjlane3475 Před rokem

    bought my '84 LP Custom in 1988 ... never thought about weighing the dang thing when I got it. Never thought about weighing it for 20+ years. It's just awesome. Then the internet made me question my guitar choice because it's 11.3 lbs (I did end up weighing it on a postal scale a few years ago). Do I wish some days it was lighter? sometimes, but I wouldn't trade it for another LP.

  • @bryancollins6796
    @bryancollins6796 Před rokem +1

    That's what SGs are for. Lightness. LPs are going to be 9 lbs or more. SGs 7 - 7.5 lbs.