Seymour Duncan Vintage Blues Humbucker Pickup Set (with SH1 59 Bridge and Neck) Product Description:
- Includes pickups targeted to a specific type of player and their musical taste.
Product Description
The Vintage Blues Set is made up of a pair of calibrated SH-1 '59 Model pickups for the neck and bridge positions. This set is based on the vintage P.A.F. humbuckers of the late '50s and is perfect for blues, jazz, and classic rock.
Customer Reviews
Most helpful customer reviews
9 of 9 people found the following review helpful.Great P.A.F. tones, easily into Page Territory
By S.
I've been using these two pickups in an Epiphone Les Paul for over five years, with a handful of tube based amps, as well as a few modeling setups. Sounds great in all of them but shines the most through an moderately overdriven tube amp.I'm of the impression that these are the best non-boutique P.A.F. reproductions around. Wooden spacers, alnico magnets, you name it, Seymour Duncan went to great lengths to model these pickups on the late 1950s Gibson 'Patent Applied for' (PAF) Pickups.Frankly, the 59-neck pickup is legendary, and I will be looking to add humbucker and single coil sized versions of it to my other guitars. There is no replacing it, as far as I am concerned it is the definitive neck pickup for rock and metal ( I know Dimebag Darrel and several members of Iron Maiden used it in the neck position). The neck sound is woody, warm, never muddy, and has a slight hint of bite behind it, especially with the guitar's volume pot dimed (maxed). Almost a magical sound that has to be heard.The Bridge 59 is bright and has a biting edge, resulting probably from vintage correct slightly mismatched coils. It is slightly hotter than the neck pickup (probably by about .75 - 1.25 k.Ohms). It gives a great, bright Pagey tone with guitar's volume knob dimed; backed off from between 7 to 9, the bridge 59 model still has a PAF'ey edge, but without the sharpness and brightness. Great for blues, hard rock and even metal (more Dave Mustaine style metal though... I seem to be getting great Sabbath sounds from it as well, and the amps I have have tons of gain to spare). It reminds me of a Duncan JB with less output. It can be a bit abrasive, but this is what makes it great with distortion, in my opinion, and is easily toned down my using volume or even tone controls.With the two pickups combined, (neck volume control set to 5-7, bridge set to 8-9.5, using 1950s Les Paul wiring rather than modern wiring), I get a balance of the two pickups - retaining the woodyness of neck pickup, with a brighter tone. This in my opinion is perfect for edge of distortion tones, and my favorite use of the pickup - through a good Marshall I can get great dynamics and can go from say edge of distortion cleans (like Page's live version of Stairway to heaven) to overdriven leads by flicking the selector switch to the bridge position. Flicking to the neck pickup gets me almost or totally clean sounds, depending on the amp or pedal setting.
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful.PAF'S without the high price tag
By G. ONeill
Hello Everyone: the seymour duncan 59 set in my opinion is the closest thing to a real PAF without paying the high dollars for an original one or paying for a boutique one.Seymour claims the pickups are wound on the original winding machines from Kalamazoo and he went to great lengths to copy the production process.I installed this set in an Ibanez that is similar to an LP special, made in Korea, not China, all mahogany.I replaced the pots with CTS 500K ones from Mojo Tone, added orange drop capacitors, a switchcraft 3 way switch and input jack, and it now has that vintage tone.I have been playing it through a marshall dsl 401 tube amplifier, when it's clean it has that classic early rock tone, but when distorted, Joe Walsh or Angus Young comes to mind.the pickups are an overall good copy of the original PAF, I have had originals, and these really come close to those without breaking the bank.if you are going to install these in your guitar, I recommend using good electronics and good capacitors, those parts do have an overall affect on the tone as well, most of your import guitars use cheap parts and the capacitors are usually the wrong value, .022 is the common one used for PAF's, but a lot fo the imports use .047 which is good for single coils not humbuckers.take care and keep rocking.
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful.classic rock
By vermonster
Excellent if your looking for a classic/ vintage rock/blues sound and don't want to spend a ton of money. the value is great- you get 2 pickups that really give you a '59 les paul sound. I changed many things on my epiphone les paul to make it closer to a 59 gibson and these pickups were probably the most important. unbelievably clean tones with the guitar vol. turned down. turn it all the way up to get creamy distortion sounds.I play them through a tube amp only and I'm totally satisfied.If you play led zeppelin, Lynyrd Skynyrd, ACDC, CCR, GNR, Rolling stones, Pearl jam, The Tragically Hip, the who, ZZ Top, Rock...........You will probably like these.Don't buy them if you're totally heavy metal, super modern, because some of the best sounds from these pickups are because they can play so clean.
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