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Reviews (3)

Oct 04, 2016
A great option for humbucker players
1 of 1 found this helpful Listen, I love my Teles. But I'm not what I'd call your typical Telecaster player. There's something about the aesthetic that I truly enjoy, and tonally I've heard them used with incredible effectiveness for ambient guitar work, and even as a means of floating a hook. But if I'm honest with myself, the icepick highs from a Tele bridge pickup just don't suit my style of playing.
I'm not shy about taking a router to my guitar bodies, but I did want to avoid the considerable investment of all new hardware at the bridge position. And I want my guitar to sound more like a PAF. The Little 59 does exactly that. I got the quack and roundness of a humbucker without needing to overhaul the entire bridge.
It doesn't have the output of a full size humbucker, as you might expect. But it's close. And it does what I need it to do. I'd keep an eye out for them used, since you can get a large variety of pickups from foreign manufacturers for literally a tenth of the cost. But I went with the Little 59 because I could do research, read reviews, and it was more of a known quantity. I'm pleased with my purchase.

Apr 11, 2017
The best strings on the market, and the only ones I'll play.
Blue Steels are SLIGHTLY more expensive than most strings - a cost which is 1) completely offset by buying in bulk and 2) completely warranted. They are the best strings on earth. The tonal balance afforded by these strings, the consistency, the rebound under your fingers without any hint of brittleness, the life (for an uncoated string)... I've played DR, EB, D'addario, Martin, Gibson, Elixir, etc., and I kept coming back. Still experiment occasionally, but only to confirm these are still at the top of the heap. And they are.
Jan 03, 2007
Good game... so why ruin it?
4 of 10 found this helpful My son is an avid Shadow fan. All he wanted for Christmas was this game. So we got it for him with the expectation that it would be a lot like Sonic Heroes or other previous titles. It's similar in gameplay and concept, and generally a pretty cool game.
It's rated E:10+. I hadn't ever run into the rating before now, and I think I know why... it's stupid. The mild cartoon violence is to be expected - it's a video game. But "mild language"? What's the point? My 9 year old son gets to hear his current favorite character say "damnit" every time he loses his rings, "Damn... not here" when he loses a life, and even Knuckles tosses the word around - and it shows up in the subtitles when he uses it.
Point being, it doesn't improve the experience of playing the game, so why include any even mildly questionable content? Are there teenagers out there thinking Shadow is somehow cooler because he says "damnit"? I doubt anybody is going to take a cartoon hedgehog more seriously based on his vocabulary, and all it stands to do is reinforce bad habits in kids. And let's face it... a cartoon hedgehog is going to appeal to kids first.
So that's my rant. And I feel better now. :)