What kind of pickups are in a Les Paul Junior?

What kind of pickups are in a Les Paul Junior?

Introduced as an affordable option for students and beginners in 1954, the Les Paul Junior has been embraced by musicians for over 60 years. The single cutaway slab mahogany body, single dogear P-90 pickup, single volume and tone controls all add up to a whole lot of guitar which is greater than the sum of its parts.

What is the neck angle of a Les Paul Junior?


The standard Les Paul Junior design has a 3° neck pitch, permitting a much lower riser.

Is Les Paul Junior A good guitar?

My Bottom Line up Front: A Les Paul Junior is an iconic model, the simplicity of which makes it unique in design and tone. With only one single P90 bridge pickup, super lightweight body, and short scale, easy to play neck, this guitar is perfect for rock, blues, country, etc. It has a punchy tone with lots of bite.

What is the neck pickup on a Les Paul?

The Les Paul has two pickups, one near the bridge and the other near the neck. The neck pickup is commonly used for rhythm guitar and clean tones because it’s less harsh and bridge. Check out this post on the difference between bridge and neck pickups to learn more.

What’s the difference between a Les Paul Junior and Melody Maker?

The main differences between the Les Paul Junior, Special, and the Melody Maker are that the Junior has only a bridge pickup and no luxuries. The Les Paul Special features 2 P90 pickups with individual controls and a bound neck. The Melody Maker has a thinner body, a narrower headstock, and has 2 pickups.

How thick is a Les Paul Jr body?

This super light guitar weighs just 7.20 lbs. One-piece 12 3/4 inch wide, 1 5/8 inch thick, double-cutaway solid mahogany body with rounded edges.

When was the first Les Paul Jr made?

It was first released with a single-cutaway body style; models with a double-cutaway body style were later introduced in 1958. The Jr. continued through the first three years of the Les Paul/SG body redesign….Gibson Les Paul Junior.

Gibson Les Paul Jr.
Body Mahogany
Neck Mahogany
Fretboard Rosewood, Ebony
Hardware

Why is it called a Les Paul Jr?

The Lennon model is unique for the single-coil, hexagon-shaped “Charlie Christian” pickup at the neck, a modification Lennon himself accepted when he had his actual Junior serviced in the 1970s, upon acquiring the guitar (the pickup name derives from the pickup installed on Christian’s Gibson ES-150 guitar).