
P-90 Pickups
Technically, P-90s are not its own category of pickup but more of a specialised design philosophy under the broad church of single-coils. Designed by Gibson, they were made to be the go-to pickup for all of their guitars, however the introduction of the humbucker cut that idea short. Othewise known as either soap bar or dog ear pickups in referring to the visuals of the yellow case or triangular ends to the pickups dependent on the models, the P-90 sits in a tonal range somewhere between the classic single-coil and the humbucker. They’re raspy and raw, yet not quite not quite as ‘clacky’ as a single-coil and not as muffled as the humbucker. This is down to a wider, yet shorter bobbin than the average single-coil pickup.
P-90s have a long and varied history in popular music, as the original Gibson Gold Top Les Pauls and early SGs they are most often associated with are highly sought after instruments. Players like Chet Atkins, Freddie King, Tony Iommi, Frank Zappa all experimented with the nuanced P-90 tone. They came into their own during the punk movement as the punchy potential of the P-90 suited this intense style to a tee. They were often utilised in the more affordable Les Paul Junior, which met that punk aesthetic. Johnny Thunders, Mick Jones and Mike Ness got the most out of the P-90s in this era, and later Billie Joe Armstrong and Jim Adkins, who favoured more organic guitar tones to the processed general trends in the late nineties.
What is the Best Guitar Pickup?
Of course, there is no one-size-fits-all to soundcraft .There are hundreds of different pickup designs all vying for their own corner of the market. But with this general guide, you’ll be able to identify the intrinsic qualities to the single-coil, humbucker and P-90.
As a rule of thumb, single-coil pickups are best for bright, tonally broad, crisp tones. They add bite to cleans and sound light and agile with a moderate amount of gain. You really can use them for any type of music.
If there were a direct opposite to single coil pickups, humbuckers are it. They sound warm and/or punchy on both clean and overdriven settings and provide a more precise frequency selection. These handle distortion the best of the three detailed here. They’re not ideal for jangly clean tones, but work well for rock, metal and in traditional jazz in particular.
P-90s are a little more unique. They have the grit of single-coils without as much top end. P-90s do a great job of bedding in with a rhythm section of a band, as well as leading the charge on hot solo tones.
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