Huh. Look at those spots...obviously a victim of the recent "E. Coili" outbreak...
Since I started making the Berryville run (3 little Aiellos ago) I've heard/played just about every one of Rick's pickups ("Son of Kong", anyone?). Ever since the "MRI", with its crystalline high end, the overall fullness of tone has been increasing with each one, while retaining the high end & harmonic response you expect from his pickups. Anyone who plays through a "Potbelly", "Portal" or "Fountain" p/up can tell you he's been nailing great steel guitar tone for a while now. His latest effort-- which I believe is the first string-surrounding humbucker ever offered-- is another big step forward.
We played the coil-surround p'up installed in Rick's "Bronzepan", and in both necks of his long-scale/short-scale "Boobpan". For comparison we had his Black Pearl w/ Portal p'up, Sierra 8-string w/ an Alumitone, and my Richenbacher 59 w/ Potbelly + original horseshoe magnet. We played through a Fender Twin, Fender Pro Jr., and a Roland Micro RX. Rick was playing with fingerpicks and I was not. Mostly we were dealing with clean tones. Also worth pointing out that the only wooden guitar was the Sierra, and even that one has an aluminum plate running through the body.
Without getting into pages of comparison, I can say
all of these instruments sounded great. The new pickup stood apart, though, in producing the fullest (clean) steel guitar tone I've heard yet. While I've gotten accustomed to the really fat sounding chordal tone possible from an Aiello Potbelly or Portal or Fountain unit (and it's there, in spades, with the new p'up) I was knocked out by the coil-surround sound for
single-note lines, which is spectacular. Never been a fan of thin trebly steel guitar tone-- and this is the polar opposite
in sound, though there's plenty of treble content in the tone.
Rick preferred the bass cranked and the treble rolled way down. I get a darker sound without picks...I liked the bass rolled back to half and the treble up to 9-10 o'clock.
Would love to hear this pickup in a wood-bodied steel as well. This will probably happen.
--Steve