Sorry. I'm sure there has been more than enough discussion about this already but I'm a little stumped non the less.
I have a Mexican Nashville Telecaster, ash body?, rosewood neck, with what I assume are the original pickups. I'm playing through either a Blues Deluxe or a '59 Bassman reissue. Compared to my ash Strat with maple neck and Texas specials I find my Tele dark and characterless. I'm assuming a pickup upgrade might get me some more spank.
I've been exploring the Seymour Duncan site which was really thoughtfully setup. Each pickup has sound samples, clean, with some dirt, with more dirt, with and without the backing band track. The guy plays exactly the same parts very time. Now that is the way to be able to truly compare pickups. All the variables besides the pickup are eliminated. Unfortunately I think they just updated the site and there are now a few glitches with some of the sound samples. In any case with good speakers or ear phones you can AB and C, or more, pickups and split hairs until your eyes cross.
Having done that I've narrowed my list of the Seymour Duncan offerings.
Why can't Fender do something similar? They have some products posted with pictures of the packaging which sometimes include the graphic illustrating the relative balance of high, mid and low end tones. BUT they don't have that for every pickup. And they can post as many DC resistance/output numbers as they like. It doesn't making things any clearer.
Yes, there is a question coming. Does anyone have anything to say about the Fender Vintage '64s, Vintage '58s, Black Guards, '51 No Casters and how 5they might compare?
I realize that Fender has some Youtube videos but unless they guy is playing the same stuff with the same amp set up and the same pickup position what's the point?
In any case if anyone has any words of wisdom on this I would appreciate it. Just trying to figure out which pickups are going to give me the most classic Tele twang.
Thanks.