February 2011 \ Reviews \ Electrics \ Gibson Lou Pallo Signature Les Paul Electric Guitar Review

Gibson Lou Pallo Signature Les Paul Electric Guitar Review

Adam Perlmutter

Gibson's latest honors Les Paul's right-hand man, and an incredible player in his own right, Lou Pallo. The instrument incorporates elements from both traditional Standard and Custom models, with some twists like the P-90 and Dirty Fingers pickup duo.


Premier Guitar February 2011

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Download Example 1
Clean tone - neck pickup, low volume
Download Example 2
Distortion tone (bridge pickup) with The Tone God NerFuzz
Clips recorded with the Les Paul into Schroeder amp mic'ed with Shure SM57 into Apogee Duet into GarageBand.
Few electric guitars are as iconic as the Gibson Les Paul, introduced in 1952. And few other guitars have known as many different incarnations. At present, Gibson’s USA builds 33 different Les Pauls—versions as varied as the Studio 50s Tribute and the ultra-modern Dusk Tiger. The Nashville Custom Shop meanwhile builds 39 versions—mostly detailed recreations of 1950s originals, including many collectors’ favorite, the 1959 Standard. Signature models are part of that mix too. Some are replicas of famous guitars, like the Eric Clapton 1960 “Beano” and the Randy Rhoads Les Paul Custom. But others are new models entirely, like the Lou Pallo Signature Les Paul—named in honor of Les Paul’s right hand man and a jazz legend in his own right.

Made in a limited edition of 400 models, this classy guitar splits the difference between traditional Standard and Custom models and features an electronics package never before seen on any production-model Les Paul.

Classic Gibson Styling
The Lou Pallo Signature has similar specs to 1950s Les Pauls—a single cutaway mahogany body with an arched maple cap and a mahogany neck with a 1.68"-inch nut and a 24.75" rosewood fretboard. It borrows trim and detail from a Standard—single-ply neck and body binding, an unbound headstock with a silkscreened Les Paul logo, and three-per-side single-ring tuners with plastic tulip tips. But other elements like the rectangular fingerboard inlays and ebony-finished top, are inspired by the Custom. The only detail indentifying this as a signature model is Lou Pallo’s signature on the 12th-fret inlay.

The Lou Pallo Signature model has a nicely understated appearance. There’s no pick-guard and the pickups, reflector knobs, and switch ring and tip are black. The hardware is not gold like on a Custom or nickel as on a Standard, but chrome, a finish that will best resist tarnishing. The instrument’s natural back and neck, a feature found on certain original Goldtop Les Pauls, is lovely.

The Lou Pallo Signature isn’t executed perfectly. The crème binding is obviously in-tended to look aged, but appears undesirably pinkish in certain lights—white binding with a yellowed clear coat would have definitely been preferable. The guitar also might have benefited from sharing certain features from Gibson’s Historic models, like thinner neck binding, tortoise side dots, and a holly headstock overlay.

Craftsmanship on our review model of the Lou Pallo Signature was excellent. The guitar’s glossy finish was free of orange peel. And the 22 frets and Corian nut were extremely well finished, thanks, in part, to Gibson’s use of the PLEK system (a computerized tool used to dress frets and cut slots). Determined to find a finish flaw, I encountered only a minute smudge of black that had migrated from the guitar’s top to the binding on the upper-left bout.

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Comments

(8 comments) display by
UsernameComment
mike
on 02/21/2011
so, steve, you drank the pos koolaide, a prs could'nt carry a les paul's water, this guitar has the best of both worlds the P 90 has the greatest tone of any pickup, and the dirty fingers rock, the black over light is an eligant look that seems to break away from the tired, repetitive look of a standard LP, I for one am going to pick one up, in the world of fine guitars, if you you have a problem with the price, thats why they make knock-off's
Bill
on 02/09/2011
I don't understand "signature" guitars that bear no resemblance to anything that the "signatory" plays/has played.
steve
on 02/08/2011
Get A Prs Les Paul is old and lame news
FlatBrokeN KS
on 02/04/2011
Nice guitar, once again over priced. I'm not sure what level of musician can afford it and Gibson seems bent on this path. The most appealing signature axe I've seen in awhile though...
Lucille
on 01/31/2011
Check out a Tradition S200 or S2000.
Maso
on 01/31/2011
What I'm hearing doesn't sound like great tone at all. Give it to me and I will get some tone out of it. And... how do you name a guitar first for Les Paul then Lou Pallo at the same time...? I'll stick with my beat up old Dan Elecrto. That guitar really knows the blues...!
Michael Radgers
on 01/30/2011
Sigh.... another overpriced Paul from Gibson. Come on guys, come up with something that player WITHOUT the big wallets want. At least it's not a robot.....
James
on 01/29/2011
I have seen Lou Pallo play a couple of times and even though he was "backing up" the late great Les Paul I could tell he was a seriously good musician. At one point in one of the shows he got to take a solo and he really smoked. He was very polite when I spoke to him after the gig - a realy gentleman.



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