Australian Guitar

• Epiphone Alex Lifeson Les Paul Axcess Standard

ROLL THE TONES!

- REVIEW BY ROB LAING.

Alex Lifeson’s Les Paul finally coming at a more affordable price-point opens up one of the boldest takes on an LP to new players. Ten years ago, Alex told TotalGuita­r how his Gibson signature was, based on the Axcess model and its thinner body but with caveats. “We went with a very heavy [non chambered] mahogany so it still has weight and resonance,” he explained. “There’s a lot

[of electronic­s] in the guitar so it was important to have a good solid block as a starting point.”

There’s plenty of talking points here; including those electronic­s, in addition to enhanced fret access and the locking tremolo that will immediatel­y divide opinion between purists and progressiv­es. Our Les Paul expectatio­ns could be challenged here.

When Lifeson said “very heavy”, he was talking about his own early serial Gibson signatures. While the standard Axcess shares key features and is known for being a lighter Les Paul, the Rush man consciousl­y went for a non-chambered, weightier option.

That equates to a substantia­l nine pounds here.

And this is despite the reduced body thickness over a standard Les Paul, here one-and-three-quarter inches at its thickest compared to a Standard’s one-and-seveneight­h inches. A Comfort-Carve belly scarf enhances the closeness we feel with this guitar over a usual Les Paul and the reduced neck heel improves upper fret access too – hence the name.

The Viceroy Brown Lifeson favours is a pleasing sunburst that brings the classic Les Paul heritage to bring balance to the impact of the great diversion here; a double-locking tremolo and the same Floyd Rose licensed Graph Tech Ghost unit found on the Gibson version with a Floyd Rose R4 Locking Nut.

Alongside the traditiona­l body mahogany and maple cap combo, the fretboard wood here is

Indian Laurel, a more affordable alternativ­e to rosewood and visually similar. A fine aesthetic, but the five cavity covers at the back suggest there’s more than the scope of vibrato unit spicing up the recipe for expansion here.

The man himself told us exactly what that meant back for his own guitar back in 2011. “We have coil taps on the pickups, a Floyd Rose and the piezo is the second jack - the Life-O-Sound - that we run independen­tly or you can mix both magnetic pickups and the piezo through the main output.

The versatilit­y of Les Pauls is often unsung – myriad tones can be accessed via shaping gain and EQ through the volume and tone controls. But this guitar is on a whole other level; factor in the three pickup positions for humbucker and coil-splits. Now add bridge and middle positions for piezo, with and without coil-split from the bridge. Oh, and you have a fantastica­lly expressive tremolo system to explore, that keeps tuning rock solid. Plus the ability to send that piezo signal separately to a PA or acoustic amp for layers. But all this wouldn’t count for much without the foundation­s in place. While the action on our test guitar is a little high for us, the humbucker choices here feel right; the bridge rich and fat, the neck blooming and throaty, with definition. Dialling in the piezo adds air between notes with low end that’s great for gentler, strummy tones and folkier places than you might expect. Then the coil-splits take out some low end if you wish (coilsplits always take away low end in our experience). Split alone, we’re certainly not talking Strat or Tele twang but some useful chiming mids with some high sizzle and cut à la P-90.

VERDICT

It’s quite simply a stunningly versatile Les Paul – and now more people can enjoy Lifeson’s combinatio­ns, and bring their own creative ideas to the table. Axcessibil­ity indeed.

PROS

Feature-packed.

Excellent value for money

CONS

None

CONTACT

Australis Music Group Ph: (02) 9698 4444

Web: australism­usic.com.au

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