Guitarist

Top Lollar

Jamie Dickson talks to revered maker Jason Lollar about what makes a good pickup

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Few pickup makers have as much savvy and experience as Jason Lollar. Read his views on what makes a great PAF on

“A maker needs to consider all the variables that contribute to the perfect voicing for a pickup – and orchestrat­e them for the right result”

If there is such a thing, Jason Lollar is a pickup maker’s pickup maker.The American winder is so often named in discussion­s of great pickups that he’s almost a kind of Old Master of the craft. His Imperial humbuckers have become something of a benchmark for how a modern recreation of a PAF should be, so we joined him to learn what the ingredient­s of the Lollar special sauce are.

“I like the pickup to be able to follow any kind of input that the player puts on the string, rather than the pickup itself dominating the sound,” Jason begins, when I call him at his Tacoma manufactur­ing headquarte­rs. “That takes a certain amount of attack and clarity,” he adds, “especially when you’re playing real close intervals. You also want a real open, even high-end and midrange.”

Lollar comes from a lutherie background so his viewpoint tends to take in the whole guitar when he talks about making good pickups. Since the early years of aftermarke­t pickups, when makers such as DiMarzio and Seymour Duncan appeared on the scene in the 1970s, guitar players have become steadily more aware of the influence of magnets, wire gauge and winding patterns on the performanc­e of pickups. Jason Lollar says a savvy maker needs to consider all the variables that can contribute to the perfect voicing for a pickup – and then carefully orchestrat­e them for the right result.

“We use a lot of different things,” he explains. “A tighter wind will give you more inductance and more output,” for example. “With a looser wind you’ll get more of a brilliant sound with less drive. So it’s the way the pickup is wound but also the gauge of wire – smaller gauge wires can dampen some of the high-end. Then there’s the type of magnet and how much it’s charged or degaussed, which makes a big difference. Even the pickup cover material makes a difference. So there’s a lot to pay attention to,” he reflects.

Jason adds that when it comes to understand­ing how a pickup will perform, some commonly used rules of thumb can be more misleading than helpful. For example, DC resistance is often used as a measure of how hot a pickup is. Trouble is, says Jason, a pickup’s DC resistance reading isn’t fixed – and can literally change with the weather.

“Most guitarists [judge a pickup by] the resistance, which is really kind of a poor way to judge what a pickup’s doing because resistance can vary even with air temperatur­e,” he explains. “If the air temperatur­e is 90 degrees [Fahrenheit], the pickup resistance is gonna read higher. If it’s 50 degrees, it’s going to read way lower.”

While Jason Lollar’s pickups are fitted as standard on many boutique and premium guitars, notably Eastman, some of his designs have acquired a kind of cult following in their own right, especially the Imperial humbucker. What was his train of thought when he was designing this well-known set? “Well, I wanted it to be a kind of standard PAF output range and the Imperials are also designed to have a cover on because the pickup cover makes a difference in the sound,”

“One thing a low-wind pickup does is tighten up that bottom-end, so you can goose your amp a little bit more without ‘blatting out’ the bass”

he explains. “It evens out the high-end and it also gives the overall sound a little bit of a snarl. If you take that pickup cover off you don’t get that any more – it distorts the magnetic field a little bit.

“Another thing we did on the Imperials was boost the output on the bridge pickup a little bit, so it balances better. I’ve got a ’63 ES-355 and a ’71 Les Paul Custom and, on both of those, you gotta roll the neck pickup volume down a little to get an even volume response from both pickups. I was aware of that happening with old Gibsons, so I designed our set so it wouldn’t sound wimpy when you went from the neck to the bridge.”

Like many premium PAF-style pickups, Lollar’s Imperials are offered in high-wind, standard and ‘lowwind’ variants. The latter term has become a bit of a buzzword among tone-hounds, especially in relation to vintage humbuckers. But what does it really mean in terms of practical pickup performanc­e?

“Okay, if you’re playing on a Fender amp, for instance… those amps tend to ‘blat’ out on the low-end really quick. So you gotta roll off a lot of bottom-end from the amp if you’re playing loud with a fairly hot pickup. One thing that a low-wind pickup does is tighten up that bottom-end, so that you can goose your amp a little bit more without blatting out the bass.

“A low-wind also gives you just a little bit more sparkle on the top-end,” he continues. “So you can get a little bit more clarity out of a semi-hollow guitar. Finally, if you’re a player who uses chord inversions that feature really close intervals… the low-winds really accentuate that. You can really get much more clarity out of the bass. So that’s really what that’s about,” Lollar concludes. www.lollarguit­ars.com / dynamicmus­icdistribu­tion.co.uk

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 ??  ?? Jason Lollar’s approach to pickup making involves judicious tweaking of a variety of aspects of each build to get the target tone
Jason Lollar’s approach to pickup making involves judicious tweaking of a variety of aspects of each build to get the target tone
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 ??  ?? A pickup builder inspects his handiwork at Lollar’s Tacoma-based workshop
A pickup builder inspects his handiwork at Lollar’s Tacoma-based workshop

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