Product: Epiphone '56 Les Paul Goldtop Reissue Price Paid: USD 430
Submitted 08/13/2009
at 12:01pm
by JA
Features
:9
2008 made in China, all standard options, bought it new. P-90s, etc.
9 for features because it's a re-issue and contains almost every feature of the original, except accurate tuners. Why would they make that beautiful accurate gold top, cream binding, red mahogany back, and put modern chrome Grover tuners on it? I'm not a fan of the Epiphone headstock shape either, but it is what it is.
The neck shape, if you're familiar with the fat Gibson 1958 style ("baseball bat") and the thinner, faster 1960 style, this is right in the middle. Faster and thinner than the baseball bat, but more substantial than a 1960 thin neck. Very comfortable.
Sound
:7
I bought this to use as a blues guitar, looking for that fat growly woody P-90 tone on a solid platform.
Acoustically (unplugged) it is a very bright guitar. The body is one-piece mahogany (not maple capped as the Gibsons are), and that mahogany must be a very hard piece of wood, harder than a maple cap would be.
It's a punchy tone, it hits hard then fades fast, not much of a sustaining guitar. Easily corrected with a bridge/ stopbar upgrade if you want to.
Plugged in, the neck pickup is fantastic. Rich, fat, balanced with a nice edge when pushed, cleans up well and allows the tone of the string and body come through. Sounds like an amplified version of the acoustic tone. That neck pup driven very hard into a tube amp can get muddy, it's better to stay in that magic zone where the amp is just compressing and will grind if you push it. The richness of this pup largely makes up for/ smooths out the punchy lack of sustain that the guitar naturally has. Singing edgy blues solos are it's forte.
The bridge pup is a disappointment, most obvious when you've played the neck pup for a while then switch to it. You'll be wondering what happened to your tone. The up side of this is that pushed hard into a well overdriven tube amp (master volume amp, etc), the bridge sounds great. It's thin-ness at a relatively clean setting translates to a lack of mud and a fantastic heavy metal distorted tone. Power chords rock, single note is punchy. Problem is that at that amp setting, if you switch back to the neck, it's mud city. In other words, the two pups are not a match made in heaven and it's hard to make them work well together.
A pickup upgrade (at least one of them) is needed for a pro player. I used a set of Duncan SP90-2 and SP90-3. Hotter than stock, but very well balanced and perfect for this guitar.
Action, Fit, & Finish
:6
I bought this guitar new, as a factory second/ blem item and saved some cash. For the life of me, I can not see the flaw. They are capable of doing very, very good work in the Asian guitar factories, as good/ better than any of the big USA/ Mexican factories. The binding is perfectly applied and well finished, the gold top paint is perfect and VERY authentic looking, the red stained back and neck are all very well done, no issues that I can see. The mahogany back is a dark red, but translucent enough that you can see the grain showing through. Neck is straight, action good, truss rod properly set at the factory.
I did feel the need to polish the frets at the first string change to make them perfectly smooth and add some lem-oil to the fingerboard, but I do this on all new guitars that I buy as a matter of basic set-up.
However, as well applied and beautiful as the finish is, I grew to hate it. It LOOKS fantastic, but it feels cheap and plastic. I own a Gibson Custom shop Historic 1960 reissue Les Paul with a thin nitrocellulose finish that is absolute heaven. When I switch from the gibby to the Epi, it feels like a piece of plastic. What I've done is remove all of the hardware, etc, and wet-sanded the whole guitar with 800 grit to remove most of the clear poly, and rough it up. Then, I brought the finish back to a soft matte texture with automotive polishing compound, by hand. MUCH better, looks and feels more like a vintage "instrument" less like a shiny piece of plastic, but I'll probably eventually completely strip it and re-finish it vintage correct with nitrocellulose. THAT will be a fantastic guitar.
You can probably tell that I'm very picky, most users will be very happy with the finish on this guitar. I'm just crazy.
10 for the quality and appearance of the finish and construction, minus 4 for the cheap feel of the thick poly finish for a 6 rating.
Reliability/Durability
:7
It's built like a tank. Neck/ body joint is rock solid, the thick hard poly finish will last forever and stand up to dings and hits very well.
The first thing that I did with this guitar is remove all of the electronics and replace them with pro-grade stuff. Switchcraft pickup switch and jack, CTS pots and MojoTone PIO tone caps all with the Gibson 1950's wiring configuration. Vintage style Gibson steel braided wiring throughout. The pots and switch felt cheap, bottom line, and I would expect them to cr*p out and fail or start to make noise rather quickly with regular use. CTS pots have larger shafts than the Chinese pots that came stock, so I had to slightly enlarge the holes and get Gibson knobs as well.
I also swapped the tuners out for a set of Tone Pros Kluson vintage keystones. Seems odd on a 1956 vintage recreation guitar that is so accurate elsewhere, that they'd use modern chrome Grovers. The tuners seemed solid, but a heavy user would probably want to replace them with USA made quality tuners at any rate.
With these upgrades, I have complete confidence in the guitar's ability to last and perform consistently. No problem gigging with it.
7 because of the cheap feeling electronics. With the Switchcraft/ CTS upgrades, it is a 10.
Customer Support
:No Opinion
Have not experienced Epiphone customer service. They're a huge company owned by Gibson, I'm sure they'll take care of business if I need it.
My guitar is so modded now though, I'm sure the warranty is void anyway.
Overall Rating
:8
For a lot of players, younger/ newer players, this is a fantastic guitar right out of the box. You need something built well that will last, stay in tune, perform reliably and allow you to practice and learn. It has a cool vintage vibe but will work well as an all-around guitar.
For a more experienced, pro player, some parts will need to be upgraded.
Electronics, tuners and pickups. This will allow the owner to build a niche guitar, suited for a certain tone or style he's looking for to add to his collection. This is a specific type of guitar- not a heavy metal/ thrash/ hard rock guitar. It shines with a clean fat tone, or my favorite- tube amp just on the edge of crunch/ break-up. Modern jazz, heavy blues, PERFECT. It offers a lot of nuance and is a very playable guitar.
As well, since it's very well built (good wood, good construction) and relatively inexpensive for it's quality, it's a great platform for modding and customizing to build YOUR perfect P-90 axe.
8 because it's not perfect out of the box, but can easily be made much, much better.
Product: Epiphone '56 Les Paul Goldtop Reissue Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 04/09/2009
at 01:54am
by John
Features
:9
2006 Epiphone 56 Reissue Les Paul Gold Top (P-90's)
I have been anti Epi for the last 10 years or so, I've always got the impression that they were over priced and not worth the price tag even as a beginners guitar. That was until today when this 2006 56 reissue I picked up used renewed my faith. It has a great feeling neck and decent sound out of the box. To all of you coming down on the guitar for it's factory setup equaling a large volume/Tone difference between the neck and bridge pickups - please read my portion of this review under "Sound".
Sound
:10
Out of the box it plays great for a beginner/intermediate player or someone who hasn't owned USA Gibsons in the past. You will love it if you are looking for a blues guitar or for something with just enough jangle to not be a Fender.
As stated it plays and sounds good out of the box but, I like others found some weak points/dislikes in the factory setup as well...
......... Dislikes ......
1. The stock plastic nut is garbage, it binds and the plastic is not dense enough to offer any tonal advantage.
2. The Bridge pickup couldn't keep up with the Neck pickup in terms of volume, tone and feel.
3. The intonation was sharp on every string and the factory strings would not stay in tune, it's like they were constantly stretching with each bend and/or re-tune.
4. All the hardware on the Grover tuners were loose.
5. The neck had to much releif which caused buzzing around the tenth fret.
........ Solutions... Don't give up this is a great little guitar if you can find one!
1. I had a new Black Tusq XL Nut made by Graphtech laying in my parts bin for a Les Paul. As soon as I installed it I could hear the difference acoustically, night and day, literally! (I replace standard Gibson Bone Nuts with these on my USA Gibson guitars - It's an awesome product, the nuts are pre slotted and sound better than even natural bone material because Tusq is a more consistant material)
2. I turned my amp on a low volume level and adjusted/raised each pole piece on the pickups individually for the right amount of attack, sustain and warmth for my liking. Do this one pole piece on one pickup at a time - be sure to take your time. Start with your bridge pickup since it is the one that sounds weak compared to the neck pickup. Adjust the pole pieces under each string until you can play each string with even volume, warmth and sustain. Use a scale, the notes will help you hear any volume, attack or sustain differences between each string. After you setup your bridge pickup this way move onto the neck pickup and do the same - play with this until you get even volume out of both pickups and until open chords sound full and pleasing when strummed.
3. After taking care of dislike number 5 by adjusting your truss rod until the neck has only slight relief, intonation is the next step. If you do not know how to intonate your guitar there are lots of instrustions on the net just look up "tune-o-matic intonation adjustment" Intonation is easy and my guitar seemed to intonate quickly with little effort.
4. Check your tuners and make sure all the hardware is tight but, do not over tighten the screws for the buttons. Nothing feels worse than sloppy tuners.
After I did these few things this guitar is a blues machine, literally a tone monster. It has more feel than any NON Standard USA Gibson. It plays and sounds way beyond my expectations and it's price point.
Hopefully my experience helps some of you! Play On!
Action, Fit, & Finish
:No Opinion
Read Above
Reliability/Durability
:No Opinion
We'll see..
Customer Support
:No Opinion
No Thanks, I purchased the guitar used even though it has rarely been played I am pretty sure the warranty has ran out!
Overall Rating
:10
One of the most under rated guitars available.
Product: Epiphone '56 Les Paul Goldtop Reissue Price Paid: USD 320 USED
Submitted 03/29/2009
at 08:49pm
by Jason
Features
:9
Made in Korea by Unsung in 2002. Epiphone reissue of a 1956 Gold Top Les Paul. Cream P90 soapbar pickups- neck measures 8.3k and bridge measures 8.6k as far as output. Beautiful gold sparkle finish with cream binding, set neck, rosewood fretboard with white pearl inlays. Grover tuners. Neck feels nice- REAL nice. Medium sized feel to it. Mine was bought used and came with an Epiphone hard case. I upgraded the toggle switch and output jack to a Switchcraft brand switch and jack, and upgraded all 4 pots to 500k CTS pots (they were 500k stock). Also upgraded the tone caps to .022uf Mallory's (they were .022uf cheapy film caps stock). It gets a 9 because it has all the features of the original '56 Gold Top, and that's about all you can expect from a reissue.
Sound
:9
It sounds amazing! I sold my Mexican Fender Telecaster and bought this Gold Top. My Tele had a P90 neck pickup and a humbucker bridge pickup, and this Gold Top has even better tone than that did. This Gold Top gets great P90 growl! Bitey and raw, but nice and thick too (not thin like a my Tele sometimes was). I play this through my 1965 Ampeg Gemini 1 with original Jensen C12Q speaker and I get GREAT vintage rock tones. The neck pickup sounds especially good. I wasn't digging the bridge pickup (sounded dull/lifeless compared to the sweet neck pup) so I raised it closer to the strings and that helped- but I think I can do better so I ordered a Lindy Fralin 10% overwound bridge P90 pickup for it. That should push this guitar into the "dream-boat" category as far as tone goes. I can't say enough good things about the sound of this guitar. The electronics upgrades I did were merely for longevity sake. The stock toggle worked fine, but upon inspection/replacement it was obviously cheapy quality compared to the Switchcraft. The stock pots were also very cheap and were slightly scratchy- who knows what value they were actually (forgot to measure before I threw them out) but they said 500k on the back. Now the tone caps seem to have added a LITTLE extra "mojo" in my opinion but that is supposedly not possible (in such a low-voltage application, there is scientifically no perceivable difference in sound when changing from low quality caps to high qulaity caps, especially since there is no optimal value in the first place) BUT, nevertheless, in my opinion it sounds a bit more lively/clear as if the signal is being filter more properly. Before the upgrades it was a 9 but I'm thinking this Fralin P90 could push it up to a perfect 10. I mean it- this is the best sounding guitar I've ever owned. And I know there are far too many Epiphone reviews that say this but I'll say it anyway- I don't see what Gibson could offer that would justify spending $3999 on a Gibson Gold Top reissue instead of this Epiphone for far less. Has great sustain and harmonics and sounds loud and tone-full even when you play it unplugged.
Action, Fit, & Finish
:9
I got mine used so I can't say how it came from the factory, but mine is setup PERFECTLY. Plays like a dream. Has action just a tad lower than I like personally (since I play slide too) but I have been playing just fine with it so far. The tuners took some getting used to. They hold tune well but they are very touchy- that is, just a slight nudge on the tuner changes the pitch of the string quite a bit. Tuning is a delicate procedure here. Might end up replacing those tuners someday but no real reason to other than preference. Frets are all nice, no issues. Nut is great. Plenty of sustain and harmonics. Feels very solid and well put-together.
Reliability/Durability
:8
I upgraded the switch, pots, output jack, tone caps, and changed the strap buttons out for some chrome Schaller strap-locks. I think with these upgrades, this guitar is VERY dependable. Without those upgrades, I would only give it a 8 since the quality of the stock pots/jack/switch was not spectacular. But with the upgrades it gets a 10.
Customer Support
:No Opinion
Not sure. Haven't had to use them.
Overall Rating
:9
Been playing for about 10 years. I've owned at least a handful of other guitars and this is easily my favorite. Sexy, tone-full, and fun to play. Great vintage vibe to it. Can't wait for the Fralin bridge pickup to arrive so I can slap that in there. If you are looking for ballsy, raw, vintage P90 rock and roll goodness in LP form, go ahead and get yourself on of these little beauties. I can't believe how good the stock pickups sound. I'm only replacing the bridge pickup because I'm picky. Most folks would be more than happy with it. I wish Epiphone wouldn't have cheaped out on the switch/jack/pots but that is typical of asian-made mass-produced guitars I guess. It might be cool if it had a Bigsby...
Product: Epiphone '56 Les Paul Goldtop Reissue Price Paid: ??? 400 USED
Submitted 03/18/2009
at 09:44am
by tomazb
Features
:10
got it used. mine has the "limited edition" logo on the back of the headstock. classic features, already described by past reviewers. to me it has all i need.
Sound
:10
i play a mix of punk & r'n'r. i'm not looking for that modern sound - i was still a bit sceptic about the P-90's but found out how great they are! i'm running it into a marshall 900 or jmp super lead, through both it sounds great. i'm also using a boss overdrive stompbox, but i use it only as a booster. the P-90's can be a bit noisy... but you know, shut up and play & you won't hear any noise :)
i think it's all stock (except strap-locks). might change the pickups in the future, but i don't know. i don't think there's any real need for that - even stock it sounds great!!!
Action, Fit, & Finish
:10
i checked the serial when i got it, i think the guitar is from '96 or something. it still looks great, except a couple of scratches gained in time it's flawless!!!
Reliability/Durability
:10
i have 2 other guitars, an epiphone LP standard (with new pickups - you have to change them there) and a gretsch 6120-1959 (reissue). each one has its own sound, all three are great. i always take 2 to gigs, just in case a string problem, even if i never had to pick up a "backup" guitar during a gig till now. i'm pretty much sure this beauty won't let me down during a gig.
Customer Support
:No Opinion
never used it... so i don't know.
Overall Rating
:10
a great guitar. got it used in great conditions. sounds great stock, not like the LP standard where you have to change the pick-ups. i just put on strap-locks, but if you move when you're playing you have to do that with any guitar, i definitely don't want her to drop on the floor.
Product: Epiphone '56 Les Paul Goldtop Reissue Price Paid: USD 359.00
Submitted 02/06/2009
at 03:13pm
by Mike Solomon
Email: mike at cardonesolomon<dot>com
Features
:8
Made at Epiphone's factory in China, 2007. Two P 90 style pickups, 2 volume, 2 tone controls, stop tailpiece, tune-a-matic style bridge, Grover tuners, dark, rear stained, alder body, with maple veneer gold top finish, typical carved styled single cutaway Les Paul body. Cream colored top body and fretboard bindings, trapaziodal inlays on rosewood fingerboard. Gibson scale and fret count.
Sound
:9
This guitar, especially with neck pup or with both pups on, are wonderful for fat, creamy, clean or raunchier,overdriven blues.I also play some jazzier tunes, and some southern country rock too.I use this guitar with Fender Princeton/Deluxe/Super Reverbs,loaded with a mix of Jensen, Oxford or Utah spkrs,a Marshall Bluesbreaker, a Vox AC 15, both w Celestion Greenbacks and a 50 watt Marshall plexi into a Marshall 4x12 w Vintage 30 Celestions.
With the bridge pickup on,one can get some Telecaster-ish sounds, that are bright, crisp and trebly.Good for country style pickin'.
I use either the neck pickup alone or both pickups 95% of time.
Action, Fit, & Finish
:8
I was simply amazed at the quality of the fret work and the excellent setup from the start.I have raised the action slightly to fit my prefrence and for slide playing in open tunings.
The pickup's outputs are poorly matched with the neck pickup way hotter than the bridge.This is not a big deal for me, since I always adjust volume & tone controls as I play anyway.
The finish work was also surprisingly very good to excellent considering,this price point,and,for a Chinese built instrument.
I prefer the Gibson styled amber volume/tone knobs which are easier to see the settings, than the dark amber ones supplied.Again,no biggie, since I adjust by ear as I play.
It is much lighter than my other "real" Gibson Les Pauls, and this is a BIG plus, and the guitar resonates differently from the Gibson's historic mahogany/maple wood body setup..I like both sounds.
The nut needs a minor adjustment to enhance tuning and intonation stability.
Reliability/Durability
:No Opinion
I do not know how this guitar would hold up under constant live performance work. My impression is that it is solid, yet like most guitars one should be careful.
Customer Support
:No Opinion
I have not contacted Epiphone regarding this instrument
Overall Rating
:10
I have been playing since 1965, and own a mix of Fender, Gibson, Guild,Martin, Dobro, & Taylor electrics and acoustics. In addition, I own a mix of Fenders, the two Marshalls and Vox previously mentioned, plus an Epiphone 5 watt amp head.I generate overdrive and distortion from driving the amps hot, and use reverb. The only outboard gear is a Fender reverb unit, and some different flavored analog delays.I played a Gibson version of this which retailed for $2,800, and it was a superb guitar. At under $400, this is a very nice instrument, and an excellent value, and I would gig out with this. However, it is clear to my ears that the pickups could be upgraded, and I may eventually do that.This guitar feels great, sounds great, is light for a Les Paul,and it looks very close to the Gibson version. To summarize, this guitar at this price, is an outstanding value.
Product: Epiphone '56 Les Paul Goldtop Reissue Price Paid: USD 235
Submitted 09/27/2008
at 01:47am
by Steve Oxley
Features
:9
07 Made in China Epiphone Les Paul 56 Gold Top, Features two P90 PUPS, 2vol and 2 tone Controls, plus selector switch. Mahogany body and mahogany set neck.
Sound
:9
Played clean, through a 68 Non MV Marshall 100 Super lead, the guitar sounds overall very good. With the selector switch in the middle position, theres a nice hollow sounding honk, great for leads or rythm work. seperation between strings is really pretty good, i never found the sound mushy or congested.
With the bridge pickup selected it sounds a bit thin, more so than my 2001 Gibson Les Paul std, or USA Strat for that matter, dont think i would ever wanna play it clean on the bridge pickup. The neck pickup on the other hand sounds fat and round, not as deep or as rich sounding as my Gibson, but with a little bit more lower mid honk which i liked a lot.
Through an overdrive pedal the bridge pickup starts to come to life, and sounds pretty good, a touch harsh but easily tamed with a tweak of the tone knob. When you get this guitar cranked up and rockin its easy to get some great sounds from all pickup combinations.
I used to own an Epiphone Les Paul Standard some 8 years ago, but sold it as i found it lacking in clarity and tone, it was dead and mushy sounding. Not so this 56 Gold Top which i found very lively expressive and sweet sounding. In fact, i liked it so much i am contemplating swapping out the Humbuckers on my Gibson for some P90s
The Pickups are noisy, about on a par with my usa strat, also there is NO hum canceling in the middle position like there is on a strat, but having been a strat player for many years, you learn to deal with it.
Action, Fit, & Finish
:9
Purchased second hand, so not sure about the factory set up. Intonation is spot on, its well fretted with no sharp edges, frets are reasonably well polished, neck correctly adjusted with just a bit off relief.
Action was set medium low, maybe not low enough for shreders, but i like to get under the string a bit for bending, perfect for that, i think it would go lower without buzzing with a tweak of the bridge.
The nut is well cut, i dont get any string binding in the nut unlike my Gibson which cost 8 times more!, the Chrome grover tuners work smoothly, and the guitar stays in tune very well.
The guitar is quite heavy, hard to say how many pieces of wood its made from as the back finish is fairly dark, but no obvious joins that you can see. Trapezoid inlays are nicely figured and well executed, i cant see any filler around them, unlike some epiphones i looked at a couple of years ago. Strap buttons and most of the attached hardware seem secure and of good quality.
The Knobs are cheap looking and wobble a bit when turned though the pots operate smoothly and quietly, i will probably replace these just from a looks point of view, and maybe the pots too as the rest off the guitar seems very well made and of very good quality. And it sounds good! and feels good.
Top Body and neck bindings are well fitted, though the gold finish has run slightly onto the neck binding where the fingerboard sits on the body, a minor thing which dosent detract from the sound or feel of the guitar, this is the only finish fault i can find.
All in all i would say excellent for the price and beyond.
Reliability/Durability
:9
I would say this guitar could withstand just about anything you could through at it.
Customer Support
:No Opinion
No Idea!
Overall Rating
:9
I have been playing guitar for 30 plus years, Mainly Strats, currently i have 2 Fender Japan Strat 68 reissues, 2 Fender Japan Strat 62 reissues, A 2003 USA Strat and a 2001 Gibson Les Paul Standard.
Ive had a few Les Paul style guitars during this time , a couple of Japanese Aria Pros, and a Korean Epiphone Les Paul Std, but never got along with them, mainly for sound reasons rather than playability issues, though i could never get the intonation right on the korean Les Paul.
I bought this Chinese Epiphone after reading good things about the p90 PUPs, and i have to say i am very happy with it, for a cheap guitar it really delivers, feels very solid, and apart from the minor finish fault where the neck binding meets the body, it really is excellent. Swap out the pots and the knobs and its one killer guitar.
A lot of people say the chinese epis are junk, i did look at some a couple off years back, i didnt try one but i did notice quite a bit of filler around the neck inlays. This one was made Feb 07 and it really is good, way better than the previous korean model i had.
Product: Epiphone '56 Les Paul Goldtop Reissue Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 09/21/2008
at 09:37am
by Mac
Features
:5
I reviewed one of these before I think--anyway, we all know what it is and what it does.
This one was made by Saein, in Inchon, Korea, in 1999. I Previously had an Unsung model-- the gold finish on that was nicer. Otherwise very similar guitars.
Now, for those who have played guitar more than a couple of years, and have maybe had a couple of GOOD guitars, no disrespect to the others, but let's be frank--anyone telling you these things stand comparison to Gibsons is just full of it. This is one of Epi's cheapest set-neck solids, and it shows.
It has the usual Korean scarf-joint in the neck-- how could you advertise cheap construction better?
Sound
:5
The OE pickups make a kind of a stab at sounding like P90's, but they are muddy, wimpy and unbelievably noisy. Swap them. I put in Kent Armstrongs. Instant huge improvement. As ever with Epi, the other electrics match the bucket-shop pups. Expect toggle switches and jack sockets to die at an early age.
Action, Fit, & Finish
:5
Neck is one of the strong points, action is good, frets are well finished. Outside the guitar, it looks okay; inside the guitar is just a mess. (It tells you something about the Korean mindset--take a look inside any Japanese-made Aria Pro2 from the 80's and wonder at the difference. The Japanese know quality comes from within; the Koreans just care about what you can see.)
The neck joint as seen from the pickup rout isn't even a fit, never mind a tight fit, and it has been bodged together with a big slap of what looks like epoxy. Yahoo. forget craftsmanship with these things, they are cheap, mass-produced factory planks. Solid enough, though, and anyway you're never going to want to take it apart to repair it-- these are essentially disposable guitars.
Reliability/Durability
:5
The guitar will definitely stand live playing. Agricultural they may be, but they're tough. The hardware is decent quality chrome plated, and the tuners are replica Klusons that sem to work as well as the real ones. Fitting Grovers would be a smart move. The electrics will die, but they're so poor you won't miss 'em. Get new stuff when you kick out the old pups.
Customer Support
:No Opinion
Never tried that.
Overall Rating
:5
Yet again, the truth about Korean guitars is that most of them are pretty damn poor. Apart from the very top-line Epi's like the Lucille, the Sheraton or the big jazzers, Korean Epi's bear no comparison whatsoever to either US or Japanese products. They're cheap and there's a good reason why. It is worth rememberimg that all of these guits are cut out on CNC cutters using the same software, so the difference between a US Gibson and a Korean Epi is in things like the woods, the fit, the finish, the electrics-- all the places where Koreans really seem to struggle to get quality.
If you get one really cheap, and are prepared to stick in some new pups and sort out the electrics, you'll have a good gigging guitar for very little cash--and you genuinely won't care if it gets damaged.
It is to be fervently hoped that the new Chinese Epi's show an improvement in quality over the Korean stuff.
These are okay for what they are-- at the low end of a low-price guitar range. Just don't be kidded into thinking they are what they ain't.
Product: Epiphone '56 Les Paul Goldtop Reissue Price Paid: Euro`s 450
Submitted 08/12/2008
at 02:51pm
by EdR
Email: terraplane1962<at>hotmail dot com
Features
:8
China made Gibson clone,mahony body and maple top white cream bindings.
2 P90 pups volume and tone controle.
Mahony neck whit rosewood board.
Nice gold finish whit chrome hardware and grover tuners
Sound
:10
Bridge pick up is little to sharp and to soft,
bridge pick up is a real mean dog!
Hey man this ting really got the blues!
I intend to replace the bridge pick up for a mean one like a Seymor Duncan or a dimarzio
Action, Fit, & Finish
:9
Great action right out of the store and need no set up or adjustments.
Has a very comfortible neck and a low action.
Reliability/Durability
:8
Only play it as a back up guitar at home,but it stay in tune when its tuned.
The quality of the finish is nice,to my opionion it wil last as good as a expensive one
Customer Support
:No Opinion
never dealt whit them
Overall Rating
:10
Play for over 25 years had a lot of different guitars
This guitar has a great value for the money and really: forgot the name on the headstock and try this one,you be amazed!
Owned a lot of Strats, Gibson Standards en recently brought a Les Paul studio but this one is someting else.
You might not compaire it whit the Gibson,it`s 6 time cheaper but
Product: Epiphone '56 Les Paul Goldtop Reissue Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 07/10/2008
at 09:34am
by Jimmy
Features
:No Opinion
Gold Les Paul with P-90's. I think everyone knows what it is.
Sound
:7
I have to agree with others and say the neck pickup is quite wonderful and the bridge pickup is a joke. I replaced the bridge PU with Seymore Duncan's hottest P-90 and it is much more balanced. I usually dont care for "hot" pickups but for this LP with P-90's it just seems to give the guitar a nasty attitude that I really like. The electronics are not bad at all. The body resonates fairly well. I can only give it a 7 because of the bridge PU, but the guitar can be made to sound much better. A matched set of Lollars would be quite nice too, but the stock neck PU is just really cool.
Action, Fit, & Finish
:9
This is my 2nd new Epi in the last few years and I am very impressed with their build quality. The other is a 335 with a flamed top. I have seen some that were not up to par but you should never buy a guitar without comparing it with others. Both of these guitars play as well as anything in my collection. Of course some work is required if you are able to do so.(The 335 has a set of gibson 57's and it is just a blast to play). Both guitars needed very little in the way of neck, bridge, nut, or fret work. Less than an hour or two. For the price I rate this guitar quite high. Not as heavy as my Gibson LP but I look at that as a blessing.
Reliability/Durability
:No Opinion
Seems to be very sturdy.
Customer Support
:10
I did have a problem with the 335 when it was new. The bridge post was locked up and the ferrule had spun it the body. I e-mailed Epiphone and told them what was wrong and that I was quite able to fix the guitar without having to take it to a shop and they sent me the replacement parts and an apology. I was very impressed.
Overall Rating
:9
I bought this LP at Guitar Center in Orlando during the Fathers Day sale last year (2007). They had 2 on hand for $399. There was an obvious difference in the shade of the gold paint and the fit and finish. The one I took was missing a couple of screws but had the better paint and the neck was much better in my opinion. I had them install new screws and went on my merry way with a brand new Les Paul for $399 plus tax. If their quality control was more consistant their price would go up. Just shop around and you will find an Epiphone thats a good deal. I have been through way too many guitars in my life and stiil have a decent collection. Gibson LP, 2 Epi's, matching Strat and Tele, 2 Reverends, Dean, 2 Dano's, Gretch, Fender Jazz, and Taylor. The Epiphones fit in my collection very well and I see no reason to replace them. A lot of bang for the buck.
Product: Epiphone '56 Les Paul Goldtop Reissue Price Paid: USD 500 USED
Submitted 07/07/2008
at 10:02pm
by Justin S.
Features
:8
My Les Paul is in the gold top finish, which looks quite nice. It is older, a '97 I beleive, and the gold seems to be a tad darker than some of the newer models of this guitar which I have seen in stores. 2 P90 pickups, usual 2 tone and 2 volume pots, comfortable neck with nice binding, and body binding too. I imagine its all Mahogany, but I don't totally know, because I don't know the specs on the older models. It's got the usual Les Paul bridge, and the old style tuners, the ugly kind with the greenish heads. The usual for a Les Paul, and seems to be a good representation of a '56 model, though I have never personally played one from that time.
Sound
:7
As far as music style goes, I'm all over the place. I guess most of the time I'm doing jazz, blues and classic rock, though I also like some indie rock, punk, hard rock, ect. Just not metal, or real hard progressive. When I'm playing, I'm either playing through a Fender Princeton Pro 112, Fender Hot Rod Deluxe 112(wonderful amp) or an Epiphone 5 watt valve junior through an old Ampeg 212 cab (great head for the money) It fits pretty much everything, I mean, the neck pickup sounds great, warm and punchy, cuts through, and with some gain and the tone turned down a bit, I can really get a Warren Haynes sound. The bridge pickup is a bit pathetic though. It sounds good, but it is MUCH quieter than the neck, and sometimes just can't cut through. I know as far as playing goes, humbuckers have a tendency that when you play softer, you can get a different sound than when you pick harder, and it will cut through more (just my findings) and although P90s are single coils, the neck pickup seems to be able to do just that, while the bride just stays the same. To me, the bridge pickup seems tonally refining, because I just can't get it to sound the way I want, and its much quieter. I even shimmed it, and brought it up a little bit, and though it made a difference in volume, not in sound.
The pickups are a bit noisy, I mean, they are really just kind of beefed up single coils, so a little noise can be expected, though its not as bad as my strats. I love the neck pickup on this guitar, because its warm, and cuts through, and has many possibilities, and the bridge, like I said, is a bit lame, but I don't use the bridge pickup much, so I guess its okay for me. I give it a 7, because, although the neck pickup is just incredible, the bridge is lame.
Action, Fit, & Finish
:7
I got this guitar used, well, my father got this guitar for me. Since we are into fixing guitars as well as playing them, he went to town on it before I even saw it. According to him it was kind of lame in general when he got it, I think there was something wrong with the switch, as well as the output jack, and I think it was buzzing a bit, and needed a neck adjustment. Now some of this could be the fault of the previous owner, due to "guitar neglect" and I am a very picky player, and tend to keep my guitars in very good playing condition. The neck feels real nice, its got a heavy finish on it, and is comfortable in the hands. Like I said before, the bridge pickup was quiet, and I raised it, but it still wasn't quite right, I think it is just the pickup. I think there is some evidence of glue around the binding on the neck though, and with the original tuners it doesn't stay in tune well at all. Though I haven't gotten new tuners for it yet (it is inevitable, it really needs them) I have tried ruling out other flaws, as when I change the strings, I've put them on different ways and with different techniques, and adjusted everything to as near perfect as possible on the entire guitar. The tuners are just horrible, as in, I will turn them nearly one entire turn, and nothing will happen, and all of a sudden, in about 1/8 a turn, they will go up atleast a half step. I don't know why it does that, but the only cure I can think of is new tuners. Another thing is, the finish is kind of weak. Now, my main rig is a MIM sunburst strat standard, as well as a strat I custom assembled myself, and both of them have very sturdy finishes, and I'm not to careful about banging my guitars around, because personally, I don't care if they are all dented up, as long as they sound well. Well, one night at a gig I went to pick the case up, and it wasn't latched (stupid me) and it opened, and one of the latches caught the guitar right near the back top curve (where the arm curve is on a strat) and left a pretty nice gash. The thing was, it didn't hit it too hard, and it scratches easy, so just beware if you care about the finish on your guitar with this. To sum it up, it doesnt stay in tune well with it's original tuners, there is some evidence of glue on the binding, and it scratches easily. Oh, and there is also a problem with the input jack that when I plug in with a certain cord, (its kind of a bendy, twirly kind, so it kind of goes at odd angles) and it will cut out, and though I've investigated, I can't explain it, and I know its not the cord, its something with the jack itself.
Reliability/Durability
:5
Like I said before, it dents and scratches easy, so if your not a crazy player, you should be fine. If you move around alot playing, or just carry a guitar around like another limb like I do, you have to be carefull. When I went to tighten one of the nuts on the volume pot, it exploded, it just blew into peices even though I had very little pressure on it. The neck tends to be quite suceptible (I have no idea how to spell that) to the environment, and since I'm a New Englander, my summers are hot and muggy, winters cold and dry, I have to adjust my guitars seasonally, and this one tends to be more affected than others. I wouldn't use it as my only guitar at a gig, but then again, I wouldn't use my MIM strat as my only guitar, it's just not my way, I always have a backup. But, considering it's tuning issues, as well as the thin finish, output jack and tendency to be easily affected by humidity, I wouldn't use this as an only guitar. Not to mention you always have to be carefull of banging the head stock, because a Les Paul tendency is to crack where the headstock and neck meet, as well as where the neck and body meet. So it really couldn't take a hit like a strat or tele.
Customer Support
:No Opinion
I got it used, and do my own minor repairs, anything major goes to a pro.
Overall Rating
:7
Though I've only been playing about 4 1/2 years, I study guitars. I play and work, and research them constantly, I'm kind of a nut I guess. I've also got two strats, a Peavey Wolfgang special EXP, and an old Kramer/Striker 200st. This guitar plays better than the peavey and Kramer, and sounds better in my opinion too, but it has it's flaws. I love it's neck pickup, am dissapointed by the bride, as well as it's tuning problems and thin finish.
Product: Epiphone '56 Les Paul Goldtop Reissue Price Paid: USD 400 USED
Submitted 06/08/2008
at 11:00am
by Bob Wood
Features
:8
My latest guitar purchase is a used 2007 Epiphone Les Paul '56 Goldtop Reissue finished in ebony, rather than the gold top. Made in China at Ephiphone's plant. Two volume and two tone pots. P-90 "soapbar" PUs. Non-locking Grover tuners. Stop tailpiece.
Sound
:9
I play jazz, blues and some rock through a Peavey Studio Pro 112 amp. Generally play clean but sometimes use a Zoom 505 processor. I bought the guitar because I had sold my Gibson Les Pauls (had two) years ago, and wanted another one. The P-90s made this particular guitar more interesting to me. The guitar is not noisy, but this is after being set up correctly. When I got it, it was a mess. My tech filed some frets, widen the gaps in the nut, tweaked the truss rod a bit, flipped the bridge, and tightened the tuners. Put 11s on it with an unwound G string. It now plays and sounds very good. I get a big, bold tone out of the neck PU, but the bridge PU is the real surprise. Never had a neck PU with so much bite! Not harsh, but a really sharp attack. Very interesting. It cuts through everything. Switching to both PUs gets a very intermediate sound: full but not harsh. Sharp but not too sharp.
Action, Fit, & Finish
:8
I think I addressed this stuff in the previous paragraph. The only thing that I didn't mention was the pots. I think these are pretty cheap ones, because they go from nothing to about a three setting when you turn them. No gradual increase: just pop and their on. I may replace them in the future. No crackling or anything like that, just no smooth transition at the low end. That's really my only complaint with the guitar. Otherwise, it seems, to me, a very, very good value for the money.
Reliability/Durability
:No Opinion
On this question, it will remain to be seen how it holds up. But, I suspect that it will do quite well.
Customer Support
:No Opinion
Nope, nothing yet.
Overall Rating
:9
I've been playing off and on for 20+ years -- sometimes more seriously than others depending how busy I was or what I was into at the time. I've owned a couple of other Gibson Les Pauls, and this one seems lighter in weight than they were. But they were both like anchors! I've owned a Gibson ES345, ES175D and a Taylor 310 acoustic. I now have this Epiphone Les Paul, a Mexican Strat, an Ibanez Artcore AG75 jazz guitar (I love that guitar!) and an Alvarez Regent acoustic with some sentimental value that I've had for years. I've finally gotten away from being stuck on brand-names, and focus now on value.
I'd replace this Les Paul because it seems to have a lot of value for the price. I had heard that the early Chinese guitars were pretty hit-or-miss on quality, but that they had gotten their act together by now. I think that's true. But my Ibanez and this Les Paul are Chinese-made, and though they both have some cheap components (easily replaced) they play very, very well. And, their prices make them literally too good to pass up.
Product: Epiphone '56 Les Paul Goldtop Reissue Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 11/10/2007
at 01:00pm
by Reckless Amateur
Features
:8
This guitar's not about "features" -- it's about tone, fit and feel. You want "features" go buy one of those goofy guitars with all the switches on 'em.
Sound
:10
Love the tone -- as others have said it's like a Tele on steroids.
Action, Fit, & Finish
:10
I was amazed how good this guitar and felt. No flaws at all, nice smooth neck, etc. etc. Now I did try out another one at GC that was crap for crap--rusty strings, a volume pot that didn't work, no pretense of setup. Can't stand that place.
Reliability/Durability
:8
So far so good, tho' the input jack does seem to be a little fragile.
Customer Support
:No Opinion
Overall Rating
:10
This is the coolest, best sounding guitar you can get for the price. I was looking for something between a telecaster and a thick ol' humbucker Les Paul and this fits the bill exactly. Go get yourself one.
Product: Epiphone '56 Les Paul Goldtop Reissue Price Paid: 330
Submitted 05/19/2007
at 06:01pm
by OutToPlayJazz
Features
:9
Epiphone Les Paul '56 GoldTop Reissue, with gloss finish over traditional goldtop metallic & dark mahogany back & sides. Standard tune-o-matic bridge & Alcino P90 pickups. Possibly the best sounding Les Paul and I may even go as far as the best sounding electric guitar ever. Flawless finish and feels just right :)
Sound
:10
This guitar suits my blues and jazz playing to a tee. Even more than my Ibanez AS-83 archtop which is utterly subline! A little hum comes from the pickups, but that's normal for P90's, I'm led to believe. Capable of all sounds, from bright on the back pickup, to mellow and full rich toned on the front pickup. Nothing to dislike at all!
Action, Fit, & Finish
:10
The action and neck relief was just about perfect. Needs some lighter strings, but apart from that, I've played it for hours since picking it up. No flaws at all as far as I can see.
Reliability/Durability
:10
It hasn't gigged so far, as I mainly play as a professional bass player & guitar is mainly a hobby and a personal challenge! I'd play this guitar without a backup, no problem. Feels solid and built to last.
Customer Support
:No Opinion
N/A
Overall Rating
:10
If you're after the most lovely sound possible from an electric, get a goldtop - I thought it would be inferior to my archtop 335 copy, but it's even better. I work with a player who has to real Gibson Les Pauls & this feels and sounds even better than the real thing. It feels absolutely right in the hands and I couldn't ask for anything more - Go buy one!
Product: Epiphone '56 Les Paul Goldtop Reissue Price Paid: Euros 489
Submitted 05/05/2007
at 05:18pm
by Nuno
Features
:9
56 Reissue Goldtop, made in Korea in 2005. Bought new about a week ago. Features are the mentioned below, goldtop finish, P-90's pickups, etc...
Sound
:No Opinion
The sound is very good. I was very impressed with the acoustic sound as soon as I played it acoustically. I had played one in the shop and the sound was exactly the same. The pickups are very good. Theres a huge imbalance between the neck and bridge pickups though, even with the neck totally lowered and the bridge totally up,this seems typical with Epiphone guitars, since my Sheraton was like that with the stock pickups. The neck pickup has a beautiful sound. It's loud and powerful, with a kind of nasal tone to it (a characteristic of the acoustic sound of the guitar also) and it's great for all kinds of clean sounds. It's a bit bass heavy for some stuff though. With the tone a bit rolled off it has a beautiful jazz sound. The middle position has a great sound too, similar to the neck but with less bass. Great for reggae sounds, funk, etc... The bridge pickup I don't really have much use for. It is very piercing, very bright, but a little underpowered. Generally speaking I rarely have any uses for bridge pickups, so I am not the best person to evaluate this.
Action, Fit, & Finish
:8
The guitar had fret buzz issues with the open 6th string before I strung it with 11-54's but now it's fine. The intonation was close, but I don't think it's reasonable to expect a guitar to arrive with a perfe3ct setup if you buy it online. The temperature and humidity changes in the transportation are enough to throw everything out of whack. The finish is flawless. After one week I still didn't manage to find any flaws on it. The only let down with this guitar is the nut. Very bad cut job. It's a shame really. Such a perfect guitar with such a nut. I am replacing it with a graphtech next week. The binding and inlays are perfect. Bridge is decent quality, my only grip with it is that I much prefer philips type screws as they much better to adjust at an angle. Setting the intonation is easy.
Reliability/Durability
:10
Solid as a rock. Weights 3.8 Kg. Epiphones are usually very sturdy and this is no exception.
Customer Support
:No Opinion
Never used epiphone costumer service.
Overall Rating
:10
If this guitar had a Gibson headstock with the Gibson logo on it people would happily pay 2000 more Euros for it. I am totally in love with this guitar. I also have an ESP 901 and a 91 Korean Epiphone Sheraton and this guitar is every bit as good as them. If stolen I'd buy another immediately. For the money is a 10, no doubt.
Product: Epiphone '56 Les Paul Goldtop Reissue Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 04/18/2007
at 10:42pm
by Spider
Features
:9
Nice "Goldtop" finish. Not flawless but for the price (asking price $599)you would expect way worse. I was in the market for a Gibson Goldtop but at $1800-$3000 and finding ridiculously flawed paintjobs I couldn't justify the price but that wasn't the only determining factor. I understand the $499 "made in China" models are available now. Look for the Korean model if you have a choice. It seemed to have a little better quality to it and it will retain a little more value if they stopped the Korean production. Regardless of the origin, it handles well and does what is supposed to. The Epi P90s are great. Cheaper hardware, but easy to replace. It's a Epiphone Les Paul so it has the same features you would fine a "Gibo"
Sound
:9
The Epi P90s sound great. The bridge pick-up is "bitey" in a good way, but this guitar realy lights up with both the bridge and neck pickups engaged. The neck pickup alone is a little "woofy" but I haven't really spent a lot of time setting it up yet.
These are P90s so don't expect to sound like Zakk Wylde, unless you are of course Zakk Wylde. Think telecaster on steroids.
The pickups are as noisy as a single coil is expected to sound. Not a flaw.
Action, Fit, & Finish
:9
A nice finish, not an exact copy of an old Goldtop finish. Take a look at the Guitar Center Special "Bullion Gold" Les Paul for $1899.00 (horrible paint job, slopped together guitar) and this Epiphone will seem like a steal.
Pickups may need minor dialing in, but what guitar doesn't.
Reliability/Durability
:9
Play this guitar. A ding in a $599 guitar hurts way less than a $3000.00 guitar, This guitar is easy to make your own.
It seems to be pretty durable. It does have a good weight to it.
I would absolutly use this with out a back up, but I would make sure I bring a back up tuner.
Customer Support
:No Opinion
"Limited" lifetime warranty.
Overall Rating
:9
I own a nice selection of guitar including "real" Gibson Les Pauls so giving a good review to a "copy" seems like it should carry some weight ( No Les Paul pun intended).
If the Epi was stolen I would go down to the nearest guitar shop. Check the headstock sticker to see if the price is closer to $499 or $599 and buy it. Easy to replace seems to be a nice feature.
Don't be stupid, get a case. It's already in the cost even if it's not "part of the package".
Product: Epiphone '56 Les Paul Goldtop Reissue Price Paid: USD 299
Submitted 04/15/2007
at 04:03am
by Fergyuk
Features
:8
56 Goldtop,Made in Korea,2 Gibson designed p90's,body seems to be three pieces of mahogany stuck together and covered in a dark stain so the grain of the wood is nearly invisible.It's fitted with grover rotomatic tuners, the mahogany neck is 60's style and has pearl inlays on a rosewood fretboard, Epiphone headstock logo is mop and the truss rod cover has 56 Gold Top on it. Its the usual set up for the electics that you get on a les paul 2x Volume 2x Tone 3 way switch for PUP's.(Would of give it 9 or 10 if the body was one solid piece of mahogany)
Sound
:8
This is a totally different from a hummbucker driven guitar the p90's are single coil PUP's on steroids.The neck pup on a clean setting with some reverb = bluesland switch to the bridge pup ad some gain = growl some great lead tones,In the middle setting both pup's on it gives you a strange out of phase sound which I love.There is bit of 60cycle humm but it's soon forgotten about when immersed in play.
Action, Fit, & Finish
:8
The action on this guitar is really low (no fret buzz and I'm a bit heavy handed)The pup's needed ajustment to get a balanced sound when switching between them.The grovers do the job nicely and keep tune well.There a no noticable floors in the laquer finish and the frets are well finished.Recently the tonepot for the bridge pup has become noisy but a squirt of switch cleaner should sort that.
Reliability/Durability
:7
I've owned it about 4 years now and the only thing that's gone wrong is a scratchy tonepot,There is no visible signs of failure It's reliable, you could and I do depend on it.
Customer Support
:No Opinion
Never needed to use them
Overall Rating
:9
For the price I paid this is one good guitar and holds it's own against my other guitars,I own a Gibson LP Standard LE. With Burstbucker Pro's, a Tokai LP Standard (Made in Japan) an American Fender Standard Strat and a Fender Deluxe Player Strat.Overall I never compared the Goldtop To a Gibson Goltop in the shop I liked the sound it made and bought it for that.
Product: Epiphone '56 Les Paul Goldtop Reissue Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 04/07/2007
at 09:35pm
by Johnny Z
Features
:9
This ia an update to my 2000 review. You can read all about the features in other post.
Since I've had this guitar for over 7 years I have to tell you I think it's been one of the best guitars I've ever owned. I have owned several other guitars, none I have I like better. This one is a keeper. Sure it isn't a $3000 Gibson but for the price it's way better. I have compaired it to a friends Gibson '56 Goldtop and they are very close, but the Gibson had a thicker neck and some of the plastic parts like the switch and knobs were a darker color and the finish was better, well for $2500 it better be better. There ate a few differenced in the Korean and the Chinese models. Mine is the Korean model with the "Limited Edtion" Logo on the back of the peghead and the Mother of Pearl Kluson type tuners. The newer Chinese models I've seen have chrome Grover type tuners and don't have the Logo. I'd go for the grovers but don't want to drill out the peghead to do it. I've never had tuning issues with this guitar, why bother changing it.
Sound
:9
I could tell how wonder full it sounds but that's too subjective what I can tell you is I could not tell the difference in sound between the Gibson and the Epiphone versions of this guitar. My friend sez' he can tell the difference, I doubt it. One of these days I challenge him on this with a test. I like the tone better than my SG with humbuckers for most stuff.
Action, Fit, & Finish
:7
For me the action is almost perfect. The finish is a tad thin, after 7 years it's still holding up okay but I've added a few scraches and dings to it.
The only complaint I have is the binding on the neck has little cracks in it where the fretts have expanded and pushed against the binding in several places. I think this is due to changes in tempature. Where I live it gets below "0" and over 100 F. so I think over the years it just happened. No other guitar I own has ever done this. I think they didn't trim the fretts back far enough into the neck to allow for expansion. But It has no effect on the playing at all.
Reliability/Durability
:9
7 years and still going strong.
Customer Support
:No Opinion
Never tried.
Overall Rating
:8
I've been playing over 45 years, been in bands most my life and still gig off and on. Now days I mostly play jazz and 50's-70's rock.
Yes, I would buy another one of these guitars maybe a different color, Black or Sunburst? but the same basic guitar with P-90's. I usually play this guitar through a '75 Fender Twin or a Reverend Hellhound and sometimes a Roland Spirit 60.
My other guitars include a Fender '62 Strat RI, Epi 400 (SG), a home made Strat, Fender Tele Custom, Ibanez Artcore AF85 Jazz guitar and several acoustics.
Product: Epiphone '56 Les Paul Goldtop Reissue Price Paid: USD 600
Submitted 11/01/2006
at 07:59am
by dennis
Email: dennis<at>tenindians dot net
Features
:9
i bought my 56 goldtop on-line from Bellones Music in London, On. it arrived in excellent condition
It was made in China.
This guitar is hands-down the best guitar I have ever played in it's price category ($650 cdn).
Very little noise, (it does have glorious p-90 pick ups, so some noise is inevitable. A hum-ex on my power bar virtually eliminated all noise.
This guitar switches from a deep, rich bright tone to an in-your face, thin lizzy-gary moore tone at the flick of a switch and a stomp on a box (i use boss overdrive). I would not beccessarily recommend this guitar for you `dimebad darrell' heads out there.
the action was a bit low, (easily adjusted). Had a litlle fret buzz but the action adjustment eliminated this. And lastly, this guitar is simply a beautiful piece of art. I highly recommend this guitar.
Sound
:No Opinion
Action, Fit, & Finish
:No Opinion
Reliability/Durability
:No Opinion
this guitar is solid, and i look forward to years of both studio and gig work alike with it.
The hardware is very solid, though I did have to tight two tuning heads.
I never use any guitar on the road without a back up. In this case, I actually use an Epiphone Studio Les Paul as back up.
Customer Support
:No Opinion
I have never had to worry about warranty a I have never had a problem as of yet. I am an optomist, but a realist too. No guitar is Excalibur.
Overall Rating
:9
I have been playing twenty years proffessionally. If I lost this guitar, I would immediately seek out a replacement. I had a Gibson 56 re-issue, but due to its' worth, it was to valuable to take on the road. This guitar gives me everything my Gibby did, and plays a little less tempting to those sub-human axe snatchers out there.
Product: Epiphone '56 Les Paul Goldtop Reissue Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 10/30/2006
at 01:57pm
by Stephen Worthington
Email: sjworth<at>ccrtc dot com
Features
:9
Goldtop ie... Gold Metallic on the Maple/Alder top w/ dark cherry on the Mahogany Back and neck. Single cut away LES PAUL style. Tone -o- matic style stop and bridge. Grover tuner. 24 3/4 inch scale. Medium Jumbo frets. Rosewood fret board. Hand made in China in 2006. Three way switch, 2 volume, 2 tone. 2 Epiphone passive P-90's in the neck and bridge.
Sound
:9
I run this Epi through a Peavey renoun 400 and a Mesa Boogie nomad 45 with a compressor and stero chorus. I find I use the effects much less with this guitar as I am usually looking for a more vintqage sound when I play it. While this guitar sounds great at all tone, gain, and volume setting it shines the most compared to my other guitars (12) when combining puckups and turning down the tone and cranking the gain. I found going this way gave me a very unique tonal quality that is not just fun to mess with but, really cuts through the mix. This guitar does pick some noise from external source but is far better than my strats in this category. I would give this guitar a 10 if I thought there was such a thing.
Action, Fit, & Finish
:7
Everything on the guitar was perfect except the pickup mounting and height adjustment. I ended up filling and redrilling the mounting screw holes and adding some foam rubber padding to get the angle and height. This extra work paid off in spades as it really brought the guitar to life. I did refret the guitar with biggest jumbo wire I could find at Stewmac but that was just personal preference as my finger tips are a little doughy and I can play much longer and cleaner with the taller and wider frets. String height (measured with Capo at first fret) from factory at the 12th fret was 4/64 treble side and 6/64 base side. After refrett and leveling it is now 3/64 treble side and 4/64 bass side at the 22nd I did not have to level the fret board and it could go lower.
Reliability/Durability
:10
This guitar is a tank. It is heavy, has great perfectly installed hardware on it, and has a very durable finish on it. I would never gig with only one guitar/one amp unless that was all I had. But, this guitar would be a safe bet to go it alone with.
Customer Support
:9
Bought at Guitar Center, Terre Haute, Indiana. First one of these I got had was a 2005 model made in Korea and the bridge posts were mounted too far away from the nut to set intonation. As I could fix this I refused to do this kind of work to a new guitar, period. That guitar was perfect in every other way and was the basis for setting the newer 2006 China made guitar up as far as pickup height and orientation. Guitar Center Imediately ordered the replacement for me from their warehouse. Had some minor communication problems concerning when the replacement would actually be in, but, all was great in the end and I am satisfied with the effort and service I recieved.
Overall Rating
:9
Been playing/giging for 25+ years and own or have played everything I could get may paws on. I am always looking for a new sound to go with what I have already. If I lost this guitar I would be heart broken and start looking for a replacement. While this guitar is great for vintage stuff 50's 60's it also does a very mean Little Wingand any rock or country until the wide use of active pickups; this is by far my favorite "electric blues and boogie guitar". This guitar's identity is made by the P-90's it came with. That sets this guitar apart from the other. I would not change a thing on it. I did compare this guitar to several others with p-90's most notable the Washburn WI-66 PROG which had buzz fieten and noiseless pickups. The Washburn had better fit, finish, and playablity stock for the same retail (start bargining here) price $599.99. The Wi-66 PROG had a more modern sound and I just could not get the killer vintage sound that the Les Paul could. Don't misunderstand me the Washburn sounded great too, just different and more like my hummbucker guitars. Rate this guitar as a 8 the way it came and a 10 now that I have it exactly the way I want it.
Product: Epiphone '56 Les Paul Goldtop Reissue Price Paid: USD 540.00
Submitted 09/27/2006
at 01:51am
by Dr. "O"
Features
:9
Mahogony body. Alder top. Same thickness as a Gibson Les Paul. Rosewood fingerboard with simulated MOP inlays. The top of the body and the neck have creme binding. The neck and back side of the body are finished in dark cherry. Two creme colored P-90 soapbar pickups, Grover tuners, chrome plated ABR-1 bridge and stop bar. Three way switching. Amber colored Tone and Volume knobs set up in the typical Les Paul configuration.
Sound
:9
I play mainly Blues, old rock, and Rockabilly. This guitar suits those styles of music to a tee. You jazz musicans who like woody, mellow and clean in a small package buy one of these. You musicians who like raw and raunchy primal rock and roll sounds, buy one of these. You Blues players ??? YOU MUST GET ONE OF THESE. You pure country twang guys, it probably won???t be your cup of tea. Rockabilly, slide guitar, oldies ??? you bet. You thrash and death metal guys . . . maybe.
Even though these are single coils they do not sound anything like Fender SC???s. You can instantly tell it sounds like a Gibson. A Les Paul to be precise. Where Fender SC???s have a chime to them, the P-90???s have a clang. For pure twang I prefer the Fender SC sound.
The pickups are very touch sensitive and depending on pick attack and the settings on your guitar and amp you can get just about any kind of tone from them. If you are right in front of your amp the pickups are very noisy. Back off a few feet, or to the side, and you???re fine
The bridge pick up has some balls and, if cranked, really wails. Not nearly as thin as on a Strat or Tele Put both of them on, and depending on how you blend your controls, and it will sound like two humbuckers or two good Tele pickups being on. The neck pickup is mellow and sounds very similar to a humbucker but more woody. Some reviewers have mentioned that the neck pickup sounds very muddy. When I first got the guitar I found that to be the case too ??? but only on the three low strings. After doing some tweaking I found that a lot of that muddiness can be cleaned up by turning down the bass setting on your amp. Speakers also make a big difference in bass response and clarity. I am anticipating that a new bone nut will give even more clarity to those strings. Until I get that done I do not see any sense in messing with the pick up height or adjusting individual pole pieces.
You want raw power ? Think ???Won???t Get Fooled Again. Think ???Young Man Blues??? off the ???Live at Leeds??? album. You want raunchy and primal ? You want sustain ? Think Clapton on ???All Your Love??? on the Bluesbreakers ???Beano??? album. You can get some nice swampy sounds ( think CCR/ John Fogerty) out of this gutar too. Oh, by the way, this was without any effects pedals through either a Tweed Princeton 5F2-A clone or a Blues Junior. Makes me wish I had a Marshall half stack or at least a Bluesbreaker.
Weeks later . . . I finally got around to playing this guitar through my ???66 Deluxe Reverb. All I can say is WOW. This thing really barks though that. I thought it sounded good through the amps mentioned above but the DR elevated the sound to a whole new level.
Action, Fit, & Finish
:8
Finish excellent. Binding excellent. Paint job excellent. Inlays on fingerboard, absolutely perfect. The routing for the inlays is so precise it makes me wonder if they were cut with a laser. The fingerboard inlay work is far superior to what was done on my USA made Gibson Les Paul Standard Premium +.
Much to my surprise the body appears to be a solid piece of Mahogony. I cannot see a joint anywhere. The neck is solid mahogony up to around the third fret. At that point there is a strange joint that I have never seen before. I think one reviewer said it was called a scarf joint. The headstock and part of the neck join the other part of the neck at around the 3rd fret. The angle of the two joined pieces is quite severe. The two pieces are glued together from the 3rd fret to around the 8th fret.
The rosewood fingerboard has been darkened with an ebony stain and looks classy with the gold body and the pearloid inlays. The MOP patterns on the fingerboard inlays are beautiful and look very realisitic. Again, better looking than on my Gibson. That has MOT inlays.
In a few spots there are some light file marks on the edge of the fingerboard that are only visible upon close inspection. I assume that was a result of beveling the frets and binding. Fretwork is excellent. The frets are not as huge as on my Les Paul.
Right out of the box the action was pretty darn nice. It came with .010???s on it. BTW I don???t know what brand of strings they are but I really like them and they held up well.
The nut was not cut real well. I get some binding on the G and the B strings. This guitar is too nice for that crappy nut. It deserves (and will get) a nice bone nut when finances allow.
The electronics seem quite good. The switch is quiet. The controls work like they are supposed to.
Minor nits: Side dots on neck a little too small for my taste. Although I like the amber colored control knobs I can???t read the numbers on the knobs. That is because the numbers and the knobs are the same color.
The neck is a dream to play. It is very similar in size and contour to the 50???s neck I have on my Gibson LP. The poly finish on the neck is slick and makes it a pleasure to play.
Reliability/Durability
:10
This guitar feels rock solid - like a Les Paul should. The chrome hardware will last just as long as any other chrome plated hardware will last. The Grover tuners have been time tested. Although I only jam with friends these days I would not hesitate to use this guitar on a real gig.
Customer Support
:No Opinion
No idea.
Overall Rating
:10
I have been playing for about 40 years and have accumulated some decent guitars (Gibson LP, 2 AV '57 Strats, Epi Dot Deluxe, USACG Custom Tele to name a few) and amps ('70 Vibro Champ, '65 Princeton, '66 Deluxe Reverb, '59 Tweed Princeton clone, etc.) along the way.
I have been wanting to get an EPI gold top outfitted with P 90???s for a couple of years but was put off by the weight of them. Prior to finding this one, every one I picked up weighed a ton. This one is very light (almost too light for an LP) and the body is very resonant. As a point of reference it weighs about as much as your average Strat.
Although I have only had this instrument a couple of months it feels like I have had it for years. It???s like slipping on your favorite pair of worn-in sneakers. I get a real comfy feeling when I play it. That makes me want to play it even more. I love this guitar. It is a fantastic value. I would buy another one in a minute.
Product: Epiphone '56 Les Paul Goldtop Reissue Price Paid: USD 500 USED
Submitted 08/12/2006
at 11:40pm
by Squaysh
Email: wes<at>squaysh dot com
Features
:8
You know all the features. Mine came with a hard shell case... *CHA CHING!*.
Sound
:10
The sound of this guitar is fantastic. It is very thick, beefy, though has a very smooth high end clarity. The tone is well balanced and is very dynamic. It is a very versatile guitar as well. P-90's are just really great. I use this guitar with my Dr. Z MAZ 38 1x12 combo and my Epiphone Valve Junior. Sometimes I will throw it through a Keeley Compressor or a VanAmps spring reverb to add some additional flavor. Other times I will throw it through distortion pedals or crank up my pre-amp section. (This guitar sounds EXCEPTIONALLY well will with nice reverb.) By nature, the guitar can be a bit nosy. You can hear pickup buzz on the neck and bridge pickup settings. The middle selection is dead-quiet. This guitar sounds brilliant clean and grows a serious set of balls when distorted. I hope you like beef stew because that's what this thing sounds like through a ProCo rat. It's really great actually. Singing violin'esque lead tone... or nasty, gritty, crunch action. You want it, this thing's got it. There's really nothing I don't like about the tone this thing can squeeze out.
Action, Fit, & Finish
:8
I got my guitar from Elderly Instruments in Lansing, MI. Great store. They sent it to me set up really great actually. The action was comfortably low for my tastes. No fret buzz. Pickup poles needed a bit of adjustment. There are a couple scratches, small dents in mine because it was used... but that adds character. The finish is really great. It's got that authentic greenish tint to it at times. I have a '97 model so the tuners are very cheap and the switch needs replacing.. no big deal. The neck feels really great, I love it. Nice and quick. Would be nice if it was a bit thicker. But it plays well so what am I complaining about? Fret job is great.. binding looks great. Decent bridge hardware. Overall, very nice guitar.
Reliability/Durability
:10
Come on, this thing is a beast, baby!
Customer Support
:No Opinion
Who needs it.
Overall Rating
:9
I've been playing for over 10 years and this is currently one of my favorite guitars. It sounds fantastic, it feels great, it's nice and solid... what a great guitar! If you can find one used for a good deal... snatch that thing up like it's nobody's business. Talk the price down a bit... you know the drill. I think the fact that mine's used make me like it even more.
Product: Epiphone '56 Les Paul Goldtop Reissue Price Paid: USD 530 USED
Submitted 08/08/2006
at 02:46pm
by Roy
Features
:9
The features on this guitar are the standards from the factory. I recomend that you visit Epiphones homepage to take a closer look.
I was a little surprised to see that it had Grover tuners. Even my Gibson didn't come with that!
Btw, when you see what price I paid for the guitar, remember that I bought it (used) in Norway, and by US standards Epiphone guitars are not very cheap here. For me it was a really good deal:-)
Sound
:9
I was very surprised the first time I used the Epiphone Gold Top. I didn't expect it to sound as good as it does 'cause it's a cheap guitar compared to the original Gold Top made by Gibson. The sound is in fact very good, and I'm using it with a Fender Hot Rod Deluxe amp and a Marshall High Gain Dual Reverb amp.
I was looking for the "Dickey Betts sound", and this guitar brings me fairly close to his sound. Very good guitar for blues and rock'n roll, but it can be used for almost everything, except, IMO, heavy metal. If you're looking for a heavy metal guitar you should consider getting a guitar with humbuckers.
The P90's gives you a warm sound, and these pick up's are hotter than the single coils on a standard US Strat.
Action, Fit, & Finish
:8
The set up from the factory was very well done on this guitar. I know that sometimes Epiphone guitars can be a drag when it comes to the set up, but if you take your time before you buy one and try out a few, eventually you will find one that suits you. If not, you can get some help with the set up from your local music store.
The pickups were nicely adjusted when I bought it, so I haven't done any adjustments to them.
Two things: The chrome on the hardware wears off easy, but that doesn't bother me much. You can't expect to "get it all" when you're buing a cheap guitar. The pickup selector is a little noisy too, but not so much that it is painful to listen to.
Reliability/Durability
:9
I find the Gold Top very reliable, and have no problem using it live. So far it has been very depenable, and has done it's job very well. The only two reasons I bring a backup guitar is that sometimes I need a different sound, and in case a string breaks during a song.
So far the finnish seems to be quite strong, and doesen't wear off. The strap buttons are solid, but I did change the screews because the originals weren't reliable. They were to thin and short, but with the new ones they're doing the job.
The hardware has worked properly so far. I haven't had any bad experiences yet.
Customer Support
:No Opinion
Haven't had the use for any support from Epiphone yet.
Overall Rating
:9
I've been playing, as an amateur, for about 25 year. I own a Gibson Les Paul Classic 1960, a US Strat and a Epiphone ES335 Cherry Red in addition to the Gold Top. My amps are, as mentioned, a Fender Hot Rod Deluxe and a Marshall High Gain Dual Reverb.
If my Gold Top got stolen or lost, I would surely buy a new one. Great value for your money!
What do I love about this guitar? Well, first of all the sound. I really like that "Dickey Betts sound" that it gives you, but I also love the feeling the whole guitar gives. It's not very heavy compared to some Gibsons, it's very easy to play, the colour is great. What can I say? The guitar just gives me a good feeling. Everytime I pick it up I think about how little it did cost me, and what it gives back to me.
The only thing I miss on this guitar (and all Gibson style guitars) is a volume knob that controls both pickups at the same time.
Product: Epiphone '56 Les Paul Goldtop Reissue Price Paid: US $500
Submitted 07/06/2006
at 04:44am
by Ts
Features
:10
I guess it's made in 2004 in Korea. 22 frets. It need no introduction 'Coz it's a standard Les Paul made by Epiphone, my favorite Brand. It has all a Les Paul ought to have! It's my first guitar without a tremelo system. It stays in tune very well! I compared it with Gibson model and find it more beautiful. But the Gibson model has a thicker neck. Thick or thin? Depends on you. I don't have long fingers, so I prefer thin neck.
Sound
:10
It sounds incredible! Because it use single coil P-90s, it produce some usual noise. But I did compare it with Gibson 56 Gold Top Reissue. Gibson has the same amount of noise! Both the Gibson and Epiphone sounds very warm and lush! Think it cost much less! Its sound is the famous Les Paul sound, though it doesn't have humbuckers. When I plug it into my Laney VC30 2*10, and use the bridge pickup, I can get the guitar tone in Thin Lizzy's song! Very perfect for playing Classic Rock and Blues. Epiphone can always deliver me the sweet sounding guitar tone.
Action, Fit, & Finish
:8
Action is not as good as my Ibanez guitar. It I set it low, the high fret has a little buzz. But this does not affect my playing so much. Acceptable. Its flawless finish is so much better than the Gibson model!!
Reliability/Durability
:No Opinion
I bought this new. It seems perfect now. Waiut and see.
Customer Support
:No Opinion
Never dealt with.
Overall Rating
:10
I've been playing for 7 years and own 5 guitars. I love this guitar very much and I'll sure gig with it. It fits my styles and my fingers condition very well. If it were stolen or lost, I'll buy it again. I hope it will last for all my life. Epiphone cost less than Gibson, but its guitars beat all the guitars whose price are under $1000. I'll buy a Gibson next year, but it will not replace my Epiphone.
Product: Epiphone '56 Les Paul Goldtop Reissue Price Paid: US $498 on sale
Submitted 06/10/2006
at 03:33pm
by Craig
Email: wainty<at>juno dot com
Features
:10
Sound
:10
I have another guitar with a gibson p-90, and the sound is wirtually identical to this guitar. The epi pickup has higher output, and a slightly less "junky" tone (one of the qualities P-90's are known for), however it remains just as well-balanced and responsive, and has a certain quality the gibson p-90 doesn't: you hear an undeniable sense of "space" around the guitar sound. This gives distorted sounds a picturesque quality and depth that I can't believe. I've been recording this guitar for 6 months now, and the sound of it continually blows my mind. I've had 2 gibson les pauls with humbuckers, and several single coil strats- then I found the P-90, a giant single coil that has the best of both the humbucker les paul and strat sounds. The gibson p-90 is a marvel of tone, and the epi P-90 rivals it beautifully and brings something new and wonderful to the table. I had planned on getting gibson P-90's for my goldtop, assuming the epi's wouldn't cut it- but instead I found a new plateau of my guitar sound. I use an Art Power Plant preamp for distortion, and after a 30 year search, this combo is it for me.
Action, Fit, & Finish
:7
I returned 2 of them, one for a huge wound, one had a flaw in the archtop bevel, the third had binding flaws but otherwise perfect. The goldtop finish is so thick and durable, real 50's feel to it. Solid, beautiful guitar. String retainer was screwed down way too tight, had to ruin the slots just to loosen the bolts. Many quality problems with these but otherwise we'd be paying $3000 for them- and it's true that the gibson finish is squeaky and slow, and this epi finish is much better. Action & intonation from factory was terrible, 8 hours later perfect.
Reliability/Durability
:10
Customer Support
:No Opinion
Overall Rating
:10
Product: Epiphone '56 Les Paul Goldtop Reissue Price Paid: US $449
Submitted 06/06/2006
at 07:46am
by Mark
Love the Sound. Neck is bright and crunchy, neck is velvety smooth. I'm using this with a very expansive Vetta rig with two 4x12 bottoms, a pedal board with vintage fuzz boxes, rack effects and a wet/dry set up using 2 PA/Keyboard amps. When I run it through my main sound it rocks, when I use some of my vintage amp settings it sounds right on! Very authentic. Drips with vintage tone
Action, Fit, & Finish
:10
This is a beautiful, well made, great playing, very expensive feeling guitar. I was floored when I picked it up. The neck is a dream.
Reliability/Durability
:10
Very, Very solid guitar
Customer Support
:No Opinion
N/A
Overall Rating
:10
I've been playig for 37 years. I own 29 guitars. I own, have owned and played a lot of vintage guitars over the years. This is one of my favorite guitars at the moment. I can't get over how expensive it feels. At first I was concened that, because it had Grovers instead of Kluson style tuners, the 1956 visual vibe would be ruined for me (I know it sounds stupid), but this thing is amazing and it doesn't matter (Gibson told me that the Grovers are actually better than the "classic" style tuners that they were using). I would be devastated if something happened to this guitar. I'll tell you...Epiphone is really making some great guitars lately. I own eight and love them. I know I got a deal (I knew someone), but even at the going rate, this is a steal. If you love vintage Les Pauls, do yourself a favor and buy this guitar. You won't be sorry.