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Epiphone Les Paul Standard

Summary
Price New Epiphone Les Paul Standard @ Musician's Friend
Manufacturer URL http://www.epiphone.com/
Features 8.1 (374 responses)
Sound 8.2 (402 responses)
Action, Fit, & Finish 7.9 (393 responses)
Reliability/Durability 8.1 (383 responses)
Customer Support 7.9 (79 responses)
Overall Rating 8.5 (395 responses)
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Product: Epiphone Les Paul Standard
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 10/14/2009 at 10:39pm by hayes m

Features : 8
2008 China, 57clasic alnico 5 epi neck humbucker ohmed to 8.9. Hotch alnico 5 epi bridge humbucker ohmed to 13.5. Alpha pots, cheap caps. Fat neck profile. Black paint, beige trim. Laminate Mahogany body with maple top.Laminate Mahogany set neck, Ebony fretboard. Grover tuners. ABR-1 style epi tune-o-matic with stud bushings(big stud holes)

Sound : 8
I play mostly rock and blues. I use only tube amps. This guitar is very quiet no buzzes, scratches, pops, or hums. Almost a Gibson LP, its pickups are moderately hot, with a well rounded warm but somewhat bright sound(I role back the tone knobs a bit). I can get most the sounds out of it I want. Great Sustain! I think the bridge pickup can get a little to crunchy sounding, still not bad.

Action, Fit, & Finish : 5
Not the worst setup ever, but only o.k.. The action, string spacing, and fret work was very good. The pickups needed adjusting right out the box, the bridge pickup was so close to the strings it shrilled out of phase, lowered both pickups, no problems now. The ABR 1 style bridge has very little intonation range, so the G string stayed slightly flat on intonation until a bought a Gotoh model#1511 replacement bridge, perfect intonation now! The nut slots were a bit tight, a touch with a file and some "Graphit All" white graphite, no strings binding now! The nut was also a bit high so I sanded it down a bit and rubbed out some rough egdes. The finish is good, the only flaws were where the pick guard was mounted left some indentions in the uncured paint, and the binding paint is a little uneven in places, and sharp on a couple edges.

Reliability/Durability : 10
Think this is the best Les Paul for the buck! Period. Rock solid! Dependable!

Customer Support : No Opinion
Never used it.

Overall Rating : 10
I'm a fourteen year guitar player. I have lots of gear. If this guitar was stolen I would freak out, and buy the same one again. I actualy had a Gibson LP stolen from me, it hurt me bad. I could of have four of these great Epi Pauls for the same price as that Giby. I recommend this guitar to anyone who wants a Les Paul but dose not want to spend a lot of jack. Also, I highly recommend the Gotoh bridge upgrade($20-$30). As far as things I don't like, the bridge is the biggest issue, come on Epiphone and get it done right!


Product: Epiphone Les Paul Standard
Price Paid: USD 500
Submitted 07/09/2009 at 08:32am by The Chosen One

Features : 7
09 model, i think it's made in China. I've had it for 5 or 6 months. Got mine in black. It's a Les Paul, so you should know most of the features. This guitar has Grover tuners, and is solid mahogany (neck too). The neck is painted, which i would rather not have because it isn't as fast as say, an unpainted satin finish neck. It is pretty thick, and rounded, which makes it comfortable, although not extremely well suited for metal soloing.

Sound : 8
I use this guitar through a Morley Bad Horsie Contour Wah to a Peavy Vypyr 75, which is great. I mostly use the Mesa/Boggie Dual Rectifier model, which is great for what i like to play (METAAL!). The stock pups are very good when played at low volume, and get an extreme sound if raised a little bit, although there is some hum if that is done. The only problem is when this guitar is played at gigging volumes, and i have gigged with it before. There is a lot of feedback, although i use do a ton of gain. If you put in some decent high output pickups, this baby would scream. With the stock pickups, you can get literally any sound, from metal in the bridge with everything at full blast to jazz in the neck with the tone turned down some. Would've given a 10 if the pickups would've been better for metal, but that's really just personal preference.

Action, Fit, & Finish : 10
The factory setup was PERFECT. The pickups were in the sweet spot for just about anything, although they sound better for metal if raaised just a touch. Everything was dead on, the fretwork rivals any guitar i have every played. The only issue is that the pickup switch is very noisy, but if you change the switch lightly (don't bang the crap out of it) this isn't really an issue. Also, i really don't change pickups very much, so this doesn't really matter to me.

Reliability/Durability : 9
Like i said earlier, it's solid mahogany. It seems indestructible. The finish is great, and not the fake flamed maple like on the other finishes available. This guitar is extremely heavy. I have heard of people messing up their backs because they play Les Pauls a lot. The strap buttons aren't great, and my strap kept coming off until i got a locking strap (it wouldn't fit in the case with straplocks). Definetely couldv'e been a problem, but it's an easy $20 fix.

Customer Support : No Opinion
The warranty is a limited lifetime, which is great. Nothing has gone wrong on it, and probably never will. I've never had to deal with the company, and i doubt i will have to.

Overall Rating : 9
I've been playing for a year and a half, and am starting to get into soloing. For this reason, i would've wanted a guitar with jumbo frets, but i really didn't know better. If this guitar was stolen, i would buy an ESP or a Jackson with a Floyd Rose, and then go track the guy down and beat him with this guitar. It would take it, and there probably wouldn't be much of a scratch. Still, i wish it wasn't so heavy.


Product: Epiphone Les Paul Standard
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 05/14/2009 at 11:02am by paul water

Features : 2
Dunno when it was made but it's a Chinese one. Tobacco burst with what appears to be a decal showing the grain of the maple top, not actual wood. The back and sides are painted black and don't allow you to see the wood either, so even though it's supposed to be mahogany I tend to wonder.

The tuners although Grover were installed unevenly and the d-string tuner has way more play than normal so it was probably damaged from the factory.

The bridge piece is too slim and forced me to flip around a couple of the saddles in order for it to intonate, frustrating. The bridge screws into the body also are a little outside, look like they could come off.

Sound : 7
The sound is the best part, although not a Gibson, it sounds similar. Still as close as you can get without buying the real deal, better in sound than the offbrand copies. Great sustain as expected, classic rock in all its glory. But, I attribute most of this to the design that Mr Paul came up with, not Epiphone.

The pickups are noisy yet not that hot though. But I imagine with burstbuckers in it, you could make it so nobody knows the difference. Why anybody would want to invest in one of these is beyond me though. Not worth upgrading.

Action, Fit, & Finish : 2
The setup was terrible from the store. I intonated it and set the neck and action and got it so it sounded good with no buzzes through the amp, but was never able to lower the action as much as I wanted without it buzzing out massively unplugged. Although this doesn't affect the amp sound, it still reminded me everytime I picked it up of what a cheap, sloppy instrument it was.

The finish was the sloppiest part. The bindings not straight, crooked trapezoid inlays. The dovetail piece of the neck that is rounded at the back and meets the body was notoriously uneven.

From a far it looks just like a Gibson, but for anybody who's owned one, they know instantly it's a cheap copy.

This is the category that finally motivated me to sell it. Sure, you can get by with it for that LP sound, but if you are serious enough you will spend enough time with this thing to notice exactly how inexact it is.

A quick mention of its case: since the Les Paul has an angled neck, it's very hard to find a good case for it that fits if you don't want to buy the brandname version, which is always more expensive. I bought a hardshell case from Epiphone since I never ended up finding an offbrand and was also disappointed with its build quality.

Despite being more expensive than any other comparable case on the market, the thing started falling apart on its own without even subjecting it to hardly any travel.

It was a "hardshell" case but was pretty flexible anyway and the cheap vinal on the outside started coming unglued. Pathetic.

Reliability/Durability : 2
The input jack always kept unscrewing itself, which although seems like something totally minor and fixable, is frustrating and is a possible shortout on stage. Plus, the tuner had a problem and the bridge gives me the impression it could actually come off cause the bolts like I said before were halfway out from the factory. So no, it isn't very reliable for continued stage use.

Customer Support : No Opinion
Don't know.

Overall Rating : 1
I bought this because I was so obsessed about replacing a Gibson Les Paul back in the day I had to sell. I was blinded by the glory of the concept that is the Les Paul in the store and I did a very immature thing and bought it despite the fact that I knew all along it really wasn't the same thing.

Don't do the same as I did. Be honest with yourself, this is no Les Paul, no matter what you do to it later. And upgrading it is like putting a turbo into a Yugo, you can always improve on it but why on earth would you want to waste your time and money.

I finally sold it on ebay cheap and with the money bought a brand new Ibanez AG75 hollowbody for less than what I sold the paul for used.

Amazing since the Ibanez has perfect finish, decent hardware and is an all-around better instrument. It's a guitar that is actually useable and likeable by a pro, not just a toy for bedroom playing like the paul.

But in retrospect, I am still a little annoyed with myself for having bought it in the first place. I'm also seriously disappointed in Epiphone.

I know there are exceptions and every once in a while one came come across a charmed Epi that was made well, but the great majority I've tried are like mine was, poor on most levels.

I don't consider it a good value, because to make it as good as my Ibanez I would have had to spend at least another US$200 to fix the tuners, have the frets dressed and leveled, get a new bridge and possibly even swap out the pickups. And even then the craftmanship would still be poor.

People, if you absolutely must have one, get a Gibson and buy it used or a Studio model, even an SG as a substitute, but don't buy this lemon.

Furthermore, shame on you Epiphone for trying to card this piece of junk off as an LP. If he were younger, I imagine Mr Paul might have done the same as he did in the 60s and told the company he didn't want to have it put his name on the SG.

Even the case started falling apart. To me Epiphone=junk.


Product: Epiphone Les Paul Standard
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 05/13/2009 at 01:06pm by paul gates

Features : 4
Same as the Gibson Les Paul. A special mention for the Grover tuners that came with it. They are excellent tuners but my particular set came with the D string tuner messed up with way too much play. Poor quality control on the part of Epiphone. Also, the jack input kept unscrewing itself, a very frustrating issue.

Finally, the tune-o-matic bridge piece was too slim and in order to get the right intonation I had to flip around the saddles because I maxed out their range. This was with 11 gauge strings, so I suspect if I put any higher gauge on it the bridge would not be able to intonate correctly. Cheap and amateur.

Sound : 8
Considering the price, the sound was really good, very similar to a Gibson but not as hot because the pickups aren't Gibson. It did sound a little colder and emptier than a Gibson but again, considering the price, one shouldn't complain. All in all, very respectable sound, thanks to the Les Paul design, which to me is the best solid body guitar design in the world. You can make this baby scream because although it is a copy, it is still a Les Paul.

If you close your eyes and forget all the guitar's other problems, for a few minutes the sound actually makes the guitar redeem itself.

Action, Fit, & Finish : 2
The factory setup was horrendous and like I said before, is very close to not able to intonate correctly with heavy strings because of the thin bridge piece. The action is not bad because the angled Les Paul neck allows for great action just because of the genius design Mr. Paul came up with decades ago. But the frets were very uneven, forcing me to raise the action higher than a well-made Les Paul in order to avoid massive fret buzz. In the end I made a trade off and just set up the action to buzz like mad as long as it didn't come through the amp. Still, kinda a downer if you pick it up without an amp. Reminds you instantly of what a cheap guitar it is.

As for the finish, it just plain sucked. Poor paint finishing, uneven bindings, the fretboard had glue and carelessly selected wood. Looks great from a far but if you're holding it, you know immediately it's a cheapo copy.

My particular one I think was worse than most though, I've seen some Epi Les Pauls much better crafted, leading me to believe one can actually get a good one if they absolutely have to own a Les Paul and can't compromise and buy a better-made copy from another brand.

Reliability/Durability : 2
Considering the loose input jack and the crappy D-string tuner, I think this thing probably is not reliable for stage work. I didn't have any problems with the electronics, but I got the feeling they would likely arise later on, if I hadn't sold it first.

Customer Support : No Opinion
Don't know.

Overall Rating : 2
I wouldn't buy this guitar if I were serious about playing. I ended up selling it cheap shortly after I got it and bought a brand new Ibanez AG75 hollowbody for less than what I got from selling this used. Amazing considering the Ibanez is a far superior instrument in craftsmanship and sound. Embarrassing for Epiphone if you ask me. I was just so obsessed about getting another Les Paul after I had to sell an excellent Gibson Les Paul Studio a few years back, that I got this, because I'm not about to spend more than two grand for a real Gibby standard. Too much if you're not a pro. But this is not a good compromise. If you can't afford at least a Gibson Studio model just be honest with yourself and don't get a les paul. It's like buying a Ferrari kit car. Looks great from far away but pop the hood and you're in for a good laugh, or a belly ache thinking about how you were duped into buying this lemon.



Product: Epiphone Les Paul Standard
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 04/29/2009 at 10:09am by Tim Adams

Features : 7
2000 model made in Korea. Has the basic features you'd expect on a Les Paul. This is my second Epi Les Paul. The first one was a '97 model with a neck that twisted beyond hope of repair. Gibson replaced the guitar and trasferred my pickups and tuners from the old one to the new one.

Sound : 10
I've never heard the stock pickups for this guitar. Gibson transferred the 498T (bridge) and the 490R (neck) from my old LP. After 9 years she still sings like a lady and just gets better with age. The bridge pup has the nice fat Gibson crunch and the neck pup has this warm tone that's great for blues and jazz. Never played it along side a Gibson LB but to my ear (since it's got Gibson pickups) it sounds like a Les Paul.

Action, Fit, & Finish : 9
No complaints at all here. When Gibson replaced my old LP they most have chosen the cream of the crop. This old girl has a luscious ebony finish that's flawless. The binding and inlays are perfect. The stock tune-a-matic bridge is rock solid. I had replace the stock Epi tuners on my old LP with actual Gibson Classic Tuners so the guys at Gibson transferred those to this guitar and did a GREAT job. Tuning is not a problem. The controls and electronics are stock and have never given me any trouble. Gibson even transferred my Schaller strap lock buttons to the new guitar.

Reliability/Durability : 10
Can you say, "Built like a tank"? this Les Paul is made on mohagony all the way. No alder here. I tend to treat both my guitars with the respect a fine instrument deserves. I'd have no worries about gigging live with it.

Customer Support : 10
As I mentioned above, the support I got from Gibson when the neck on my '97 Les Paul warped was outstanding. They transferred ALL the custom hardware from the old guitar to the new one and did an excellent set up job on it. When it arrived back at Boykin's Music in Richmond, Va the guy I was dealing with asked if he could check it out. So he plugged it into a Marshall head with a 4X12 cab and he was blown away.

Overall Rating : 10
I've always loved the look and sound of a Les Paul Standard, but just couldn't justify the cost of a Gibson. The Epiphone Les Paul Standard with a couple upgrades fills the roll perfectly for a fraction of the price. I play though a second generation Peavey Bandit 112S with a 112S external cab. My other guitar is a heavily customized Ibanez Blazer BL1025. I call that one my "Stunt Guitar" because of the mods it's had done to it to turn it into a do everything axe.

If someone stole my Les Paul, let's just say they had better book passage off the planet and leave it at that. I'd defenetly get another one, but would probably have a hard time finding one as good as the one I have.


Product: Epiphone Les Paul Standard
Price Paid: New Zealand dollars 550 USED
Submitted 09/24/2008 at 06:12am by james
Email: the_oil_industry at hotmail<dot>com

Features : 8
Righto! Epiphone les paul standard, made in China 2003. Good solid run of the mill Les paul replica. Mahogany body with a maple cap on it, not 100% sure of the neck, probably maple. Heaps of sustain so maybe mahogany?

Neck is ... Not as chunky as I'd thought, my hands aren't huge nor are they small but it feels great. Gloss finish and rounded in an odd but comfortable way. Headstock is the... Actually, not so appealing Epiphone shape. Adorned with grover tuners.

Has the Gibson style fat and chunky bridge and tailpiece. They come to bits easy with loosening of the screws, but they're rock solid when you're playing and strung up.
The pickups are raw and raunchy; the middle position gives one a nice growl on clean. The bridge has the usual humbucker grunt (don't get too happy, it lacks a little low end power.) The neck ... Gawd. Don't replace it. It's fine. Gets an 8 for being second hand. Harhar.

Sound : 10
The pickups are stock standard, and do what they should. I am a poor student so what I have at the moment is a blessing! After playing a telecaster for a year, moving to a les paul for... Hell, less than 1/3 the price the tele. was, it has blown me away. You have the power of a cool jazz sound, something you'd expect from BB King, something else that delves into european metal, and a rock and roll flamethrower strapped over your shoulder. This mother f... This guitar does... More than what I'd expected it to do [being a chinese made replica]. I play through a zoom 505ii pedal to a behringer bx600 bass box [that gives me a gruntier sound than anyone else!] and Phwoar, this is... This thing blows you away. It does all sorts of stuff from the clean, smooth as a baby's bum jazz tones, great for picking and blipping around with, right the way through to really hard stuff, getting to the point of death and black metal, which is pushing it a bit [perhaps take the covers off the pickups?]

The sustain is very Gibson. It does not die. [If you know what you're doing.] The low end blows your head off. Good for mimicking the p.a.f sound like on Brothers in arms [Dire straits].

There's one thing I don't like [that doesn't really get to me that much], and that's there the cutaway sits on my leg. Not something I won't get used to.

Gets a 10 for value of second hand goods and being the man.

Action, Fit, & Finish : 8
Seeing as I bought it used, the thing was sorted right out of the case. The bloke I bought it off reckoned the strings needed a change, but, they didn't. They'll be good for a while yet.

The pickups were a bit... Odd. I dealt to them [not alot to do] and put the action down slightly... After I'd figured out how the bridge worked. [Haven't had a proper look at a Paul before!] Tuned it up, and away I went.

The finish is very thick; it has binding [single ply] on the body and neck. Very smart looking guitar. Being the second hand guitar it is, it had the few imperfections and a hardly noticeable belt rash on the back you'd expect. I think I can see the lines in the maple top through the finish, but, oh well. It's excellent. I think one or two frets might need being stuck in, but, who uses 21 anyway? That's c#. Yuck.

The neck pickup's tone pot [dedicated!] was scratchy, but a bit of twisting it round fast fixed it in 30 seconds. This section gets an 8 also for being second hand.

Reliability/Durability : 9
I reckon I could play at the vector arena [local huge stadium], in a few bars etc, this thing would hack it no trouble. The catch being I'm not in a band.

The hardware is solid as... Something really solid. This is not a flimsy $300 guitar.

The finish on it is lovely and thick; very pretty looking guitar in gloss black and cream adornments with all the other **** being chrome.

The strap buttons are bigger than on my tele and don't look like my strap will fall off anytime soon. If it does, it will be picked up and played as is.

This dept. gets a 9, because I've heard of Epiphone [moreso Gibson, actually] headstock joints being quite weak, and easy to snap.

Customer Support : No Opinion
Who knows. Changing bits of guitar can't be that hard. I know a few people that will do it for me and not f... Bugger it up.

Overall Rating : 9
Since I've been playing [started 2004. it's now Sept. 2008] I've owned absolutely bugger all guitars; a cheap ashton acoustic [ooh, ouch.], a squier bullet strat, a Fender '60s classic tele [first decent guitar!]. Then there's this thing, the Epiphone les paul. Playing through a behringer bx600 bass amp with a zoom 505ii pedal. It's neat if you know how to use it.

If this bugger of a thing was nicked, I'd definitely not be happy, Jan. This is not a guitar to be taken lightly. Though, a DEFINITE WORD TO POTENTIAL BUYERS : Epiphone les pauls etc. these days [chinese made] are strictly hit or miss guitars. You're either going to get a Ferarri or a Lada; find a dollar on the pavement or get kicked in the shins. Play around on a few les pauls before you settle on buying one. The build quality varies astonishingly.

I compared this with an Epi. flying v which I think has the same specs as a Lp. studio model [yuck]. the V was brand new for about $750 nzd no case; The paul was $550 used with a case. They retail for $1099 without a case. I wish it had previously had the bridge pickup cover removed. Just for a meaner look and more high end in it, and coil taps on both pickups.

Gets a 9 all round cuz I decided to be a bit picky. If you see one for sale, don't hesitate to give it a shot, especially older korean models.


Product: Epiphone Les Paul Standard
Price Paid: USD 350 USED
Submitted 09/16/2008 at 04:02pm by dhenry
Email: awestruckbygrace<at>gmail dot com

Features : 8
2006 Korean Guitar. You know the specs by now. Mine came with HSC.

Sound : 7
I would like to give 2 different reviews for the sound of this guitar. I have owned it for over a year, so I have had time to weather the storms of ownership, and believe to have found the highs and lows of the instrument.

The pickups on the stock Epi are just too muddy for my style of music. They seem best suited for players who are mainly playing power chords, or possibly for players who are linked to a digital modeling amp like a Line 6. They are ok when distorted heavily, but not great for sounds on the verge of breakup.

The tone of the guitar on the other hand is a completely different story. With a mahogany body, maple top, and rosewood fretboard this guitar sings when not plugged in. That made me decide to install better pickups (Anderson pickups specifically) into the guitar. Once this was done, the guitar had clear voicing, creamy distorted tones, and is a real pleasure to listen to.

So with the stock pickups, for the style of music I play I will give the guitar a 6.5. With the andersons, I will give the guitar a 9, so overall I would give it a 7.5

Action, Fit, & Finish : 7
I can't speak for the factory, as I purchased the guitar used, and I always take my guitars to a luthier for the initial setup. I will say this, there is a fret buzz on the open "g" string that drives me up a wall. Also, the pickup selector broke off, so I had to have a new one put on.

Reliability/Durability : No Opinion
Reliability wise, I have no fear to use this guitar live. It is made of solid wood with hard binding and chrome hardware. There is nothing to be afraid of there. Unless you like to throw your guitars in the middle of shows, but then again I guess if you break this guitar at a gig, you could probably break any guitar at a gig.

Customer Support : No Opinion
Why deal with the company when you can work with a quality luthier you can go see.

Overall Rating : No Opinion
I have been playing for the better part of a decade, and have owned a lot of gear during that time. If it were stolen or lost and $600 was my limit I would probably buy this guitar again, but I would rather save money for an anderson.


Product: Epiphone Les Paul Standard
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 07/03/2008 at 02:15pm by ak47dragunov
Email: vilna4<at>yahoo dot com

Features : 8
Epi LP standard, plain top, 22 frets, trapezoid inlays, vintage sunburst, chrome hardware, grovers, alnico v humbuckers, rosewood fretboard, maple neck, dedicated tone and volume controls, toggle switch.

Sound : 6
I play hair and glam metal with my band, and death metal for myself, this guitar fares well but not amazingly. The pickups have a very dull sound and the palm mutes just don't produce the grinding tones my EMG jackson does. I wish the sound was brighter on both clean and distorted settings. But don't get me wrong I only get these problems on my practice amp. On my Fender Deluxe Reverb I get a great grinding distortion with a digitech death metal pedal.

Action, Fit, & Finish : 6
The action is low which is fine, however there is a horrible amount of fret buzz and I dont think the fretboard was sanded properly. The strings were very rusty and scraped the wood, I immediately changed the strings to Ernie Ball Customs and the playability soared. I also had to re-adjust the frets.

Reliability/Durability : 9
This guitar is not a good live guitar for me anyways, because I dont like the weight. The strap buttons are nice and solid though and if necessary I would use it live but not unless it is the only guitar i had available.

Customer Support : 10
Bought from Guitar Center, extremely helpful and caring I recommend to everyone to go there.

Overall Rating : 7
I've been playing for about 3 years. I own a ****** LP special from epiphone, a gibson invader, fender deluxe players strat, and a gibson es-335 (from a garage sale 200$ yeah!) I made the mistake of buying a guitar solely on looks. I saw the LP and I thought holy crap! a REAL LP but i didnt consider my playing style and sound. Yet again dont get me wrong, I love it just dont LOVE it. I compared it to the fender deluxe and the deluxe played better and felt better but the LP had that powerful humbucker sound which i needed for metal. I recently traded the LP in for the fender i mentioned earlier, love it alot! If it was stolen I would probably buy an sg or another strat.


Product: Epiphone Les Paul Standard
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 05/03/2008 at 11:12pm by Epimaster

Features : 9
We all know the classic Paul setup- 2 alnico classic hummers, 2 tone 2 volume controls, 3 way selector. mine is a mahognany bck and maple top. Replaced tuners with Grovers, mulling a pup change.

Sound : 9
Good Paul sound from nice and chunky to a ringingly sweet treble. Running thru a Crate VTX65b with a Ts 9 overdrive. Able to get that J Page tone with no problem. Also grest on jazzier stuff. With the amp pedal combo really able to get almost any sound I choose to emulate.

Action, Fit, & Finish : 9
Setup great out of the box from MF. Had it for almost three years now looks as good as the day i got it. Nice ebony gloss finish. Have been over the axe forwards, backwards and sideways and so has my local tech shop, no complaints or problems. Grovers made a big difference but the stock tuners were just fine.

Reliability/Durability : 10
AS i stated earlier almost three years in and the Paul is better now than when I got it, finish is great, tone is awesome. I know that a ploy finish isn't suppose to enhance the sound with age like Nitro does, but it sounds better, can't wait for it to reach ten. Have a Carlos acoustic(don't laugh) that is 29 yrs old and it sounds(no ****) as good as the Low end Martin I tryed out two months ago, so some inexpensive guitars do get better with age too. I gig without a backup with no worries.

Customer Support : No Opinion
Life time warranty, but i haven't needed it.

Overall Rating : No Opinion
Been playing 41 years. Dad and granddad had pauls..one a '58 standard and the other a '66. I have them both now..too afraid to take them out of the house and won't pay two plus Gs for a new one. the epi gets the job done. Also have a Tele and an Es 335 custom copy, the Epi holds its' own in fast company. Use the VTX65B, a rewired Fender "franenstein" tube with two 12's and 100 watts all tube and the tube screamer, in combo with the Epi I get all the tones I ever wished for and then some. Buying an Epi Goldtop and a Prophecy LP one for my B'day later this year and the other for Christmas. I would burn any ***** that lays a hand my Epi.


Product: Epiphone Les Paul Standard
Price Paid: USD 400
Submitted 04/22/2008 at 08:35pm by Riley

Features : No Opinion
No idea when this was made, probably in 2007. Seeing as how its an Epiphone, it was likely made in Japan or Korea. Has 22 frets with pearl-block style inlays, very classy! I'd say its a solid top but then again I don't know the difference. This model has a tone and volume knobs and what I'm GUESSING to be pickup knobs (I can't tell what they do). The guitar has two humbuckers, whatever comes on an Epiphone Les Paul standard. Has a beautiful sunburst finish, I wouldn't ask for anything different.

Sound : 8
Now this guitar sounds WONDERFUL, for just about anything except metal (with the exception of hard rock). If you couldn't see the headstock you wouldn't know the difference between this guitar and a genuine Gibson Les Paul. This guitar hardly buzzes at all. Like a Gibson, this has that beautiful warm, rich sound.

Action, Fit, & Finish : 10
Well I'm guessin' that this guitar was set up at the store I bought it from. But when they set it up they knew what they were doing! Although the action, when set low or at medium, the frets buzz on the low E and A, especially when power chords are utilized. But hooked up to an amp, you can't tell that the frets buzz at all so its nothing to rant about really. I wouldn't replace the pickups in fear of losing that warm Gibson tone, after all, it'd be more than a shame to lose that! As far as that goes though, the guitar contained NO flaws whatsoever.

Reliability/Durability : 10
This thing is tough. Quite. Although I wouldn't suggest taking a hammer to it! I've had this guitar since December '07 and the finish hasn't even begun to phase, still looks brand new. If the hardware doesn't last, then I'm a monkeys uncle, because like every Gibson-made product, its built to LAST. The strap buttons aren't coming off any time soon, even if you wanted to rip them off (not that I've tried). Without a doubt though, this thing is 100% reliable! If I gigged or went some where with it (and not a backup guitar), I would be confident that this guitar could stand up to about any challenge.

Customer Support : 10
I bought this from the Dexter Music Center, the employees there gladly demonstrated how well the guitar played and were very friendly and helpful. The thing came with a warranty, but I don't remember how long it was, but it was long enough that if anything happened to it now, I'd still be under warranty.

Overall Rating : 9
Its a Gibson Les Paul standard without the trademark Gibson headstock practically. Just think of what a Gibson Les Paul standard is like and visualize it with an Epiphone headstock. I would reccomend this guitar to just about anybody for the tone and price. I have a 1961 Melody Maker, and really, they're quite equal in tone, but that also depends on what tone you want.

Just as a warning, this thing is made for hard-rock and lower. Not quite metal friendly.


Product: Epiphone Les Paul Standard
Price Paid: 430
Submitted 04/17/2008 at 05:27pm by daseinsform

Features : 8
You all know the features. My lady was build in China and I think they have used an unusual amount of varnish for the finish. Nevertheless the Honey-burst finish looks pretty nice and is giving this lady a very expensive look - as my daughter says.

Sound : 10
I??ve prefered to play acustic guitars (Ovation, H??fer) years before. Got some experience with a Fender Strat - stopped for 10 years and entered jazz and blues guitar 2 years ago. I use a Roland cube 30 for this lady and a Beringer sound modulator for the note book when playing just with head phones.
I??ve tested some of the LP-standards build by Epiphone and I??ve to say that the sound varies very much. My lady sounds very rich with a rich sound especially from the neck HB. I use D??Addario EXL110W strings and they give a much more intense sound than many other strings I??ve tried (from .009 up to .013) The neck HB is perfect for Jazz and Blues and I??ve to admit that I rarely use another configuration.
But as I??ve said: sound characteristics seem to vary comparing different "individuals" of this modell. Test your lady before buying!

Action, Fit, & Finish : No Opinion
Baught this guitar from a Music Store where they adjust all Guitars perfectly. Can??t judge the quality of the factory.

Reliability/Durability : 10
I just play this guitar at home and on very small sets. It works without any problems since 2 years (and I play it every day, travelling a lot as well). The toggle switch is a little wobbly and the buttoms have been placed sloppy.

Customer Support : No Opinion
Did not need this so far.

Overall Rating : 8
This is a guitar which enables you to play a great variety of sounds. The price is reasonable. You should play with the guitar before you buy it, because the individual sound might differ.

If my lady will be stolen, I shurely will replace it.


Product: Epiphone Les Paul Standard
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 03/30/2008 at 12:12am by Wizard
Email: Teleguy55 at aol<dot>com

Features : 9
This Epiphone Plaintop Honeyburst was made in China in 2008.It has 23 frets.The pickups are Gibson design Alnico V's.2 volume,2 tone controls in the old style Gibson top-hats.Passive Electronics.Finish is Gloss Plaintop Honeyburst.When I say plain,I don't mean it's ulgly,in fact it's quite striking.Les Paul body style.Frets seem jumbo and neck is right in the middle between thin and fat..nice feel.No case or bag but there was a cheap cord that I probably will never use.Tunamatic bridge with stopbar tailpiece.I was looking for a great guitar for under $500...I found it!!

Sound : 10
I have been using it with a small Peavy tube amp and also a Marshal DSL 401.THIS GUITAR ROCKS!Pickups are very very good...Alnico V's..no need to change em in my opionion.Nice AC/DC crunch on the bridge pickup and on the neck nice Funky...Doobie brothers "Long Train Comin"Plenty of Sustain.This guitar Sounds great.A+

Action, Fit, & Finish : 10
This is the Second guitar I received.The first had buzzing and cosmetic problems..like..a knot in the neck by the first fret..also the first finish bled into binding.AMS was very good at taking it back and immedialtly replacing it....

The second Guitar was absolutly PERFECT!!I believe there has been a significant improvement in Epiphone Quality in recent months...BRAVO Gibson.Nut beautifullt cut...Action perfect...Everything....ROCKS..And I'm a finicky guy...

Reliability/Durability : 8

Yes,it can withstand constant use.Very Solid looking guitar.I have ordered the Epiphone LP case..hoping it's good.I would use it without a backup,it's that good

Customer Support : 6

I didn't need customer support,But,I'm not trustful of the Warranty.The only real help from Gibson is there 1-800 number.If you get to the point of needing to go for repair...GOOD LUCK

Overall Rating : 10
I had a couple of Rock bands in the 60's.Now I'm just livin the dream.I have done an open Mike...that was fun.I have a Tele.Strat,SG 61 reissue,SG Classic,Epiphone Casino Elitist...very nice...Fender Blues Junior Amp...Epiphone Valve Junior..and lots of Boss pedals and Many Acoustics...just got the Taylor Baby...Very nice.

If this Epiphone were stolen,I would get another.I Love the sound,feel.I hate that I had to eturn the first guitar to finally get perfect one.It has everything a Rocker needs :)


Product: Epiphone Les Paul Standard
Price Paid: USD 379
Submitted 02/29/2008 at 11:27pm by Derek

Features : 8
2007 Chinese Les Paul Standard that was a factory 2nd. 22 frets
This one is light more like a Studio than any of the other 4 Epiphone Les Pauls I had. The finish isn't transparent but I'd be inclined to say this guitar either is hollowed out in certain areas or is alder wood. I changed the nut to a Tusq nut right away and put String-Saver saddles on it. I took it into a luthier as I bought it off eBay and he found the frets were very uneven. I guess that is what made it a factory 2nd because everything else is fine on the guitar. Anyways he set in and glued the frets and dressed them and now it plays very well. I got a hardshell case with it even though I only play at home. I figure every guitar of mine should have a nice place to rest. The Grover tuners perform wonderfully. I give it an 8 because it was a 2nd and because the factory nut and saddles are pretty cheap. But for $379.00 it is a good value for those looking for a Les Paul styled guitar.

Sound : 8
I run it through a Digitech RP50 effects unit into a Peavey Studio Pro amplifier. It has a 12" speaker so it provides good sound from a relatively cheap amp. The pickups are okay. They sound pretty much like my other Epiphone pickups with the exception of two of my previously owned Epiphones which both had 57 Classic/57 Classic Plus
pickups in them and they were pretty fine. I may at some point change to a Seymour Duncan Jazz in the neck and a JB at the bridge, but I'm in no rush. The sounds I can get with the stock setup are pretty good. The neck pickup is not muddy and the bridge is bright and can get raunchy with some distortion, which I like when I'm in the mood. It is good for jazz, blues and rock. Not country though. But I have a Telecaster for that kind of twangy sound. I give it an 8 because the sound is good but if Epiphone spent another $50.00 bucks on this guitar they could install much better pickups in it and I would gladly pay the extra $50.00

Action, Fit, & Finish : 8
The guitar was not set up well from the factory and required work at my local luthiers shop to get it into Grade A playing condition. As I mentioned before the frets had to be re-set and dressed. The paint job was fine and the gold hardware looks fine. It gets an 8 because my Fender came with a decent factory setup, and the quality control sticker(which has been removed) should not have been put on this guitar that had terrible fretwork. Note also that it has a logo on the back saying this is a limited edition custom shop model. It should have been fixed before they rushed it out of the factory.

Reliability/Durability : 9
It is a solidly built guitar and I believe that it would stand up to live playing quite well. The gold hardware finish will likely wear off pretty quickly, but it it would be dependable as long as it wasn't abused.

Customer Support : No Opinion
No warranty since it's a 2nd. I would never take it to the local Epiphone dealer. I take it to the local Ibanez shop where they do good work at a fair price. I think if you take care of something from the start it will last and you'll never have to deal with a warranty issue. I think the Chinese factory still has a ways to go before it matches the quality of the South Korean models of 2003 and before.

Overall Rating : 8
I have been playing off and on since I was a teenager in the 70's. I just play for fun. I won't buy another Epiphone guitar on eBay without playing it first. I think that I'll buy my next guitar (an acoustic)locally and try it first. I compared it with an Agile Les Paul copy. I had two Agiles before and I had to return one of them with a crack in the neck. I chose the Epiphone this time over the Agile because it's expensive to ship it back if there is a problem even though the Agile dealer is great. My other guitar is a Fender Standard Telecaster which I will review next.


Product: Epiphone Les Paul Standard
Price Paid: USD 400
Submitted 02/24/2008 at 08:42pm by Steve

Features : 8
2 passive stock humbuckers,rosewood fretboard. black/white,grovers, les paul style single cutaway guitar, jumbo frets.

I like this guitar for the money. It has the weight which contributes to the sustain. I knew I was most likely going to have to change the electronics/pickups but the guitar provides a great base product to upgrade. The finish work is very respectable relative to its Gibson peer.

Sound : 7
Classic Rock run thru a Vox 30 watt Valvetronix. The stock pickups are decent but nothing special. Good harmonics, feel and playability. I will upgrade with some hotter pickups. Rhythm pickup is a bit muddy. Middle and Treble position are OK.

Action, Fit, & Finish : 9
Many of these companies cut corners on the finish work but, again, I like the base product features and finish. The strings buzz a little but I will have that worked out with a set up and some heavier strings. The frets, usually the area suffering on these copy guitars, are very well done on mine. Smooth jumbo frets with no overhang thanks in part to the bound fretboard. A very nice looking guitar.

Reliability/Durability : 9
Feels like a heavy duty and durable guitar - weighty. Parts are solid with no loose connections. Well built. Neck is solid and joins the body well. I would play live with it.

Customer Support : No Opinion
Not a lot of experience with Gibson but they do offer 24 hour customer support.

Overall Rating : 9
This is a very good guitar. I don't understand the folks that expect a $3,000 Gibson Les Paul for $400 bucks. Just make the upgrades and setup and you will have a very nice guitar. Good looking, solid build, smooth playing - what more can you ask?


Product: Epiphone Les Paul Standard
Price Paid: AUD 1200
Submitted 02/16/2008 at 02:41am by Cameron Poole
Email: poolec at hotpop<dot>com

Features : 9
This Epiphone Les Paul was made in China and i have no idea what year. It has 22 frets The controls are 2 volume controls (for each humbucker and two tone control likewise. The pickups are passive being Epiphones own and they perform well. The body is a solid chunk of mahogany, enough said. The neck is glued on and has a rosewood fretboard. It has a flamed top. It has Gibson/Epiphones stop tailpiece. The tuners are top quality grovers and have satisfied me from the onset. It also has a fat wide neck, that is very fast and comfortable for a les paul. not tons of features so it won't give it 10, but it does heaps of tones

Sound : 10
It is perfect for my rock/blues music style. I run it through a Behringer GMX212 (sadly) so the tone of it dosen't quite show. It is hum free and completely silent due to the humbuckers, which are medium output. The sound isn't particulary bright, but is very, very rich. it dosen't do shimmering cleans all that well, but your eyes will light up when you run it through a Plexi or something like that, it is made for this kind of amp.

Action, Fit, & Finish : 8
The action is not to low, not too high, perfect for playing and sounding good. Th guitar only had minor flaws like the neck-strap button coming loose every time you use the strap, and the pickup toggle coming loose, but these are minor cosmetic flaws and are easily fixed, other than that, the guitar is absolutly perfect.

Reliability/Durability : 10
I have used it on a gig and it is very solid, the hardware will last if you look after it. I don't think the finish will wear off, and so what if it does, it will only look like a well aged les paul. I would trust this guitar with my life, very solid and unsmashable, it just wouldn't break like a flimsy bolt on neck type (you all know the model im talking about)

Customer Support : No Opinion
Never dealt with them

Overall Rating : 10
I have benn playing for 4 years now. I fit was lost or stolen i would be seriously pissed off, because it the most expensive thing i own, and I treat it like a baby (wiping down after gigs etc.). The only thig i don't like about it is where the intonation screws are, but i don't care, I get music headquarters in newcastle to do it for me for reduced price because i buy everything there. If you want a serious Les Paul, at a reduced price, run and get one of these axes, you will not regret it


Product: Epiphone Les Paul Standard
Price Paid: USD 350
Submitted 01/10/2008 at 10:44am by Hal

Features : No Opinion
Nothing I can add here that hasn't been described in full better than I could. Semi-hollow body certainly helps make it lighter!

Sound : 7
With a good amp it seems to produce a good tone and the humbuckers can certainly be adjusted enough to mimic almost any type of music as long as you have the right amp (I'm a beginner with a nice Vox Ad30VT which sounds great to me). The pickups aren't as loud as real Gibson or others but they do the job. The neck pickup is very quite and doens't offer much. It acutally sounds kind of nice unplugged.

Action, Fit, & Finish : 5
This is the area that I have the most gripe about this guitar. It buzzes a lot. When I mentioned it to the sales person they said it wasn't that bad but after only a month is certainly gets on my nerves. It's adjusted as well as it can be so must be caused by crappy frets. When bending the strings it ofter causes my finger to go under another string causing a possible twang. Also, bending the A string a bit may make the top E string slide off the end because the neck is very narrow. The action just doesn't feel very good to me. The finish on the neck causes my hand to sweat and get sticky so I have to use talc or baby powder to keep from sticking. Because of all of these issues I wish I could get different guitar that I like more.

Reliability/Durability : 7
This guitar seems very sturdy, I haven't had any issues and it seems to hold its tune. I am a beginner so don't know how it would hold up at gigs.

Customer Support : No Opinion

Overall Rating : 4
Unfortunely it lookes good but just doesn't feel very good or play easily. You have to be very skilled to keep from doing something wrong (keep frets from buzzing, sliding hand without sticking on neck, bending strings without causing problems). I would love to buy something else and probably will sell on craigslist for cheap.


Product: Epiphone Les Paul Standard
Price Paid: USD 350
Submitted 12/15/2007 at 12:14pm by Rich

Features : 8
Typical made in China Les Paul features: 24.75" scale, 3 mahogany body with laminated flame maple top and laminated back, body and neck binding, 2 piece Mahogany neck, rosewood fingerboard, 22 frets, plastic nut, 2 Epiphone humbuckers, 2 tone, 2 volume knobs, 3 position switch, THICK polyurethane finish, grover tuners, abr-1 bridge, tailpiece. Mine is a Translucent Red Wine.
The pickups are sort of cheap. I played the stock pickups for about 7 months but recently replaced them with Seymour Duncan Jazz in the neck and a JB in the bridge and replaced all the electronics and wired it to the specs of Jimmy Pages Les Paul. I will elaborate more on them on the sound. Everything else is acceptable

Sound : 7
I play basically for pleasure by myself and with friends. I typically play classic rock, The Who and Led Zepplin etc. and my own version of James Brown funk using a Fender Blues Jr., the one with the Jensen speaker. This little 15 Watt amp is fine for me and waht I do. Like I said above I played with the stock pickups for about 7 months or so. The bridge pickup was okay but the neck pickup was pretty quiet and muffled in my opinion. I recently changed out all the electronics on it and replaced them with a Seymour Duncan Jazz in the neck position and a JB in the bridge position. I had it wired to the specs of Jimmy Page's Les Paul. I strung it with Gibson Vintage strings. This greatly improved the sound and tone variation of the guitar. I got much much more output with the Seymour Duncan pickups. The Jimmy Page wiring specs gave me increadible tone variation (coil tap on poth pickups using a push/pull pots on the volume knobs. Using push/pulls on the tone knobs - the neck tone knob puts the pickups in a seiries -the bridge tone knob puts the pickups out of phase.) I am still playing with all the tone variations but even my wife said "it vhanges the sound of the guitar entirely." With these changes I would probably rate this and 8 or 9. I plan to get a Duncan Twin Tube stomp box to get three channels out of my songle channel Fender Blues Jr. Overall a good guitar for the price under $400 not including the upgrades I made.

Action, Fit, & Finish : 7
Set up was okay out of the box to get going but was much improved with a professional set up. Frets were a little uneven. I bought mind as a blemish off ebay. It took me a long time to find any blemish at all. After a couple days looking it over I found a small buff marks where the neck meets the body but that is it.

Reliability/Durability : 9
The finish on this is pretty thick so I think it will take a beating. I keep mine in an ABS case when not playing it so I think it will last a long time. Since I do not gig professionally I do not need a backup. It is all for self pleasure.

Customer Support : No Opinion
Since it is a factory blemish I will not get any support. The company I bought it from was a perfect trasaction.

Overall Rating : 8
I've played off and on for about 15 years with long gaps between. I am totally slef taught with a few periods with lessons here and there. Putting all the time together probably about 2 to 3 years. Looking back, I might have held out for a good shape used Gibson Les Paul studio since after upgrading I would have probably found one in the price I spent on the Epiphone and upgrading it. I like the guitar because it is a good starter and would recomend it for anyone learning. Shop around and you'll find one for the price I paid stock used with probably all the upgrade you need on it for the price you'd pay for it stock. But hey you live and learn.


Product: Epiphone Les Paul Standard
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 12/12/2007 at 04:10am by saad shahid

Features : 7
all the standard les paul features...2 humbuckers, tune-o-matric bridge, 22 frets two volume two tone controls with a 3 way toggle switch, groover tuners etc...mine has a nice cherry burst finish on it...and above all it is made up of mahogany (not the ply-wood used in lower end models)..i only rate it 7 coz the features r pretty standard and i like to have a whammy bar on it

Sound : 8
i play nearly every thing from thrash metal to traditional folk songs..the pups r just ok and they dont sound even close to the burstbuckers on the gibson...this thing sounds great acoustically which suggest that by a change of pups it can actually sound very well..but with stock setup its just ok...i gave 8 bcoz it can play nearly every style of music.

Action, Fit, & Finish : 9
gr8 action just about what i like not very low and not very high finish is flawless and above all it has one thing which i love most the guitar's neck make u fell actually when u r playing it

Reliability/Durability : 10
very durable and reliable if used with care (it is not meant to be thrown and can't bear u jumping on it) polish is good

Customer Support : No Opinion
haven't dealt with them

Overall Rating : 8
i'm very happy with this guitar and its wise 2 buy these and later change pups then buying a 2.5k gibosn...just by spending a couple of hundred dollars u can have a guitar that sounds like a gibson..again i say acoustically it is gr8


Product: Epiphone Les Paul Standard
Price Paid: 300
Submitted 11/15/2007 at 10:25pm by Luka

Features : 8
Usual Les Paul features: 24.75" scale, 3 mahogany body with laminated flame maple top and laminated back, body and neck binding, 2 piece Mahogany neck, rosewood fingerboard, 22 frets, plastic nut, 2 Epiphone '57 passive humbuckers, 2 tone, 2 volume knobs, 3 position switch, thick polyurethane finish, grover tuners, abr-1 bridge, tailpiece, made in China...
Mine is colored in Translucent Amber.
All is pretty much well except finish which i don't like as it is too thick, though the guitar looks awesome! Pickups are cheap - the same with the nut, everything else is actually good...

Sound : 7
I play classic rock, blues and hard rock, using a Marshall JCM2000 DSL100 amp and DigiTech Bad Monkey overdrive and Marshall Guv'vor2 overdrive pedals. With stock pickups it is very quiet, but the pickups are sterile as expected, i recommend to change them when available. Get a real deal if you want to improve the guitar. I went with SD Antiquity and straight away it sounded MUCH MUCH better. Nut was also replaced with a Tusq nut from Graphtech in order to get a better sustain as well as the tailpiece which is now aluminium Gotoh - though i do not think that it made a big difference. I've also changed the pots with quality CTS audio taper 500k log. Next is to change the switch with a proper Switchcraft as the stock can be noisy...

So my advice is to get a proper set of humbuckers, pots and a switch, and get a new bone, Tusq or some other quality nut.

Or even better...

Get yourself an Edwards Les Paul from Ebay for the same amount of money you have spent on buying and upgrading this guitar - it is MUCH better guitar, you get nice Nitrocellulose finish, SD Jeff Beck pickup in the bridge position and the SD '59 pickup in the neck position, also you get the deep neck joint, one piece neck, solid maple body top, 2 piece body back and better hardware. A friend of mine who makes pickups said after he tried the Edwards that with new handwound pickups it is capable of killing almost every Gibson Les Paul Standard - believe me he knows what he is talking about as he is one of the best luthiers i've seen!

For ??300 it is a good sounding thing, not spectacular but ok, a lot better with upgrades...

Action, Fit, & Finish : 7
Factory setup was sort of ok, but i prefer to set it up myself the way it suits me. Intonation was very bad, so it had to be done, other than that action was ok. I needed to tighten the tuners, and the bridge and tailpiece studs could have been much better drilled in so they wouldn't stick out as much, but it is not that bad.

Reliability/Durability : 9
It is capable of live playing, it seems reliable and hardware will last for sure. Finish can be checked only if you drop it or drop something on it, so for those who like their guitars without a scratch it will be easy to keep it that way as the finish is very thick. I can definitely depend on it as with the improvements i've done it sounds really well, and yes i would use it without a backup, but i have a strat as well which i would use on the same gig so it would have a sort of backup. And yes, if you like to move a lot during playing, get straplocks to avoid swearing which will be inevitable if you drop it as it is heavy.

Customer Support : No Opinion
never got to speak to them, but judging by their website the customer support must be horrible. Still... contact your luthier instead :)

Overall Rating : 8
I've been playing for over a year and own a USA Fender Strat Standard and Marshall DSL 100 with a couple of pedals. I sometimes regret that i've bought this guitar as for the money spent on it plus the improvements i've made i could have bought a better guitar, but after all it is not that bad, and as the matter of fact i would recommend it to the beginners or anyone who doesn't have the funds to buy something better, but do yourself a favor; if you want to buy one, buy a good used one, as there will be a lot of guys like me who will not like the guitar as much and will sell it after a short time period, that is a good opportunity to got it for ??200 or maybe even less as the new ones cost about ??270

Is it worth the money? Well depends... I do like it, but again, if you can save about ??100 or ??150 more, get yourself a much better deal with Edwards or maybe Tokai which is much pricier than edwards, but also very good japanese guitar - if you don't believe me check the reviews here.


Product: Epiphone Les Paul Standard
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 09/26/2007 at 01:19am by Terrence

Features : 7
Gorgeous honeyburst unlike any other Epi's LP Plaintops I've seen in stores. Much darker and redder. Standard Lp Style. Cream Binding that doesn't look awful and pinkish like on Gibsons. Tune-o-matic import bridge. You know the deal. 2006 model with plain top and god knows what for wood. I'd say a 7 overall since I need to upgrade the bridge and I already installed locking tuners.

Sound : 6
Sounds like butt when plugged in. Dull. Sounds great acoustically, it really does. Definitely requires new pickups. I'm surprised it hums as much as it does. At least it has good harmonics.

Action, Fit, & Finish : No Opinion
Ok, here are the issues and things I should have noticed before I considered buying the guitar (I never remember to really check things out, my own fault, I need to make a list and bring it next time...). Whoever drilled the peghead holes did a godawful job because they are uneven and asymmetrical. The G string is too close to the middle of the peghead and makes the whole arrangement look lopsided. The G string tuner was slanted when installed. I did a better job with my Sperzels and it was my first try, but of course the G string peghead is still

LIke I said, who knows what wood was used. I tried putting in a Graphtech nut, which by the way folks, are never the right size. This one wasn't high enough and I couldn't even raise my bridge enough to get rid of 1st fret buzz. Fret work is fine though. No problems whatsoever. Intonates damn near perfectly.

If Warmoth had this Honeyburst color(not that Amber malarkey they try to pass of as a Honeyburst due to a lack of consesus on the general color) and painted their LP's like Gibson with no burst over the pickup selector, I totally would have ordered one with white binding on the neck and body, with pearl block inlays on an ebony neck, tummy cats and a nice shaped heel. Although, the whole bolt on thing seems weird...

Reliability/Durability : No Opinion
It will last if I don't smash it for being upset with myself. The amount of money you have to spend these days for a well built Les Paul...

Customer Support : No Opinion
No idea

Overall Rating : 5
Been playing 10 YEARS. Own two new 4003's. USA Strat. Marshall 1987x reissue, and tons of pedals. Lovetone Doppelganger. MXR Blue Box and Phase 45. Captain Coconut II. BYOC Slow Gear. EH 16 DD, EH Del. Elec. Mistress, EH POG, VS h2o, EH Little BM, Boss OD-3, AnalogMan Blue Driver and TS-808 mods.

I can't put a Graphtech nut in it because even though they offer Epiphone nuts, they aren't high enough and cause awful buzz on the 1st fret. The pegheads are misaligned, the stock pickups sound like butt through my rig compared to my Strat, and the only thing going for it right now are the looks. I bought this in hopes of upgrading it with SD Peter Green pickups and upgraded wiring, but I'm so frustrated with the flaws I never noticed off the bat and the fact that I can't put a Graphtech nut in that I'd rather smash it or pawn it off on Guitar Center.

I find it criminal how much Gibson charges for their guitars, especially since they closed down the Custom Shop to personal orders so you can get what you ACTUALLY WANT, and nothing less than $2,500 is even worth purchasing from them. Their Classics look and sound terrible, and their Studios feel and look worse than Mexican Strats ( which quite honestly, have btichin' harmonics.) If only I had ordered my custom Gibson when I had the chance... Oh poverty...

SO PLEASE, PLEASE, before you buy one, especially if you are considering upgrading one, make sure there are no design flaws. Really, save your pennies and get a Warmoth a Gibson. Bite that miserable bullet. Hopefully one has the looks and sound you NEED.


Product: Epiphone Les Paul Standard
Price Paid: (Roughly 700$) 3500
Submitted 09/23/2007 at 05:13pm by Rajah

Features : 3
Mine is a 2004 Epi standard, all stock. You all know the features but noone seems to be very critical of them, so i'll just go ahead and do that.
-Flamed top. Very very thick finish, kills dynamics and along with bad pickups ruins any hope of high end sparkle.
-The tuners are grover, and they suck the guitar has never been able to take bends.
-The frets where reasonable for an aisan, mass produced guitar. Had them redone by a *skilled* luthier.
-The controls are great, they do exactly what theyre supposed to.
-The strap buttons where utter shite i've had them repaired 5 times each to date but now the finally seem to hold.

Sound : 5
Jimmy Page, Slash, Clapton, Moore and so on and so forth. Those are the names and tones most people think of when seing a Les Paul. Let's just say this guitar doesn't seem to cut that sound. Im using this *thing* with fender tube amps.
The shiny moments with this guitar is def. with the gain half way up. It does seem to need an excesive amount of treble from the amp though. Clean tones forget it useless!
It doesn't seem to take pedals very well. But then again few humbucker guitars do.
An average guitar nothing more.

Action, Fit, & Finish : No Opinion
Cant remember except for the poor frets. I've had this thing for four years.

Reliability/Durability : 1
I'll outlast this thing by decades! I'm not afraid its gonna fall apart. It has on many occasions already!

Customer Support : No Opinion
Never dealt with 'em.

Overall Rating : 3
Average guitar, not poor, not great. I comparison to my AM fender tele this thing completely humiliates itself. The pickups are bad beyon belief, the only reason i havent changed them is that I wouldn't be able to justify pouring anymore money into this thing.
To expensive for a starters guitar, buy a squire or something cheaper from Epi. For intermediate players I would recomend saving for a schetcher or a gibson or something like it.
To expensive, to poor and far to dead! This is not just a nightmare story it's the truth.


Product: Epiphone Les Paul Standard
Price Paid: USD 400.00 USED
Submitted 09/23/2007 at 02:46pm by cb

Features : 7
It's a '99 Standard, bought (gently) used in 2003. Typical thin, fast Epi neck, woods appear to be the correct mahogany/maple combo rather than the alder you sometimes see listed in descriptions for Epi Lesters, although it's a thin maple veneer rather than the two slabs that cap the Gibson models. You know the rest.

Sound : 7
Mine is pretty heavily customized, but I HATE when I read a review of a guitar that I'm considering buying stock and all I hear is how the instrument performs with all these aftermarket alterations, so for now I'll stick to how it came.

I run this mostly through a PODxt hooked up to a decent sized power amp and studio monitors. I occasionally use an Ampeg Jet with various pedals, but I'm almost exclusively a hobbyist at this point, so that's rare. I use it for the kinds of things you'd use a Les Paul for, classic rock (Zep, Allmans, Ronson, early Clapton, 60's era Stones), heavier British flavored (flavoured?) blues, and anything that calls for a thick, distorted tone, from your Steve Jones-style power riffing to Joey Santiago-influenced craziness.

It sounded pretty good right from the get-go. Epi pups are not nearly as bad as their reputation; in fact, if you dig a more vintage, alnico type of tone, I think they do that better than those awful ceramic things that come standard on a lot of Gibbys. They'll get you in the ballpark, anyway.

This guitar does, and will always, lack some of the sonic complexity of a full fledged Gibson Lester. The wood makes a big difference. That said, I think it's mostly a difference that the player will notice rather than a listener. The resonance and vibe of high-quality mahogany and a decent maple slab is something you can feel more than hear. But if what you want is Les Paul tone this will get you there at a price you really can't argue with.

Action, Fit, & Finish : 6
Can't speak to factory set up. Action can be set very low and fast, like any decent Gibson derived solid body. Seems well made for a guitar in this price range. It's solid mahogany, you can tell from the rear routing when you pop the cover, and the neck join is sturdy, good sustain. Finish is bulletproof, which would bother me on a Historic Reissue, but is fine here. For those who complain about the tuners: the vintage style tuners are like that on Gibsons too. They actually work well enough, but they feel flimsy. If you can't stand it get Grovers, everybody back in the day did.

A couple of serious flaws: The bridge was cheap and didn't feel very solid; installing a Tonepros was an easy fix and made a noticeable difference in resonance, sustain and intonation. Of greater concern was the fretwork. If you've played more high end guitars you've probably noticed the fretboard is almost always much improved in feel over less expensive guitars, and this Epi LP is no exception. Definitely something to consider. Aside from feel, my major quibble is this one dead spot on the high E string at the 10th fret that kind of drives me insane.

Reliability/Durability : 6
It's solid enough for a Gibson-style guitar. Drop it and that angled headstock will snap. Trust me, I know. See above re finish and hardware. My pup switch went out after about a year. I wound up gutting all the electronics and replacing them so no telling if something else might have gone wrong. The wiring looked kind of chintzy. The rear strap button is very loose and won't tighten, but as I said I'm a home player these days, so I don't really care.

Customer Support : No Opinion
Never been one to bother.

Overall Rating : 7
I've been playing about 15 years, and I've bought and sold a shameful amount of gear in that time. At this point I have a career and reponsibilities, but I make it a point to plug in and wail several times a week, just to take my mind off how old and boring I'm becoming.

What you need to know is that for a quarter of the price of an LP Classic, this will get you the LP sound, both live and on tape (er, hard drive). Switch out that crappy bridge and install a set of 57 Classics and no one YOU will ever meet is going to be able to hear the difference. Will you derive the same visceral satisfaction you would peeling off Beano licks on an R9 Historic? Hell no. But if you're on a budget (isn't everybody?) and you need an LP in your arsenal, this will get you the sound you're looking for.


Product: Epiphone Les Paul Standard
Price Paid: GBP 340
Submitted 09/11/2007 at 08:23pm by Nico

Features : 7
This guitar looks great in it's Blue Burst finish, and I've removed the scratchplate to show it off.
It has an ALDER body with a mahaogany venner on the back and a maple veneer on the front, a mahogany neck and a rosewood fingerboard.
Hardware and scale length is typical Gibson, as is the neck, being similar to the Gibson Les Paul Standards 50's shape.
It didn't come with a gig bag which is a shame for a ??300+ guitar.
I have swapped the pickups for some Seymour Duncan's, but I do this to all my guitars.

Sound : 9
The guitar doesn't sound like a pukker Gibson. It is close however. It has a throaty mid range roar that is the result of the construction. Play loud through a Marshall in a band and it really is hard to hear the difference between this and a real Gibson.
It is very versatile, with nice clean sounds, amazing crunch tones and, with the Seymour Duncans, great through a high gain amp.
The stock pickups couldn't take too much gain before becoming muddy and indistinct, so I swapped them for a JB/Jazz set and now the guitar sounds awesome.
I think Gibsons decision to use an Alder body is because they want people to buy a Gibson to get he Gibson sound. They don't want people buying a ??300 Epiphone to get the Gibson sound. This guitar does have a great sound in it's own right though, and should be judged on its own merits.
You wouldn't catch John Frusciante or Andy Summers using one, but it's great for everthing else!

Action, Fit, & Finish : 8
The frets could do with being a bit bigger for me, but that is my taste. It plays slick and smooth and I am very happy with it. The flat fingerboard is great for bends.
Build quality is very good.

Reliability/Durability : 7
Built like a brick sh*thouse. I've added Grolsch bottle 'strap-locks' but I do this to all my guitars. It stays in tune, the finish is very thick so is very hard to damage.
No complaints here, except that the finish is slightly sticky and drags under the hand compared to a USA Gibson or PRS.

Customer Support : 8
Never needed it for this particular guitar, but information is really easy to find and Rossetti are very good to deal with.

Overall Rating : 8
It's not the same as a Gibson Les Paul but is a very good guitar in it's own right. If you have to have a proper Les Paul save up a little bit more and buy a secondhand Studio, but for everyone else, this is fine!


Product: Epiphone Les Paul Standard
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 09/11/2007 at 01:54pm by Seamus Aran

Features : 8
The finish looks nice. Honeyburst finish w/plain top with double humbuckers and a thin 60's style neck. It's funny because I compared it to another Honeyburst Epiphone Les Paul Standard plain top and the color was way different(in the same Guitar Center). One was a sand color with little to no burst and mine is almost a burgundy/cinnamon color with a nice amber in the middle. MADE IN CHINA. Yeah. 3-way pickup switch, 4 knobs, 22 frets. All the usual stuff.

Intonates damn near perfectly with stock bridge. Of course, they will be replaced with Tone Pros bridge & saddle kit. Also, the tuners definitely need to be switched out for locking ones, but it's nothing I wouldn't do on a Gibson or my USA Fender.

The binding on Epiphones I have find have a much better color to them, not the pinkish hue that plagues the Gibsons which looks awfu;.

Quite honestly it looks better than most of the Gibson I'ved seen except for the Midnight Manhattan LP (which was incredibly stunning and I should have bought) they released in a few years ago for a limited time.

Sound : 7
Sounds great acoustically. I was impressed. I'm not sure my USA Fender sounds as nice.

Using this with: Marshall 1987x reissue (bought new '05), Analog Man TS808, Analog Man BD-2, EH Little Big Muff (another great pedal), Fox Fox Captain Coconut II with Univibe after the delay pedal, Visual Sound h20 pedal (chorus & delay), Lovetone Doppelganger, MXR Phase 45, and finally an EH 16 digi-delay. I have an armful more, but not enough room until I get a nice pedalboard.

Basically, it sounds pretty good with stock pickups clean, but sounds delicious with my setup, didn't notice any hum other than that caused by my chorus pedal. Of course, the 1987x reissue is too bright on the High Treble channel as everyone knows, so that has to be modded, since it doesn get in the way of finding good sound sometimes. I'd recommend switching these pickups for Seymour Duncan Phat Cats or Seymour Duncan Custom Shop "Greenie" humbuckers, which are Peter Green pickups, complete with out-of-phase tone when the switch is in the middle position.

Suits my style because I love the look of the LP and it's great for that spacey classic rock with slide work.

Overall: OK sound when plugged in, great when unplugged. Upgrade to noiseless SD pickups!

Action, Fit, & Finish : 8
Action was great, but I prefer it much higher and even for good slide work. Pickups seemed fine and the plain top is gorgeous. Not really any noticeable flaws I'd care about except for a tiny bit of brown (half a mm wide, inch long on the neck binding). Must be from the wood.

Everything looks great, and honestly for this amount a money, you gotta wonder why someone would drop over a $1000 on a Les Paul Studio, which plays, feels, and looks like muddy butthole on a rainy day in Scotland. I was in the market for a Gibson Les Paul Classic, until I played one and it was ok, but looked terrible.

Reliability/Durability : 8
Hardware should last but I upgrade my guitars anyway except for my Rickenbacker basses.

Strap buttons seem solid, I have no worries about durability. Should probably still get strap locks though. My Fender's strap buttons get loose a lot.

Customer Support : No Opinion
N/A

Overall Rating : 8
Been playing 10 years. 10 for bass, 5 for guitar.

I own two Rickenbacker 4003's, one black, one "Montezuma Brown". Awesome color and sound. A Japanese Fender Marcus Miller, a USA Strat, a Mexican Strat (great harmonics), and this bad larry.

I don't know if I'd buy this again, unless I saw it in a slighty deeper brown color which is now impossible since Gibson closed their custom shop to orders from the public.

I compared this to a 60's reissue Gibson LP, which runs for $3,000. It sounded great and played well, but wasn't a fan of the look, and quite frankly, cost too much, as almost all Gibsons do.


Product: Epiphone Les Paul Standard
Price Paid: USD 400 USED
Submitted 08/06/2007 at 04:11pm by Kevan

Features : 9
We all know the stats by know, but for the sake of conformity, my Epi has the cherry sunburst finish, set mahogany neck into a mahogany/maple body, two passive humbuckers and what appears to be plastic binding. I've heard that the flamed maple tops on these are actually just veneers (ultra-thin piece of wood), and that there is alder between the mahogany and maple. I still have the stock humbuckers in mine, and though I usually run the guitar's controls fully open, they seem to function perfectly well for fine adjustment.
The guitar is a little heavy, but not nearly as much as a Gibson.
I will say that the particular guitar I bought has a neck comparable to a Gibson 1960's neck, meaning that it is a little thinner that a Gibson 1950's neck.
I'm giving the guitar a 9 simply because I would really have liked to have the binding go all the way around the headstock as well as the neck and body, but I'll admit that it is a somewhat superficial complaint. If I could, I'd give it a 9.5.

Sound : 10
I'm running this guitar into a Boss Tuner, BBE Boosta Grande, Dunlop Crybaby 535Q Wah, Electro-Harmonix Small Clone Chorus, Boss Noise Suppressor, Line 6 DL4, and Ernie Ball passive volume pedal. All pedals are powered and sit on a SKB PS-45 pedalboard, and then go to my Mesa/Boogie Nomad 100 head (with Groove Tube 12AX7's and EL34's) and Mesa/Boogie Traditional Rectifier 4x12 cabinet.

I use this guitar for blues, reggae, hard rock, and gospel. The sound is not quite as warm and strong as a Gibson, but well worth the cash spent on it. I've debating dropping Seymour Duncans into it, but that will have to wait a bit. As it is, I enjoy the sound of this guitar with my wah into my crunch and high gain channels. The guitar does have a strong, throaty bite all across the fretboard. It sounds very balanced through my clean channel, but seems a little too heavy to play funk or reggae.

I'll give a 9 overall in this category because to me it sounds pretty warm in the low and mids, and still maintains a strong high end that isn't shrill. However, I think that it could have stronger output. Compared to other guitars in this price range, I give it a 10.

Action, Fit, & Finish : 9
I can't commend on the setup from the factory, as I got this guitar used. The pickups have always sounded decent to me, though as I mentioned before, I will probably switch them out at some point. The flamed top wasn't perfectly bookmatched, but still looks pretty good to me, so much that I just took off the pickguard and mounting hardwear to show off more wood. I get lots of favorable comments on the finish, colors and wood grain combination. There is a tiny bit of paint overlapping the bracing, but it's only visible to me when I'm playing and never to anyone else.

Reliability/Durability : 9
I've had this for six months, and it's held up very well for playing 1-4 times a week. I think the hardware will last a while, but everything does wear out eventually. This finish is strong, but one nice thing about having a $500 Epiphone to a $2200 Gibson is that if by some accident you would scratch, chip or dent the finish, it isn't as critical an accident. I did switch out the strap buttons for Straplocks because I tend to move around a lot on stage, and I would strongly recommend this to anyone that plays live.
The guitar does seem reliable enough to use without a backup, but I always take my Strat with me. You never know when a string will break between songs, and sometimes I'll have to change guitars during a set to get a different sound.
I'll give it a 9 for the lack of Straplocks, but otherwise it's a pretty stable instrument.

Customer Support : No Opinion
I bought it used, so I can't comment on the warranty.
So far, I've never had to take it into the shop, though if I do, I'll take it to Warner's Guitar Repair in Edmond, Oklahoma. He does wonderful repair work, and I'd highly recommend him to everyone in the area!

Overall Rating : 9
I've been playing electric guitar for four years. This was bought to be my primary guitar, as I started off and still use my Lotus Les Paul (with Seymour Duncans), as well as my Fender Deluxe Player's Stratocaster. I listed my rig above, and I'm very satisfied on the quality of this instrument. Eventually I'll trade up, but this guitar serves me very well for the present. I love the finish and paint on the guitar, as it looks gorgeous!
I do want to warn you, not all Epiphones are constructed or sound very good. I played five other Epiphone Les Paul Standards, and not one of them sounded exactly the same! I also tested this guitar against a Gibson Les Paul Standard and Custom Shop AAAA, and I think that the Epiphone sounded better than the Gibsons. In all fairness, tone is subjective, and Gibson's quality control has taken a dive in recent ears.
While it is certainly not my "last-you'll-ever-buy-or-want" guitar, I am pretty happy with this Epiphone. I would recommend anyone looking for a solid, reliable, rock 'n roll guitar to give one of these a try. Good luck!


Product: Epiphone Les Paul Standard
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 07/24/2007 at 09:03am by Gaetano DiPaolo
Email: gaetanodipaolo<at>verizon dot net

Features : 9
Honey-burst Flame-Gorgeous! Tune-O-Matic-Plastic Keystone Tuners ( purchased before they went with Grover)The tuners are good but Grover's are better. Fat neck- feels great! I bought it new about 7 years ago. Korean made.

Sound : 10
I like the pu's because they sound perfect with my amp a Roland Cube-60. My settings are; clean JC channel, all knobs at 12 o'clock except Presence- off. I use the amp's Phase at about half and the Delay also at about half that's it. The sound is beautiful! I do not use Distortion or Overdrive ever to me clean is best at judging tone and articulation and this guitar delivers. I haven't made any modifications just lowered the action a bit but not too much as this helps the notes ring and sustain. I play all styles mostly Rhythm.

Action, Fit, & Finish : 10
Good factory set up but a few personal tweaks help to make it your own. As I said, I've not replaced anything. There are no flaws at all. I hear a lot of bad stuff about Epiphone pu's. I can only give my personal hands on experiences; I have nothing but praise for them.
Both have a clear, natural sound. I use all 3 settings. I don't play loud so clear tone is crucial to my playing. Frets are perfect and the edges are filed super smooth. I have custom made guitars that aren't as cleanly built as this one.

Reliability/Durability : 10
Here's what motivated me to write this review. I actually forgot I had the guitar. It was in an upstairs bedroom in it's case collecting dust not played for years. I came across it today and decided to give it a look and hopefully play it. I was amazed at what I saw! The guitar looked perfect! I took it downstairs to set it up and found I only had to tune it. It plays perfect! And the neck stayed perfectly straight through years of intense heat and cold, dry room conditions. That's what it's all about. Bravo Epiphone!

Customer Support : 9
Limited lifetime warranty. No repairs needed. Haven't had to deal with the company.

Overall Rating : 10
I've been playing almost 40 years. I own many guitars, amps and effects but lately I like clean jazz like tone. (Big Pat Martino fan.) I have recently purchased an Epiphone SG-400 (Blue) and an Epiphone Les Paul Studio (White) both are brand new but once again required little set up and they they play super.
Would I buy another Epiphone? I think I just answered that question.
I love 'em.


Product: Epiphone Les Paul Standard
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 07/22/2007 at 03:51pm by Tim
Email: bizflyer at gmail<dot>com

Features : 7
Cosmeticaly these are about as good as it get, glossy, good workmanship, Grover tuners, good solid feel.

This is pretty much a Gibson Les Paul except for the pickups, I know because my instructor has one, and we ran it them through the same amp.

All said it's a nice little guitar.

Over all I give this guitar an 8.

Sound : 7
Unless you compare this to a real Gibson LP, with the same amp, same fingures of someone who can play you will not know. Really your just guessin, so I did. My instructor, came over with his Gib LP, Mesa Nomad and ran them both.

Clean channel they are identical, weight wise, identical.

Here is the difference, the pickups. Gib LPs have bursbuckers in them, very hot, and Epis have kinda muddy tone humbuckers. Drop $200 on the some burstbuckers, live with the Epi label and I think you will have a LP for about 30% the price of a new LP $2300 Gibson standard.

A good player, a good amp, the right pick can make this sound nice. For rock, banging away on a Marshall, this is pretty nice.

Where I might go is insall the burstbuckers, because I think the tone would be cleaner in overdrive, not as muddy, and it breaks up nicely for the harmonic kinda squel that a reall LP can get. Ofcourse a better player then me might be able to do that with this EPI

Action, Fit, & Finish : 8
This is as good as anything out there.

Reliability/Durability : 8
Been fine. Stays in tune, no issues.

Customer Support : No Opinion
Haven't needed them.

Overall Rating : 7
It's nice enough to look at that I hang it on my wall.
Up close it's perfect, grovers are great, it feels great, play comfy.
Get a real Epi case for it, and it's about as nice as it gets, looks like a million bucks.

Sound is the only detractor here, muddy pickups that maybe with the right amp, pick and player can improve. Death metal guys with lots of distortion, playing though non tubes will probably be just fine.

Tone junkies like me would do well to put some burstbuckers in, invest a little to get the tone of a Gibson LP. I haven't done it, but when I do I will review. Everyone wants a Gibson LP, like everyone want a Marshall half stack(I have one) Can this EPI be as good, I don't know, but I suspect so, at $2200 new for a LP, the $1500 that you save on this Epi with upgraded pickups could pay for some nice amps.

I give this guitar a 7 which is not a slam, it's good. I don't think a ten exists, its a one of a kind, it's perfect. A nine is a custom model, an 8 is an off the rack guitar that you got lucky and it worked. So this 7 guitar can be an 8, which is about as good as it gets.


Product: Epiphone Les Paul Standard
Price Paid: USD 500
Submitted 07/07/2007 at 01:34pm by kayd mon

Features : 9
I got this guitar about 10 years ago, so I suppose it's a '96 or '97 model. It was when they first introduced the transparent flame tops, I believe. Anyway, mine has a flame maple top, and the standard Les Paul setup.

Sound : 10
Like most people who have Epiphone Les Pauls, mine has different pickups. I had them changed out about 8 years ago, and that was before I had a computer to read all the chat boards telling me to do it. In fact, I have two Epiphones, and they both now have Duncans in there. Let me tell you that an Epiphone with good pickups is going to be almost every bit as good as a real-deal Gibson. I say "almost" because I do have a real Gibson, and I like it better than this Epiphone. But that's not to say that my Epi isn't a fantastic guitar. In fact, I have played quite a few Gibsons that don't sound or play nearly as good as my Epiphone. I got lucky with a good, resonant plank of wood. You can, too, if you try out the guitar before buying. Play it without an amp - that's how you can tell if the wood is worth the purchase.

Anyway, on to my guitar. I have a pretty standard setup of a Duncan '59 in the neck and a JB in the bridge. After so many years, the pickups (they have nickel covers) are looking a little tarnished, but they still sound great. The JB will make your amp growl (even some solid state ones, but I play through tubes), so you might want to curl the tone knob back a bit. That really tames the pickup, and since it's so punchy, you still keep clarity. The '59 is your regular PAF pickup - you can make it growl if you want. It all depends on the attack. This guitar sounds really fat and heavy. Not so much heavy metal, although you can do that with ease on this thing. I mentioned that I like my Gibson more - that's because it's a little less hot than this Epiphone. I may switch the pickups out of this Epiphone for some GFS P-90's, just for a new sound. As is, you can hit a lot of styles with this guitar - it can get that dull thud jazz guitar sound, or screaming rock overdrive. I wouldn't really recommend it for country or reggae, since its sound is way to fat for those.

Action, Fit, & Finish : 9
I have what was supposed to be a transparent amber burst. It's not even close. It's a weird orange-yellow that's not even trans amber. At first, I hated the color, but it has since grown on me for its uniqueness. I haven't seen another guitar with this color. The action is fantastic, especially after a pro setup. I use heavy guage strings with a wound 3rd, and this guitar still plays fast. The tuners are pretty crappy, but they keep their tune fine. I'll upgrade them to Grovers eventually, but I've been saying that for years.

Reliability/Durability : 9
I seem to burn through selector switches in this guitar... it's probably because the shop I used to go to kept installing crappy switches. Can't be the guitar's fault! Also, I flick the switch constantly - I love filpping it back and forth through sustaining notes - that's probably why I have the switch problem.

I've dropped the guitar loads of times, and it barely has the scratches to prove it.

Customer Support : No Opinion
No experience with them.

Overall Rating : 10
If you're in the market for a Les Paul, you won't go wrong with an Epiphone. Just test the guitar out first and make sure the wood is good. You can always change hardware and electronics to your liking. Epiphones look great, they're well-built, and the stock electronics aren't as bad as a lot of people say. The sound works for a lot of people. For the price, you get a lot of guitar.


Product: Epiphone Les Paul Standard
Price Paid: USD 450
Submitted 06/13/2007 at 01:38am by seagullplayer77

Features : 9
I got this guitar as a graduation present, and I love it. It looks really nice--a nice gloss finish over a vintage sunburst. The tuners are Grovers and hold a tune quite well. Never had any problems with the Tune-O-Matic either.

There are two humbuckers, and although they're cheap stock pickups, I've never really felt the need to replace them with anything more expensive. They get the job done and they sound decent. A little pickup adjustment makes them sound better.

It was made in China, and I'm guessing it's probably a 2004 or 2005 model.

Sound : 8
Most of what I play is contemporary Christian worship music and this does that well. My set up is:

Epiphone Les Paul Standard > Boss CS-3 Compression/Sustainer > Boss PH-3 Phase Shifter > Boss OS-2 Overdrive/Distortion > Boss EQ-20 Advanced EQ > Boss CH-1 Super Chorus > Boss NS-2 Noise Suppressor > Marshall AVT50H and AVT412 cab/House System

I don't think the guitar itself has ever been noisy, although some of the pedals can be. It sounds great with my effects chain and I very rarely get bad sounds out of it.

The tone is OK with a factory setup, but I played around with the pickup heights a bit and I got something a with a little more bass. The treble pickup gives a nice bright, twangy sound suitable and the rhythm pickup has a full bass end and mid range.

If you don't have your amp set up right, the guitar can sound shallow, and it happens to me every once in a while. It typically sounds pretty good, though.

Action, Fit, & Finish : 8
I got the guitar new, so everything was in good working order--no scratches or dents or missing knobs or anything like that. One of the volume knobs was a bit close to the guitar so it didn't turn as easily as the others, but that's pretty minor.

The action and intonation were not really all that good when I got it, so I ended up doing some adjusting and it sounds much better now. Ditto for the pickups--OK setup from the factory, but it can still be better.

Reliability/Durability : 8
I play this guitar at least once a week live and it's never failed on me once. I always gig it without a backup because it's a solid instrument. The knobs seem kind of cheap, but they work and haven't fallen off yet. The tuners are Grovers and are very solid. The strap buttons themselves are sturdy, although they're a bit small--I've had my strap come off the buttons before, and the holes in my guitar strap aren't exactly huge.

Customer Support : No Opinion
I've never had to deal with Epiphone, so I can't comment on their customer service.

Overall Rating : 9
I also have an Ovation CU247 and a Seagull S6+ with a cutaway. I really like this instrument, and while I wouldn't put it up against a real Gibson or an American-made Fender, it's not junk. I don't care what people say--Epiphone isn't some kind of cheap garbage. They're not professional quality, but they're still excellent guitars.

I don't know that I would buy another one if it got lost or stolen, because it was a graduation present and the sentimental value is big, so I couldn't really replace it. I might buy another Epiphone LP, I might buy something else.

In any case, this is a good instrument.


Product: Epiphone Les Paul Standard
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 05/24/2007 at 06:11pm by Paulo Keppler
Email: pkeppler at tvglobo<dot>com<dot>br

Features : No Opinion
Epi Les Paul 2004 Wine Red
Amazing Flamed TOP! I think it was made in China. I am not sure.

Sound : No Opinion
I cant compare it to Gibson Les Paul because I own a Gibson and I know the difference among them. Even so, the Epiphone is great Guitar. It suit my style of music and my gear. I use it as backup in jam and small venue. it is main guitar in rehearsal studio.
For the price I paid this guitar I am very satisfied. I bought it used at store. It is worth it!



Action, Fit, & Finish : No Opinion
My guitar is perfect!
No problem...

Reliability/Durability : No Opinion
Very good!

Customer Support : No Opinion
Never had problem!!!

Overall Rating : No Opinion
I??ve been playing for 12 years. I mostly play a lot of Gibson and Epiphone. As I said above - We cant compare! The gibson is better than Epiphone. No doubt! But the Epiphone is a great guitar I can use it in anywhere, anytime, anyway... If you have a good amp You never will claim. You will not have reason to regret!
Choose with care and test before you buy anything!
Sometime peoples dont have patience to try and to search the right guitar... I had patience and I found the right Epiphone Guitar.


Product: Epiphone Les Paul Standard
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 05/17/2007 at 05:21pm by Dave
Email: madstokedsurfers<at>yahoo dot com

Features : 10
I'm giving this guitar a 10 for features because in my opinion, it has everything a decent player needs to get great tones. It's a classic design and needs no improvement.

Sound : 8
The pickups are probably the weakest link on this guitar, although for the price, they are not bad at all. I play blues, hard rock and punk-you can still coax some great tones out of this guitar when it's bone stock. The guitar has great resonance and excellent sustain- if the electronics are upgaded this would make a professional, killer sounding axe.

Action, Fit, & Finish : 9
For a budget-priced guitar, this thing came set up like a beauty. Finally a budget axe that stays in tune!!!! The action is low and smooth with little buzz, and the finish and binding look absolutely superb- this guitar is a real looker! Mine has a gorgeous tobacco burst finish. The body also has quite a bit of weight to it, which a like- it feels like a solid hunk of wood.

Reliability/Durability : No Opinion
Haven't played her out yet, but it seems built very solid like it could take quite a beating. This is meant to be my backup guitar so it'll likely see little action, except for practice.

Customer Support : No Opinion
Can't say.

Overall Rating : 9
This was an Ebay find that I bought on a whim, and I'm damn glad I did. For the price, it's a great axe. Once I change out the pickups, I just might use this as my main guitar. If you ever wanted an LP at a fraction of the Gibson price, go pick one up!


Product: Epiphone Les Paul Standard
Price Paid: USD 450
Submitted 05/04/2007 at 11:46am by Fab Four Fan

Features : 9
Blue quilt top LP Standard, rosewood neck, alnico humbuckers, 3 way pup selector, cream-colored binding, grover tuners, nickel plated hardware, made in China; but "100% inspected and Set-up in the USA" the sticker on the back of the headstock proudly proclaims.

This instrument is absolutely beautiful!! The finish is gorgeous and perfectly applied. The binding is perfectly set. No flaws whatsoever. This guitar will turn some heads in case your playing doesn't. The only negative is the volume and tone controls are the most phenomenally tacky copper color I have ever seen. Really, really ugly. I'll be replacing those soon.

Sound : 8
I bought mine at Guitar Center, and had been shopping for one for about a year. The day I went in GC had six others in stock, and this one had a slightly richer, more complex, sound than the others. The others didn't sound bad: this one just sounded better.

If you've heard a Les Paul, then there are no surprises here: it's pretty much what you'd expect, which is a throughly rock and roll instrument. While you can get some lovely clean sounds this guitar wants to rock. Others on this forum have noted that the pups aren't that good. They're right about that. It's not that they're bad, it's just that they aren't that great (but then, heck, this guitar only sells for between $350-$500). Depending on the vibe you're after I could easily see this guitar fitted with soem after-market Seymour Duncan "Antiquity" or Gibson "Burstbuckers". I'm thinking that would give you 90% of that vintage Lep Paul mojo.

Action, Fit, & Finish : 9
Mine was setup perfectly. The pups were well adjsuted and the string height was that magic distance between "low, but not buzzing". The others I played were setup quite nicely too. This seems to be something Epiphone is really paying attention to. Kudos to them. As noted above mine is a blue quilt top and the bookmatching is excellent. The finish is gorgeous, but then I've played a lot of Epi LP's in the last year and thought they were all beautiful looking instruments. Again Epiphone seems to be really focused here.

Reliability/Durability : 9
This thing is built like a tank. I can see it lasting a lifetime.

Customer Support : No Opinion
Haven't needed. Don't expect to.

Overall Rating : 10
Whenever you rate a budget priced guitar like this I think you have to rate it in terms of "bang for the buck". Does it sound like a '56 Goldtop? Well no, but as Guitar Player magazine recently pointed out, with some after market Burstbuckers you could be competeing with the new Vintage re-issues that Gibson is doing (they run in the $5,000 range).

Even if you don't do the pup upgrade you still have a solidly built, great sounding instrument. If you want the Les Paul vibe, but you're strapped for cash this is a purchase you will not regret. Kudos to Epiphone for producing a class instrument at a budget price.


Product: Epiphone Les Paul Standard
Price Paid: 360
Submitted 04/10/2007 at 09:03am by Tom886

Features : 7
blue finish, China-made, rosewood neck, grover tuners etc
fairly standard - nothing eye catchingly special

Sound : 8
I bought this guitar last year and on the bridge pickup, it sounds really good, just as it always has. The neck pickup, however sounds weak and thin and barely pickups much sound most the time. I use it live because the bridge pickup run through a marshall 50 watt sounds so good, but I really want to change the pickups on it. With new strings it stays quite well in tune, because of the grover tuners.

Action, Fit, & Finish : 7
Straight from the shop in Reading, the guitar had a nice blue finish, and no dents or anything like that. The action was alright and there weren't many general flaws with it at all. The pickup on the neck wasn't too good but I still bought it, after playing it through the bridge pickup. Unfortunately, after a slight problem with one of the strap buttons which lead to a few drops of the guitar, the finish has been compromised.

Reliability/Durability : 7
This guitar, through bridge pickup is really good for live playing, but because of the strap button, I might bring a spare guitar. It would probably be fine though.

Customer Support : No Opinion
No opinion

Overall Rating : 8
I've been playing for 2 years now and I have a cort acoustic, a marshall 50 watt amp and also an aria black strat which costed little cash. This guitar has genearally been very good, despite a few issues which are resolvable. I would recommend it, but I would still rather have a more reliable guitar like Danelectro because this guitar isn't as soild as a rock when it comes down to it. But it sounds good, and that's what matters really.


Product: Epiphone Les Paul Standard
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 04/07/2007 at 12:36pm by Jon WHalen

Features : 6
I have been playing for about 30 years, and have almost exclusively played Strats. I wanted to give a Paul a chance, but did not want to drop over 2K in the process. I went down to the local music store and played about eight different Epi Les Paul Standards. Each played and sounded slighly different, so I suggest playing a bunch before you buy. I bought a honeyburst one that felt righ. I studied the construction and was impressed at how well this one was put together and how good the brilliant gloss finish was. The only odd thing was the matte finish on the control cavity covers. I later removed them and discovered they had been put on upside down at the factory.

Sound : 8
The bridge pickup sounds surprisingly good, the neck is way too muddy and bassy even when lowered to compensate. I changed the tone circuiot cap on this PU to a smaller value and regained some highs, but it is still slated for replacement. With the bridge PU in my Plexi 50 Watt Marshall I can get some great ZZ top tones through the Tube Screamer. The guitar breaks up well and has a full heavy hitting tone. As noted the neck PU is not used much at this point. For the money, this was a great buy, I have no remorse over the deal.

Action, Fit, & Finish : 6
The action was set up OK at the factory, but the frets were not leveled enough to get it where I like it. Also the intonation was not even close on a few strings. I leveled the frets, adjusted the bridge, cleaned and oiled the neck put on some new strings, set the intonation with a strobe tuner and now it is fantastic. The guitar has great potential, it just needs a little help getting there.

Reliability/Durability : No Opinion
I have only owned the guitar a couple of months and have not played a gig with it yet, so it is too early to tell. I did replace the tuners with some vintage LP style ones from Gotoh as the Epi ones tended to go out of tune a little too frequently.

Customer Support : No Opinion

Overall Rating : 8
As stated before, I have been playing a long time. I own a stable of Strats, some vintage and some new, a Dobro and a PRS now the Epi. I am very happy with it, but as stated, be sure to play a few before choosing, and be repared to do some set up work, or pay a tech to do it and you will be happy. After reworking mine, it plays as good as any Gibson I have played. I have two PUs on order, a Seth Lover for the neck and a Pearly Gates for the bridge, and can't wait to get them in. For the money, you cannot beat this guitar.


Product: Epiphone Les Paul Standard
Price Paid: USD 340
Submitted 03/01/2007 at 05:15am by heyhey

Features : No Opinion
we all know what a les paul is. mine is a 2006 china model. i got the black one as it has all the same stuff as the sunburst but is much cheaper. i paid $340 for mine brand new. i kinda wanted a sunburst but i thought they all had cheap nasty finishes when i checked them out at the store. the black one looks classy and is the original finish for a paul i believe. quality control is **** on these. i played prob 8-10 pauls before getting the one i now have. many of them had serious issues. play before you buy... seriously.

Sound : 7
i have a love hate relationship with this guitar. im a good guitar player that moved through several guitars before getting this one. the epi gold top i had for awhile was cool but sounded muddy to me. the casino is great but its too jangly. in the end i decided that itd be better to go cheap and upgrade later. with any epi i feel id have to change out the pickups so i might as well do it on the cheap. i havent yet upgraded it. somedays i play it and i love the classic tone i get. somedays i feel the pickups are weak and noisy. these pickups arnt great but i know the guitar will sound amazing once upgraded. clean sounds are the best on this guitar. blues, jazz, and classic rock are the best styles for this guitar as is. im playing mine through a vox. this thing cannot do metal at all as is. i play blues mostly and somedays this thing really has serious attitude. somedays i wish i had saved alittle more and bought a highway 1 strat.

Action, Fit, & Finish : 9
this particular guitar was set up ok from the store. others were not. i set the action low on mine. buzzes in a good way. set alittle higher and theres no buzz. guitar came great from the store. i liked the neck on the custom much better than this one but the custom wasnt worth the money as it sounded exactly the same as the standard.

Reliability/Durability : 8
the guitar is heavy and im sure i could bang it around and itd be fine. the switches and the knobs seem to be of very good quality. dont feel cheap at all. the bridge on mine started making a buzzing sound which was messing with the sustain. i put some paper on it and its fine now. it bothers me but i was planning on replacing that anyway. the tuners are good. i tightened the screws on mine so that the knobs felt more solid in my hands.

Customer Support : No Opinion
no need.

Overall Rating : 7
ive been playing for 13 years mostly on ibanez guitars (with mods) and various pawn shop gems. i bought this guitar because i wanted a quality guitar that i could upgrade. many other guitars i played at the store like teles and strats were cool but were more expensive and still needed upgrades. if this guitar were stolen id be pissed but i wouldnt buy it again. at the time i hadnt heard of the highway 1 strats. i prob would have liked that more. right now im debating if i should sell the paul and get a strat or just go ahead with the upgrades. honestly though, this guitar was much more versatile than many of the strats i did play. a strat cant do jazz at all.


Product: Epiphone Les Paul Standard
Price Paid: USD 450
Submitted 02/15/2007 at 12:19pm by Rob McRae

Features : 8
Honeyburst 2006 model. Made in China. Standard Epi lp Stansard.

Sound : 9
I was completely blown away. I was NOT expecting the guit to sound this good! Classic Les Paul sound. The bridge pickup is tremendous. Classic Les Paul pump and growl. The neck a little less so. It is a little muddy and wont completely clean up. But there really isn't $1,700 worth of difference between this guitar and a Gibson. For a live player, you really can't go wrong with th Epi LP. I understand that there are big gaps in quality between each guit that comes off the assembly line, but I also understand that that is changing with the switch of production to China. All I know is that the one I have is a great player. Because I am recording with this guitar (and needed a little more string-to-string clarity) I did change out the pickups and electronocs with a Seymour Duncan Jazz in the neck and a JB in the bridge and HOLY SMOKES, is this guitar ever a keeper now. But I have to say that the Epi bridge pickup was a tad more harmonically wild than the JB! I am hanging on to that pickup and will probably put it in the bridge of one of my strats.

Action, Fit, & Finish : 9
Incredibly well put together. Not flawless, but close to it. Neck feels and plays great. Only one buzz on the high E at the 12th fret. No buzzes anywhere else. Paint was really well done. One little bump on the neck up near the body that wasn't sanded out. Everything is lined up perfectly, (do you remember that guits in this price range years ago ALWAYS had terrible alignment problems? Not anymore!) Hardware was better than expected, especially the tuning machines. As with all Epi's the electronics are not very good, but I didn't have any problems with them before I switched them out.

Reliability/Durability : 9
I see no problems gigging with this guitar>

Customer Support : No Opinion

Overall Rating : 10
I've been playing for 34 years and am just returning to Les Pauls after about a 25 year hiatus. Of course, I can't afford a Gibson, who can? But I really am not all that disappointed about it. This Epi LP Standard is like coming home to me. It has all the vibe of a Genuine article, and I had enough $$ left to feed and clothe my daughter! I would strongly urge anyone thinking of buying a Gibson to try a few of these out first. I would definitely get another if this one was stolen.


Product: Epiphone Les Paul Standard
Price Paid: USD 499.99
Submitted 02/11/2007 at 03:42pm by Jim

Features : 8
The guitar is a 2007 Les Paul Standard (made in China at their new factory), honeyburst with a gorgeous flamed maple top. Mahogany body and neck, maple top, rosewood fretboard with pearloid trapezoid inlays. Standard everything like you would get from the factory

Sound : 9
I mostly play hard rock and progressive rock/metal, but I also play jazz and alternative rock. The guitar has the ability to make every sound I need and then some. I am just running it through a Vox AD30TV ( I am currently in the Army, and I don't have the need for anything larger) and the guitar just sounds incredible through. Everything from the glassy Gilmourish tones to Opeth, this guitar has it covered. It sounds full, almost like getting hit in the chest with a hammer when distorted, but when run clean, it mimics classic jazz tones without any issue. Considering there are only so much this guitar can do, it does all of them amazingly well, and that is without any updrading.

Action, Fit, & Finish : 9
The guitar out of the box had the action a bit high, but I can't let that influence this review. After spending no more than ten minutes setting it up, it played fantastic. The top looks immaculate, the bookmatching is perfect. The binding is almost perfect and the fretwork compares with that of my PRS. There are no dings or any flaking in the finish.

Reliability/Durability : 10
The guitar is built like a tank, the only things that I will do in the future is replace the tuners with Sperzel locking tuners, change out the pots eventually and maybe get some different pickups. But for right now there is no reason for me to do any of those things. Before I enlisted in the service, I played professionally, and at the time I used a Carvin DC400TA, a 2005 PRS Custom 24, and a few assorted Mexican Strats. While I can't say I would use it at a gig without a backup (because lets be honest, no matter how good the guitar, you always run in to some issue) I would use it right up there with my other guitars, if not featured.

Customer Support : No Opinion
N/A

Overall Rating : 9
I have been playing for 7 years and currently I own a Carvin DC400TA, a PRS Custom 24 and an old Strat. As far as amplificiation is concerned, at home I have a rack system and here at the barracks I have a new Vox AD30TV amp. If the guitar was lost or stolen I would definately get another Epiphone. After trying several Gibson's over the years I can't see myself spending that much money on one when Epiphone's feel and sound just as good (to me at least). Considering how little this guitar costs, I can't say I have a single complaint.


Product: Epiphone Les Paul Standard
Price Paid: USD 300 USED
Submitted 12/04/2006 at 05:11pm by Julio Riquelme M

Features : 10
Black, solid body, Tune-O-Matic. An axe. Bought through Ebay. Just didnt like the original reddish knobs and replaced them by black dice knobs, now it looks awesome.

Sound : 10
I mostly do church music so it fits perfect my playing stile. I personally use for solos and mostly using the clean channel, just some chorus and light reverb. It performs fine as rhythm guitar as well. It has a warm sound, my guitar player just fell in love with this guitar.

Action, Fit, & Finish : 10
As I bought it used, I just restringed it, dissasembled, cleaned it and set it up all my way. No flaws apart of normal use wear.

Reliability/Durability : No Opinion
An axe, it will last for sure.

Customer Support : No Opinion
Not dealt with them

Overall Rating : No Opinion
Well my opinion has some bias: I love this guitar...


Product: Epiphone Les Paul Standard
Price Paid: USD 1058,
Submitted 11/24/2006 at 11:52pm by Bob Cianci

Features : 10
I chose this Epiphone Les Paul Elitist Standard over a Gibson Les Paul Studio Plus model. Both guitars had AAA flame maple tops, but the Gibson was over $500 more in most places, a little less at others, and simply not worth the extra money. I'm more concerned with playability and looks than whose name is on the headstock. The finish is a thin lacquer iced tea sunburst with the nicest flame top I have ever owned on a guitar. Grover tuners; made in Japan in the Fuji Gen Gakki factory, as are all the Elitist series guitars. It has the standard Les Paul pickup configuration with USA made 'buckers and the usual control setup. The body is hand-selected and kiln-dried mahogany, and so is the neck, with a nice rosewood board. The fretwork is flawless.

Sound : 10
It suits my harder side of playing very, very well, and as I'm 5'6', it fits me well. I use a newer Fender Hot Rod Deluxe and assorted stompboxes. It's not noisy at all (humbuckers aren't, generally), and with the USA 'buckers, it screams when cranked and sounds mellow when turned down. Classic humbucker tones all around. I see no reason to change the pickups at all. They do the job and have plenty of power. The sustain is great.

Action, Fit, & Finish : 10
The factory setup is OK, but I plan to have it set up professionally anyway, and soon, and also plan to change the strings it came with; .009s, which are too light for me. It stays in tune pretty well, and it will stay in tune better once it's set up right. Action is fine, neck is straight, pickups adjusted nicely. The top? Well, let's just say, the top is spectacular in its "flame-iness." The nicest top of any guitar I've ever had (I said that already). With the faded iced tea 'burst, it looks a little like Peter Green's old Les Paul. The fit and finish is flawless from the factory, as I expected. They do great work at the Fuji factory, and have for years. You can count on it.

Reliability/Durability : 10
This guitar is built like a tank. No doubts it'll survive live gigs in every way. Finish is solid, hardware is solid, strap buttons are fine. This is a totally dependable guitar, but I always take 3-4 guitars to gigs, so it will never be the only one.

Customer Support : No Opinion
No problems at all with the instrument, so no opinion on customer support. Good warranty.

Overall Rating : 10
I've been playing rock, R&B and blues for over thirty years and own 17 guitars. If it was lost or stolen, I would definitely buy another. I love the playability, the looks, the flame top, and its classic, vintage Les Paul vibe. I chose it because it was a better deal than the Gibsons I was looking at, it sounded as good as any of them and felt great. I wish it came with a Bigsby option. Otherwise, it's a killer guitar. Comes with a very good HS case. It may look like I paid too much for it compared to some of the other prices listed for this model, but I got the industry standard 40% off list based upon current retail prices, which go up sometimes twice a year at Gibson. I've owned at least five Les pauls, and this might be the best one yet.


Product: Epiphone Les Paul Standard
Price Paid: GBP 500
Submitted 11/08/2006 at 12:24pm by Marlowe

Features : 9
well this beauty was getting hungry, so naturally, i fed it. i made a decent roast chicken basted to death, followed by a crisp salad with toasted croutons and parmesan with an excellent dressing (in my opinion). i was dead chuffed with myself when i finished everything. oh and also i made a scrummy apple cinnamon cake for afters. i think this stunning piece of equipment was deeply satisfied.

Sound : 8
my style is mainly either italian, japanese or english cuisine dependng on how i feel. i think it suits my styles perfectly, with the perfect precision and it's modern techniques.i love it to be honest.

Action, Fit, & Finish : 7
i would say my presentation is quite...rustic, you know, move it 3 times then dont touch again. it has to have a natural look and feel to it.although sauces are important and i use them a lot , i wouldn't say it's always necessary.

Reliability/Durability : 8
my portions are generally large, which is just how i like it. there is no point serving tiny portions when someone is dead hungry is there?

Customer Support : 7
if i get a complaint from a customer i tend to either refud them or make them another dish, unless they're just picky. dont get it often however

Overall Rating : 10
income is great at the moment and i think my skills are increasing, rapidly. soon im going to add a new section to the menu 'eau cuisine' . with seafood and more complex dishes. i thnk my customers love to visit and im getting to know them. gainiong quite a reputation actually.


Product: Epiphone Les Paul Standard
Price Paid: USD 399
Submitted 09/13/2006 at 12:12am by Scott McCord

Features : 9
Honeyburst finish. Maple top, Stop tailpiece, LP body with cutaway, two humbuckers, 22 frets, 2 tone/2volume controls, Pearloid trapezoid inlays in neck. Made in China, 2006 model. No bag, case or accessories included in purchase.

Sound : 9
While I've read complaints on the electronics of the Epiphone LPs, I honestly can't complain about the specific LP I own. I think it sounds great through my Fender Blues Jr. amp. The neck pickup provides a meaty bass and the bridge pickup is actually brighter than I expected with a hint of creamy sustain typical of the LPs. I traded a Fender Mexican Tele for this guitar and am most definitely not disappointed. I should note, however, that I do use a Boss distortion pedal through the blues junior. Without the pedal, the LP still gives a great tone, just not as heavy. But that is due to the nature of this amp, not the guitar.

Action, Fit, & Finish : 10
I played every Epipone LP standard in the store and they were all excellent. They were all also the 2006 models from China. I believe Epiphone bought their own plant in China that now specifically produces Epiphone guitars, as opposed to several other brands concurrently as it used to be. The guitar was set up perfectly. Absolutely no fret buzz all the way up the neck. Action was perfect, hardware set up great. Absolutely no flaws on the guitar and I studied it closely before and after I bought it.

Reliability/Durability : 10
I think this guitar would withstand almost anything. Hardware seems solid to me. The finish is top-notch (honeyburst finish). Strap buttons so far seem extremely adequate, although like any other guitar on earth, you probably need straplocks if you're rowdy and use a strap. I would use this guitar without a backup for 1.) I love the sound and verstility and can't make myself put it down and 2.) it seems to be one of the most solid guitars I've played. I also own an American Strat (the first year Fender made the neck and bridge changes - either 2000 or 2001) and I love that guitar. But this Epiphone LP blew me away when I picked it up and played it. I'm worried that my Strat may be not getting the attention it deserves.

Customer Support : No Opinion
Never dealt with customer support. It does come with a Limited Lifetime Warranty.

Overall Rating : 10
I've been playing for 12 years off and on and have always had Fenders. 60s strat, Mexican Strat, Mexican Tele, American Strat, Squire Strat. I play a lot of blues/rock and those have always suited my style. I am a Strat man. That being said, I picked up this Epiphone LP and was hooked. I will NEVER get rid of my strat, but I wanted a different sound to compliment my strat and was just not happy with the mexican tele I traded for it. I played a friends Epiphone LP before going to the music store. Then every Epi LP I played at the store seemed to rock just as hard (Just wish I had that Marshall I plugged them into!) This guitar is so easy to play, it makes you think you're a better guitarist than you are. Now, I've never played a Gibson LP. I figured there was no need because I could never afford one and I didn't want to know what I was missing. But that being said, I can't imagine the Gibson sounding much better than this Epiphone. I still can't believe the price tags on these Epis. I just can't get over the sound it delivers. I feel like I'm having an affair with this guitar and hope my Strat forgives me, but I can't put this lady down. I think when taking into account price and quality, this is the best guitar I've owned.


Product: Epiphone Les Paul Standard
Price Paid: USD 309 USED
Submitted 08/29/2006 at 07:36pm by Dave

Features : 9

Sound : 10
I am updating my last review. As I and others have said the guitar benefits from a pickup change. After I changed the pickups the guitar sounded much better but still dark, I said that I couldn't get sparkle from it and the tone still lacked compared to a Gibson with Burstbuckers. Well, back to the tech to cure the humming problem and he mentions that the caps are 47's. This value is a high impendence usually used on basses to roll off the highs. He said to install 22's. I had him put bumblebee caps in (22's, at $60 each) and let me say that this guitar sounds awesome. Better than the stock gibson. It is much brighter, punchier and just sounds alive. I can only guess that epi used the high impendence caps to roll off some highs to compensate for the rather brittle/shrill stock pickups. Next I have to change the pots from 250k's to 500k's. Apparently the lower value pots offer higher impendence and compress the tone of the pickups. Again I don't know why cheap guitars come with 100k or 250kpots. 250k is ok for a strat but most lps need 500k, some use 1meg. Change your pots and caps and let your replacement pickups come alive! Also, some people point to the wood as the tone culprit. My experience tells me the electronics are the main problem. Luckily, that problem is easily remedied.

Action, Fit, & Finish : 9
your guitar is a fret leveling and polishing from nirvana. Unless your guitar is a Carvin or a "custom shop" instrument, you need this work.

Reliability/Durability : 9
Wail away!

Customer Support : No Opinion
I honestly don't know.

Overall Rating : 9
As the guitar sits now, it is awsome and makes me think I can get away with modifying epi's instead of blowing 2k on a Gibson that still needs a decent set up to play well. But, $200 for pickups, $120 for the bumblebees and I can only guess about $90 to have the tech change out all the pots plus I still have cheap tuners and loosey-goosey bridge hardware that should be changed, so maybe $200 more for that stuff plus $500 for the guitar and I have, lets see, $1110.00. So, still less then a Gibson, but I can sell a Gibson for $1500 or more. My Epi is still worth maybe $400 used. So, so you invest money into the epi or Gibby? I still don't know.


Product: Epiphone Les Paul Standard
Price Paid: US $450
Submitted 06/19/2006 at 02:22pm by stickymcbiscuit

Features : 9
Your standard Epi Les Paul. Black with cream hardware. I paid $450 at Guitar Center after some haggling.

The key difference: I swapped out the muddy stock pickups for DiMarzio Virtual PAFs. Definitely worth the $140. I also got my tech to wire them Jimmy Page style (coil tap, series/parallell, phase switch) which is a nice touch too -- especially the series/parallell option, which gives a tougher, "boxier" tone. That was an additional $30 for the needed pots and $150 for the labor.

Sound : 10
I'd rate this guitar a 5 before switching pups. Evidently how they shave money on these babies is building them in China (no problem there) and using cheap electronics. New pups are a must.

Action, Fit, & Finish : 7
Set-up was OK, I took it to a tech for a better setup. The finish, etc., is fine. No problems elsewhere.

Reliability/Durability : 10
No problems here. Has held up fine at some pretty wild gigs for six months so far.

Customer Support : No Opinion
n/a -- not needed yet.

Overall Rating : 8
Again, new pickups are a must. You're paying $500 for a decent Les Paul, might as well spend another $120 or so to make it sound good.


Product: Epiphone Les Paul Standard
Price Paid: US $400
Submitted 06/15/2006 at 03:43pm by Decay

Features : 10
2001 or 2002 made. 22 frets, standard Les Paul controls, hum/hum pickups, body is Mahogany with Alder top. Ebony gloss finish. Bridge is tune-o-matic with stop piece, standard LP type tuners, neck is kind of chunky, but when getting an LP, you should know that it's got some thickness to it already. I believe it's a mahogany neck, rosewood board, and it's setneck. Came with an Epiphone case.

I couldn't ask for more in a budget LP, feature are perfect, nothing missing.

Sound : 9
This guitar is great for all the styles of music I play (punk, hardcore, gothic rock, etc.). Running it through my Marshall most of the time, but just for practice I run it through an Ibanez. It's got that Les Paul tone, definitly, but not quite as good as a Gibson Les Paul. The only real bad thing with this is the stock pickups, they're a bit weak.

Overall, sound is great, but lacking in the pickup area. With a swap of pickups, this is a really great sounding guitar.

Action, Fit, & Finish : 7
Guitar came set up pretty crappy, but after setting it up, it was great. Had a little trouble with uneven frets on the upper few frets, but my tech filed them and no more problems. Again, as I notice on a lot of low-mid or mid level guitars, finish flaws come up around where the neck meets the body.

The guitar I got, after a good set up, plays really great.

Reliability/Durability : 7
This guitar has been gigged by me and a fellow guitarist in my old bands (we sort of shared it at times) many times, and definitly holds up well. The tuners on this could be replaced, and probably should be, because I found that this guitar had some trouble holding tune (nothing to serious though). With this, I'd definitly get some straplocks, I don't think I really trust the strap buttons on this. When we were gigging with this, I always had backup around, but never needed to use this.

This guitar is iffy in the reliabilty area, but strap locks and new tuners will fix this for the better.

Customer Support : No Opinion
Never dealt with them, but I have heard they were good from other people I know.

Overall Rating : 8
I've been playing for four and a half years, and own...a Squier Strat, two Fender Strats, an ESP/LTD H-250, and a ESP/Grassroots Forest GT. This guitar is rather high ranked in my line up, and one of my favorites. The only real thing that botehred me alot, was the strap buttons on this. If it were stolen, I'd probably upgrade to a Gibson or something similar. One of the best things about this guitar is that you can get Les Paul tone for $400 or so. Again, I'd like to bring up the strapbuttons and tuners, and I really wish they were both better.


Product: Epiphone Les Paul Standard
Price Paid: 1850,00 (Brazilian Real)
Submitted 06/10/2006 at 06:39pm by Felipe Braz

Features : 9
Bought in Brazil at this date. Heritage Cherry Sunburst. Same specs as the others, but with Grover Tuning Machines...
Came with a Epiphone gig bag and a t-shirt.

Sound : 10
I was looking for a guitar with humbuckers and decided for this one... No humming at all... nice highs and lows, suits every kind of music...

Action, Fit, & Finish : 9
The factory set-up was preety good, the best i've got from a new guitar (I already own a 2001 Squier Affinity and other crapy Strat from an unkown brand here from Brazil).. The finish is preety good, but I've noticed a few painting flaws on the body... That could be just a little better... But overall it has a very nice finish.

Reliability/Durability : 9
I think this is a guitar that will last a long time... I'll just replace the pickups some time in the future...

Customer Support : No Opinion

Overall Rating : 9
I play guitar for almost 7 years and this is my third guitar... I own a Squier Affinity Strat, a Collins Stratocaster (this is a very crapy guitar), a Cosmic acoustic guitar (steel) and a Condor nylon acoustic guitar. I usually use this gear to record at home and to play once in a while with my friends... If you don't have enough money to buy a Gibson, this Epiphone is surelly the most recommended choice.


Product: Epiphone Les Paul Standard
Price Paid: US $500
Submitted 05/19/2006 at 08:02pm by Reed J.

Features : 8
I got this guitar brand new from Mucicians friend. I cant belive this thing is from Korea. 2 volume, 2 tone, 3-way selector. Just the way I like it. The two pickups are perfect for me, add just a little over-drive and you get a nice smooth sound. You people know the rest.

Sound : 9
I play rock & roll (early 60's stuff), blues, and hippie music. It sounds pritty good, no complants. When I got it I plugged it into my small Marshall i was pritty disapointed. I had allot of hum. I tried to angle myself to get red of it but couldnt find a good place. The next day i was at the local guitar shop and tryed it on a VOX and it sounded really good. Ive tryed it with some more amps since then and think that a rogue amp I played on was the best. Not by itself but when i used my cry baby and boss super overdrive it was great.

Action, Fit, & Finish : 10
This is the first thing any one will notice about your guitar and i get so meny complements on this thing. It all looks so nice I hear a Heavenly band open up into gospel music.

Reliability/Durability : 8
This thing is solid. A little lighter then the gibsons i noticed, feels good really. IT stays intune like a dream.

Customer Support : No Opinion
Never had to.

Overall Rating : 8
I've bin playing about 3 years now and play a hole lot, my hole life is about music. If I didnt love the sound and feel of this guitar I would send it right back but this thing is such an honor to play I would die if any thing happened to it. There were only 2 guitars I could have afforded i would have posibly picked over it, Epiphone g-400 custom(3 pickups sound really good i think), or an Agile LP copy.


Product: Epiphone Les Paul Standard
Price Paid: 430 euros
Submitted 05/17/2006 at 03:17am by Alex

Features : 9
Made in early 2006, specs as already reported. Grover tuners, stock pups, Vintage Sunburst finish over a body of mahogany + alder, as heavy as a Gibson or only 0.01 or 0.02 pounds away... sure!!!

This one has no defects as stated by other people in electronic terms. Even, it is pretty impressive in this field. I had a Gibson with similar specs to compare it. The Epi can be only a step behind in these areas:

- sides and back of the guitar are, in the Gibson, transparent so you can see the wood colour. In the Epi is the same very dark tobacco of the finish.

- I think the binding is painted, and if it's painted it's very finely done. But I tend to think it's really a binding. You pass the finger over it and you feel an edge between the creamy line and the body. In the gibson it's clear a binding.

- seems quite glossy the finish. I wish it had less varnish. Doesn't affect the playing at all (it improves it instead) so... I come from satin finished guitars and had to adapt it, pretty quickly done. I prefer the satin nevertheless.

- the knobs are better in the Gibson. This one has kinda-hat volume and tone knobs in amber; the colour is very fine but the shape isn't. But it's one of the things very easily replaceable.

- the weight... well, you can't feel the difference if you blindly pick a Gib or this Epi. You can't. This guitar is PRETTY HEAVY.

There is a noticeable difference between this guitar and previous 2005 Epiphones as I saw in another shop. In every aspect. In every detail. This one is a superb instrument. Remember you must make a difference between what you can change from a guitar and what you can't. You can't change woods, weight, colour, shape (or you can hardly change it); you can change the pickguard, pick-ups, pick-up covers, tuners, frets. The review is in it all, specially the unchangeable terms. As for the others, I am very happy with them.

Sound : 10
Sound is one of the most personal details in an instrument. What I like can be disliked by you. You can reckon it just scrolling down the reviews, but as for me.... Sound is unbelievable. Playing mainly through a Marshall MG15DFX, stock pickups (quite loud!). Thought of a change but soon discarded it.

Unplugged, it sounds brilliant. In the clean settings, the neck pickup is amazing, what a warm, clean/semi-acoustic sound; in the middle is the best, both warm and bright; and in the bridge pickup it is such a classic rock'n'roll sound.... uuuuuh. Those two pickups are sensational!

In distorted, you get such a great amount and variety of sounds from both pickups that you cover everything. My preferred style is blues and hard rock so the softly distorted sound turns this baby into the perfect blues machine, with such a crunch... I easily got Gov't Mule first album sound. No difference. I swear. With more distortion the bridge pickup shines more than the neck, getting into metal from Iron Maiden first albums, for example. But the neck is tremendous too for soloing.

Overall the guitar is capable of EVERYTHING, just play with volume and tone from the guitar or eq settings on the amp. If you don't extract anything you want from it it's YOU the one responsible. Because it was also tested on a Fender Twin Reverb by a pro player and he was pretty impressed. He is looking for a Gibson LP Custom and he couldn't stop praising the sound, this babe.

Action, Fit, & Finish : 8
Action is untouched. I am fine with it. Neck pickup was a bit low, so I raised it. The problem came with the neck which was way too straight and it caused some buzz. Adjusted and... buzz went away.

More expensive guitars come with worse problems, come on.

Reliability/Durability : 10
A Les Paul can break a tank. This is no exception.

Looking at the other reviews, I am amazed at the electronics. A lot of people complain about them being very weak. The ones here are flawless at all. No crackles. Tone and volume respond as they should. What I suspect is that these people had bad luck. Or I have a lot, because every instrument I play seems not to have any defect.

Customer Support : 9
Never needed. Only, when adjusting the truss rod. Apart from that, nothing else.

Overall Rating : 10
The perfect machine. A Gibson costs +2,000 euros more. The quality of this baby cannot justify any jump. Forget fashion and coolness. No justify. If it costed 600 or 700 euros, it would be worth it.

It's a Les Paul. Not a Les Paul copy as a lot of people here say. It's 100% Les Paul. Both Gibson and Epiphone (Orville too?) are allowed to wear the Les Paul logo. Remember a certain Lester Polfus first efforts at what factory...

I wouldn't be ashamed to bring this baby anywhere despite not putting Gibson in any place. This one doesn't need any important word to rule over far more expensive models. Because my fingers will make the difference; the baby will help me.

Look for early 2006 chinese Epi models. I have been reported in a lot of shops about their supreme quality. As for this model, they are true!


Product: Epiphone Les Paul Standard
Price Paid: US $499.99
Submitted 05/14/2006 at 09:19am by J. Bass
Email: ke_ti_wa<at>hotmail dot com

Features : 9
1999 from S.Korea, 22 frets, 2 volume, 2 tone controls, 2 stock humbuckers passive, appears to be made of mahogany, honeyburst finish with cream colored pickguard, Bigsby-style vibrato, vintage -type green tuners, got a free gig bag with it.

Sound : 10
Suits my style of playing (classic rock, blues,heavy rock) I use it with a Laney LC-30 tube combo, usually just plugged in direct. I have some assorted effects, if i use anything it's just an RP50 for different amp sounds. I changed the stock bridge for a roller bridge I bought off ebay. I also routed the strings over the front bar of the unit instead of under it.What a difference that made. After using 10's I changed to 9's so I make bending a little easier. The vibrato unit stays in tune just as well as my Strat Plus with tremsetter. Of course I had to fiddle around with pickup heights and intonation but I am very satisfied with it's playability. Think Neil Young's "When You Dance, I Can Really Love"

Action, Fit, & Finish : 9
I have no issues about how well the action, fit or finish was when I bought it. I have always done my own upgrades or set-ups. However two of the pots keep getting scratchy, I have taken them apart and swabbed them with electronic cleaner and they work fine for awhile. I may upgrade them eventually. The pickup selector switch seems very loose compared to others of the type I've tried in stores. But since it ain't broke I ain't gonna fix it.

Reliability/Durability : 9
I don't play for money, but I believe it would hold up well. I had thought about replacing the tuners, but the guitar stays in tune, so they'll stay. The strap buttons are still in tight, although I would suggest straplocks for anyone who likes to jump off their stacks from time to time. I have other guitars, but I would take it alone.

Customer Support : No Opinion
Have never dealt with them

Overall Rating : 9
Been playing 23 years or so, I have a '90 Strat Plus, customized '00 Mex. Strat, '76 Fender Musicmaster bass , old Washburn acoustic, Laney LC-30 with Celestion G12S-50 speaker, assorted cheap effects,practice amp, etc. This guitar has been a welcome addition. Because it looks so cool, it gets all the attention whenever someone sees it. I would definitely get another even with the bigsby unit, 'cause I know how to make 'em work. I just wish the electronic parts were on a par with the rest of the instrument.


Product: Epiphone Les Paul Standard
Price Paid: US $380
Submitted 05/09/2006 at 02:59pm by Jonny the friendly lawyer

Features : 7
2006 Chinese LP Standard. Same basic features as set forth below. Tuners purport to be Grovers.

Sound : 7
Basic rock sounds. This guitar will be played by a 12-year-old through a Fender Hot ROd tube amp. It seems well-suited to that task.

Action, Fit, & Finish : 2
I am writing this review to make a basic point that I've only seen touched on a few times below. The finish and action of the guitar I bought is not bad. However, I played and looked over 6 different guitars until I found one that was half way decent. The quality control on these Chinese LPs is awful. Some guitars had the pickup switch in sideways, others had uneven nuts, still others had loose screws holding the pickups in. Apparently "Set Up in the USA" means nothing more than that someone in the States peeled off a sticker and affixed it to the back of the headstock. DO NOT BUY ONE OF THESE ONLINE. It took quite a while switching guitars at Guitar Center to find one that was problem free in the set up department.

Reliability/Durability : No Opinion
Feels solid. Pickup selector might not last. Good for a start. We'll see.

Customer Support : No Opinion

Overall Rating : 7
I agree with the general consensus that this is a completely different (and inferior) animal than a Gibson Les Paul, but is a nice guitar and a great value nonetheless. I bought this as a gift for my son's 12th birthday and think it is a great choice for someone like him who: (a) likes to rock, (b) has some talent and (c) is improving, but who (d) does not need a $2000+ guitar. The main point I want to make, however, is that there is no consistency in how these guitars are put together. Having looked into the matter I realize that the reason the reviews of this particular guitar vary so much is that the quality varies significantly from guitar to guitar. So, if you are considering an Epiphone LP Standard, be smart and test drive a few. You may be surprised at the level of inconsistency but could end up with a winner.


Product: Epiphone Les Paul Standard
Price Paid: $500 (Canadian)
Submitted 04/24/2006 at 01:06am by darrell

Features : 10
OK, I get a little tired of so many "experts" giving their opinion and realistically seem to spend more time playing around with their guitars than actually using them to make music.

I have played them all, Peavy, Ibanez, Gibson LP, Fender strat and tele and they all have merit. Personally I have chosen the epi les paul standard, sunburst. I have been playing for over 30 years, ( I am still well under 50)I find that each person has a different ear and will like a different guitar, that is a fact we all know.

I personally can buy a Gibson Les paul but I choose hands down the Epi les paul standard. I have not changed the pickups but I do have a wizard technition who has adjusted everything possible on this guitar and you can play the heck out of it. I have had 7 #1 songs on Sony Acid Planet out of 483,000 musicians which is pretty good. The guitar is light, I find the finish beautiful and no flaws. 23 frets if you can squeal the last one, act 22. I do a lot of recording and I use a Norman accoustic, Fender Bass, and the ONLY guitar is the epi les paul. A very famous musician told me about 20 years ago the following" you can have the greatest guitar with every feature available but if you can't make it sing it is useless to you. The price on the Epi was around $500 Can brand new and I do not intend to change anything, the grovers are fine, the tone is great, I use a fender twin. You should be able to use a bit of delay with either a Wah Wah or a flanger to get a screemin guitar sound. This was made in China and I do find this also to be extremely easy on my fingers.

Darrell

Sound : 10
I play mostly blues and guitar rock. It can scream or be really tasteful, the epi does both

Action, Fit, & Finish : 8
The guitar was not set up well at the factory, but it sure is now!

Reliability/Durability : No Opinion
I would always take a backup guitar on a gig, more for breaking a string. Take a listen to Brian May with the home made guitar he has and tell me if he does not make magic with that guitar!

Customer Support : No Opinion
No comment

Overall Rating : 10
yes, do not buy a guitar because someone tells you too! If you like what it does for you, the price is decent, you have done some homework, go with your gut, not with your cheque book

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