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Gibson 2012 Les Paul Standard £1999

Gibson has given the trusty LP a few tweaks - so how does the new model measure up?

Gibson 2012 Les Paul Standard

The Les Paul's tonal options have been expanded, via push/pull switches.

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There's little doubt that this 2012 Standard is a very good-looking Les Paul, and it's been set up nicely too.

The slightly upward-pointing flames of the AAA-grade maple top are strong, though it's slip-matched rather than perfectly book-matched. The centre joint too isn't the cleanest we've seen, but the dark 'bursting of the top and dark brown of the sides, back and neck are well done.

"Nicely balanced both in terms of relative output and string-to-string response, there's plenty of vintage-style, low-output clarity from the humbuckers"

Yes, it's not the mirror 'dipped in glass' finish seen on certain other high-ticket USA brands - this is nitrocellulose and there's noticeable 'orange peel' on the back. The edge binding too, around the top of the body, doesn't have the sometimes very noticeable ledge where during the finish process the binding is scraped of any colour - it's a pretty clean job.

The fingerboard is very smart, from those crisply inlaid trapezoid inlays to the perfectly cut nut and the tidy fretting. As usual, the fret ends don't sit over the too-thick binding - the end of each fret is actually the raised nib of the plastic binding, which does limit the playable width of the fret - but that's Gibson's way.

Lurking within this impressive presentation are the numerous tweaks that create this year's Standard specification. There's the 'modern' weight relief - the latest attempt by Gibson to reduce the weight of the mahogany back and also impart some additional resonance. It's not over-heavy, but certainly not light.

Second, the fingerboard has a compound 10- to 16-inch radius instead of the classic 12-inch camber of most Gibsons. Like the previous 2008 Standard, the neck profile is asymmetric and classed as a '60s SlimTaper.

The shoulder is slightly more square on the bass side, more relaxed on the treble with a centre depth of 20.6mm at the first fret and 22.45mm at the 12th. It's a very good mainstream neck shape.

This LP doesn't advertise the 'deep-set neck tenon' of the 2008 Standard, but we do have the steeply back-angled (17°) headstock. Other features that differentiate this model are the TonePros locking tune-o-matic and stud tailpiece, and the very smooth-actioned Grover rear-locking tuners with their metal kidney-bean buttons - not necessary on a non-vibrato guitar, but they do speed up string changing.

It's the Les Paul's electronics that are the main departure. Each of the four control knobs hides a dual function accessed via pull/push switches.

Both the 500k-ohm volume controls have a 'coil-split' switch - anecdotally referred to as a 'Fat Tap' when we spoke to Gibson designer Jim DeCola earlier.

A standard coil-split dumps one of the humbucker's two coils to ground. Here, however, we have a 'partial tap' where some of the 'dumped' coil is retained for a fatter sound and a little hum cancellation.

"This design also provides for a more balanced output between the single-coil and humbucking tones," says Gibson. "In single-coil mode, the pickups are reverse wound/reverse polarity which offers hum cancelling when both pickups are active."

The neck pickup tone control also offers an out-of-phase option with both pickups on. If just the neck pickup, in single-coil mode, is selected, engaging this mode will voice primarily the outer single-coil; with the tone switch down, it's the inner coil.

Finally, the bridge pickup tone control doubles as a 'pure bypass' in either humbucking or single-coil mode, that "routes the bridge pickup directly to the jack, bypassing the pickup selector, volume and tone controls," for full brightness.

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MusicRadar rating

4.5 of 5

Pros

Build; expanded sounds; neck; playability.

Cons

Over-thick fingerboard binding; takes some thought to introduce all the new sounds.

Verdict

Looks like a classic 'Paul but has numerous good-sounding additional tones. A very well-made guitar indeed.

Review Policy

All MusicRadar's reviews are by independent product specialists, who are not aligned to any gear manufacturer or retailer. Our experts also write for renowned magazines such as Guitarist, Total Guitar, Computer Music, Future Music and Rhythm. All are part of Future PLC, the biggest publisher of music making magazines in the world.

Specification

2012 Les Paul Standard

Price:
£1999
Country of Origin:
USA
Hardware:
TonePros locking tune-o-matic bridge and stud tailpiece, Grover locking kidney button tuners
Available Controls:
2 x Tone, 2 x Volume, 3-way Pickup Selector, Coil-split, Phase switch
No of Frets Clear:
22
Neck Material:
Mahogany
Nut:
43
Weight (kg) (kg):
4.1
Fingerboard Material:
Bound Rosewood
Nut Material:
Corian
Pickup Type:
Gibson Burstbucker Rhythm Pro at neck, Burstbucker Lead Pro at bridge
Guitar Body Material:
Mahogany
Bolt-on Neck:
false
Body Style:
Single-cutaway, carved-top solidbody electric
Available Finish:
Desert burst (as reviewed), Heritage cherry sunburst, light burst, tea burst, Fireball, translucent amber, translucent black. Ebony, Goldtop and Blue Mist cost £100 less

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