As others have mentioned, get down to a couple of guitar shops that have a decent stock and try as many as possible. I've heard too many stories of people buying a guitar based on style to then find they don't like the neck, weight, or tone, to leave it just choosing by manufacturer or model alone.
I'm lucky enough to live close enough to a [urlhttp://www.guitarguitar.co.uk/[/url shop to be able to go into their and try out the large amount of kit they keep in stock.
I got an Epiphone LP Standard in Tabacco burst off the wife for xmas. The Gibson version has been my dream guitar for years and I've played various LP's in the past so knew I liked them, which meant she was pretty safe buying me one without me trying it first. We aren't in the financial position to blow a few grand on a Gibson so the Epi was a happy compromise. I saw your comments on the quality of the Epi's and I can only guess that the quality must vary. Mines cracking, is well built, has a good feel and sound, and looks gorgeous.
I've had a few guitars over the years and my current other electric is a Washburn N1 that I've had for about 17 years. It's a completely different guitar to the LP, but it has a fantastic neck and plays very easily. I bought it the day I tried it and I've never been tempted to get rid. It has a good mixture of tones as the pot is set to split the two double pickups to give a clean sound like a strat if you want it.
One thing to bear in mind when buying a guitar for around the £500 mark is that the guitar will probably need some after market setup. There are plenty of guides kicking around on the net that can talk you through doing this. But depending on how far you want to take it (I've seen some guys get their Epi's setup to close to a Gibson standard), it may be better to get a professional to do it. It's worth keeping that in mind when you decide whether to pay a bit more for the guitar in a shop and see if they'll throw in a setup with the purchase, or whether you'll buy online and probably make a saving on the guitar but maybe have to get it setup for a further cost afterwards.
From the sounds of the probs you've been having with your current guitar, getting someone to check the setup (especially the action and bridge settings) for the gauge of strings you are using might help.
I've only been playing for a couple of years using a Les Paul Studio. Beautiful guitar and suits me perfectly.
My instructor had a Danelectro DC59 which I thought was stunning. I bought one for £220 from eBay (brand new), amazing guitar with wonderful tone. Pretty lightweight too.
Personally I'd save or borrow another 300 quid and buy a Japanese-made Tokai or keep an eye out for a pre-loved one. Also I would rather have the Korean-made Tokai than the Epi they churn out these days.
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