Hi and welcome to the forum.
I see
@hemingway beat me to it, but I’m going to plow ahead anyway…
I assume the guitar was too bright and cheerful?
Actually, I have a set of Gotoh brass compensated saddles on an MIJ 60s styled Tele I turned into a faux Cabronita. The original stainless threaded saddles were a bit too bright (esp. since that guitar seems very bright in its basic nature). So, even though the difference was relatively slight, I still feel they were a good choice for me.
As for pickups, I’m going to make the same suggestions & comments I always do:*
1. pickups are a rabbit hole
2. everything adds up in a guitar, and wood is organic and heterogeneous, making predictions hard and results variable
3. pickups can be defined / reduced to ‘type.’ One method might be by date or period, e.g. Broadcaster, late 50s Telecaster, early 60s, etc. Or, you could define by, say, production materials, e.g. magnet type paired with wire gauge, etc.
4. these ‘types’ are pretty broad, and in my opinion, it’s not worth sweating over type-internal variables or possibilities pre-purchase, as your guitar may well negate any qualities you think you are buying with set X.1 over set X.2**
5. there’s not a lot in a pickup, they’re simple and made from relatively cheap components. Yet some pickups cost a lot of money. Presumably some of this is due to the cost of craftsmanship and quality control, plus hours and hours of meticulous research and honing
6. but, some cost much less. Some cheaper pickups are quite generic and are made from the cheapest possible material and labour, with little quality control***
7. but, some cheaper makers produce pickups that use high quality components and high standards of craft and quality control
8. all this adds up to my standard advice - pick a definition or classification system you like, and from there work out what might suit, at whatever price level you’re comfortable with
9. or, try one of each ‘type’ from a less expensive maker
My personal preference would be to go one of those last two routes, with Bootstrap.
Ryan has truly great products and truly reasonable prices.**** And his pickup sets are offered in a manageable number of nice, broad classes or types (Original Recipe being 50s Tele, Extra Crispy being slightly earlier Broadcaster type, Palo Duro being early 60s, etc.).
You could try just what you think is probably what you want at first, or even get all four Tele sets for just US$200 plus shipping, try them all and sell on what you’re less keen on.
And, since he winds custom orders at only a little extra cost, once you get close, you could order a tweaked set or individual pickup, to really hone in on what matches your guitar and your ears.
His pickups are all made to order though, so there’s a fair wait. I just checked, and it’s currently 4 - 6 weeks.
Good luck.
Pax/
Dean
* if I talk in absolutes above, just assume I actually mean, ‘in my opinion’
** i.e between two slightly different spec’d versions of a single ‘type’
*** but also, early pickups were made on hand operated machines and this produced variable results. Not everything was tight or precise, etc. Common wisdom is that this produced both the revered ‘holy grail’ pickups and some real dogs
**** it’s entirely possible to buy all of his Tele sets for the equivalent cost of a single pickup from some more expensive makers