Sunday, December 25, 2011

Squier Vintage Modified Tele SH and Strat HSS Review

!9#: Squier Vintage Modified Tele SH and Strat HSS Review

Many guitarists use budget Squier models as a base for their own custom instruments, swapping out the hardware, pickups and other parts. With Squier's Vintage Modified Series guitars, the modifications have already been made, so you won't need to shell out extra bucks after your initial purchase. Today we're going to check out the Vintage Modified Tele SH and Strat HSS...

Squier Vintage Modified Tele SH

The Squier Tele SH has a variety of custom touches, like a Duncan Designed HB102 Alnico 5 neck humbucker, a Duncan Designed TE-103B Stack bridge pickup, a six-saddle bridge, black chrome knurled knobs and a reverse-configured control plate (the three-position pickup selector is located near the bottom of the lower bout instead of near the bridge pickup). However, the guitar also retains the classic features you'd want in a Tele, like the 21-fret neck with maple fingerboard, 25 ½-inch scale and 9 ½-inch radius.

Aside from some truly bizarre Givson-yes, Givson-models that Billy Gibbons showed me about 10 years ago, I've never seen a guitar made in India before. Another first: the body is made from Indian red cedar (apparently the wood doesn't have to travel too far to the factory). This light-weight, resonant wood is also used to make dhol drums in India, so its transition to guitar material makes musical sense. The neck is carved from nice-looking maple that has tight grain, and all the wood parts are coated with a durable polyurethane finish.

Many of the Squier guitars I've auditioned over the years have playability comparable to Fender's more expensive axes, and the Vintage Modified Tele SH is no exception. The neck offers a conservative C-shape profile, and the medium jumbo frets provide that"just right" balance of heft for bent notes and low resistance for shredding.

Performance

This model's weakest link is its hardware. The tuners feel flimsy and fragile, and the bridge sucked away the notes' sustain and body. As a result, the pickups never seemed to receive enough signal to reach their sweet spot, and the tone seemed somewhat thin. Add in a few extra bucks to upgrade the tuners and bridge, and you'll have a killer ax that performs as well as many models costing twice the price.

Squier Vintage Modified Strat HSS

Like the Tele HS, the Squier Strat HSS is built on the foundation of a classic guitar body and neck, but it features a modified pickup configuration. Squier dropped a Duncan Designed HB-112 humbucker in the bridge position, while Duncan Designed SC-102 Stack pickups replace the standard neck and middle single-coils.

Beyond that, the Vintage Modified Strat HSS is a classic Strat to the core, with a vintage-style tremolo, five-position pickup selector, 21-frets with a rosewood fingerboard, and that timeless Strat look and feel. The controls remain the same as well: master volume, neck tone and middle tone. There's no tone control for the bridge humbucker, which is mainlined to the master volume for maximum treble and gain. Like its Tele companion, the Strat has a body made from Indian red cedar, which provides a fast attack and resonant voice even when played unplugged. It felt a little heavier than the Tele, perhaps because of the tremolo bridge and the Strat's slightly larger body size. As on the Vintage Modified Tele the neck has a 9.5-inch radius, C-shaped profile and medium jumbo frets. The neck plays almost identical to the Tele that I evaluated, although the rosewood fingerboard gave the neck a slightly slinkier, sexier feel.

Performance

Plugged in, the Strat HSS delivered great classic rock tone from the Duncan bridge humbucker. It maintained clarity even through high-gain amos, with emphasis on the bass and treble. I had to boost the midrange slightly more than we did with other humbucker-equipped Strats, but this is probably because Indian red cedar produces a brighter sound than ash and alder woods. The single-coils produced bit and bark that will please most blues and Hendrix fans.

Unfortunately, as on the Vintage Modified Telecaster, the tuners were a letdown. I recommend upgrading them with a good set of locking tuners, which will improve the guitar's tone and also let you abuse the tremolo as much as you want, without going out of tune.

Squier Vintage Modified Tele SH and Strat HSS Verdict

With its mix of classic features and customs updates, the Squier Vintage Modified Tele SH has what modern players want. Best of all, it plays like a good Tele should, and purists will certainly approve. And should you love the tone and vibe of a classic Strat but need a high-octane bridge pickup, the Vintage Modified Strat HSS gives you hot-rod performance at an economy car price.


Squier Vintage Modified Tele SH and Strat HSS Review

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Wednesday, December 7, 2011

Review: Fender Standard Telecaster

!9#: Review: Fender Standard Telecaster

The Fender Telecaster is probably one of the great electric guitar developments of the 20th century. Its dual-pickup, solid body design, although simple, has effectively set trends in popular music history. The Fender Standard Telecaster does exactly what it says - it sets the standard for all other guitar manufacturers to follow.

The Standard Telecasters are made out of Fender's hi-tech production facility in Mexico. This allows Fender to produce a high quality guitar at an affordable price.

The Fender Standard Tele had a few subtle upgrades in 2006. For instance, the edges at the neck were smoothed off, similar to the American made models. Also, the frets were replaced with slightly larger fret wire which is preferred to the skinny frets. In addition, they use a bridge where the strings go through the body of the guitar, rather than fixing to the bridge itself. This improves the tome and sustain of the guitar.

Sound:

This Fender Standard Telecaster sounds amazing for having only 2 single coil pickups. The neck pickup has the classic, clean tone. The bridge produces the iconic telecaster twang. The middle is more of a bright, rich sound, which goes with any kind of music.

Playability:

This guitar is very intuitive, comfortable and user-friendly. It seems that Fender really pays attention to the various player-centric details, like the fret and nut work, and the rolled fret edges.

The playability of this Tele is great. You'll notice that a first string whole tone bend is possible with no volume loss on the bent note and feels comfortable even around the 3rd fret.

Features:

* Model: Fender Standard Telecaster

* Body: Alder

* Neck: 1-Piece Maple, Modern "C" Shape

* Fingerboard: Maple, 9.5″ Radius (241mm)

* Frets: 21 Medium Jumbo

* Pickups: 2 Standard Tele Single-Coil Pickups (Neck & Bridge)

* Controls: Master Volume, Master Tone

* Bridge: Standard 6-Saddle String-Thru-Body Bridge

* Machine Heads: Fender/Ping Standard Cast/Sealed Tuning Machines

* Pickguard: 3-Ply Parchment

* Accessories: Standard Gig Bag

Value:

For the money, this is probably the best bang for the buck. You may hear people say that it can't do heavy rock or metal. However, if you adjust the tone knob and use the neck or the middle pickup, you should be fine.


Review: Fender Standard Telecaster

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