
Thoughts on the Stratocaster
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- onedaycloser
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- Location: Wv, USA.
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- onedaycloser
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- Posts: 120
- Joined: Tue Jun 15, 2010 11:33 pm
- Location: Wv, USA.
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- hotrodperlmutter
- crescent fresh
- Posts: 16665
- Joined: Sat Apr 04, 2009 10:29 pm
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I never considered one when shopping for my guitar (1st). I guess I didn't know of any Strat players among the bands I listen to and I was told by friends that a Tele would be a good choice for a jangly sound on a budget. I never knew that two of my favorite guitarists, Johnny Marr and Julian Swales, played Strats.
- laterallateral
- Traynor or Death
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I was never crazy about the through-body tremolo contraption. This is what makes all the off-sets so appealing to me. That said, I almost always make time for strats online and in the shops. I could probably find a place in my home for something like this:
http://wildwoodguitars.com/electrics/fe ... r46607.php
PS: I'm 36 and I sometimes play in socks and sandals, so I may be a pathetic fogey already. Not sure where the lines are drawn.
http://wildwoodguitars.com/electrics/fe ... r46607.php
PS: I'm 36 and I sometimes play in socks and sandals, so I may be a pathetic fogey already. Not sure where the lines are drawn.
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Strats (and Fenders in general) are good sitting down guitars. I never found Les Pauls and SGs to be as comfortable when sitting down. My roommate's Randy Rhodes Jackson was SUCH a pain to play yesterday when I was sitting at my computer.
Bronco Bass
Squier Strat w/Hot Rails,
flea market nylon classical,
Ibanez bass w/Quarter Pounder X 2
Union Jack DC Epiphone LP
Squier Strat w/Hot Rails,
flea market nylon classical,
Ibanez bass w/Quarter Pounder X 2
Union Jack DC Epiphone LP
My first guitar was a strat copy, and I'd love to buy a nice one. I put together a parts strat, and even though its a bit crap I still find myself struggling to put it down.
After having an almost religious experiance with a 67' strat in sonic blue, I knew one day I would have to own a really great strat.
Sadly due to being a skint teenager that day is pretty far off.
The 67' strat was identical to this:

After having an almost religious experiance with a 67' strat in sonic blue, I knew one day I would have to own a really great strat.
Sadly due to being a skint teenager that day is pretty far off.
The 67' strat was identical to this:

- timhulio
- Redheaded Stepchild
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I've a love-hate relationship with strats, but it's deep love now I've got the Squier Classic Vibe 50s one with the anemic maple neck. I had a white squier standard strat when I was at uni, but never properly bonded with it, although I loved the look (John Perry from The Only Ones was my inspiration). I had another artic white squier a few years later, but was into alternative rock then and none of those underachievers play strats. Alt rock is pretty nearly played-out now, and I've got a feeling in a few years that Jags and Jazzers might get unfashionable. Anyways... I bought a custom shop relic strat for ridiculously cheap a couple of years ago, but the thing never seemed to resonate like a good guitar should. Probably got a dud. The poncey handwound pickups someone had fitted lacked sparkle too. So that went quite quickly. The CV squier really nice, and I plan on keeping it for ever. I might play it at the Shortscale gig... or I might go for the musima as it looks cooler.
The strat shape is the most comfortable of any guitar.
The strat shape is the most comfortable of any guitar.
As a few people have already said, my issue with strats was always that my first guitar was a strat copy, and it was a bit of a lemon, plus strats are quite tricky to get playing nicely (look how many people have said that the trem is impossible to set up) so problematic for n00bs. I think they are an absolute design classic; when someone says 'electric guitar', most people will think of a strat: on the flipside, I think that it is this very ubiquity that makes the strat get tagged as uncool. After my first strat, I've had a CP 60's (which I liked, but sold because it just made me want a Jazzmaster even more) and a Tokai (which was amazing, but I couldn't justify having it and a Jazzmaster and a tele and an SG - even then, selling it wasn't an easy decision). I always enjoy playing other people's strats - to me they feel like the perfect middleground between a tele's spartan, designed-to-be-mass-produced aesthetic, and the over-the-top fussiness of a Jazz or Jag. I've never played one with a really fat neck, but suspect that if I did, I'd have to buy it... I'm really not a fan of the in-between positions, but think that a good strat pickup (those in the Tokai are a shining example of this) can be about the most beautiful, complex-sounding pickups you could ever hear. They make a guitar sound like an electrified tree, which I love.
Strats take fuzz pedals better than any other guitar I've played. Not all humbucker guitars play nice with fuzz, i love my p90 guitars but sometimes a p90 with certain fuzz pedals can be an unfocused mess. For some reason I have never played a fuzz pedal that sounded awful with a Strat and I've used a lot of fuzz pedals. They all sound good, germanium, silicon, octave things, buzzy, raspy, thin, or thick. The Stratocaster just loves fuzz pedals and that's another reason I think Strats are undeniable.
paul_ wrote:When are homeland security gonna get on this "2-piece King Size Snickers" horseshit that showed up a couple years ago? I've started dropping one of them on the floor of my car every time.