it's not fair to judge other guitars against a Telecaster, cause you can't beat perfection...Reverb + Delay wrote:Played a Strat for the first time ever just about an hour ago. Tried out a CV 50s and a CV 60s and I really liked playing both as they felt more comfortable vs. CV 50s Tele. But, the sound just doesn't appeal to me as much as the Tele.
Thoughts on the Stratocaster
Moderated By: mods
XY
Played a CV Tele Thinline while I was there, too. Loved the light weight and liked it so much, I'm exchanging my CV 50s for one.dezb1 wrote:it's not fair to judge other guitars against a Telecaster, cause you can't beat perfection...Reverb + Delay wrote:Played a Strat for the first time ever just about an hour ago. Tried out a CV 50s and a CV 60s and I really liked playing both as they felt more comfortable vs. CV 50s Tele. But, the sound just doesn't appeal to me as much as the Tele.
- hotrodperlmutter
- crescent fresh
- Posts: 16665
- Joined: Sat Apr 04, 2009 10:29 pm
- Location: Overland Park, KS, USA
A standard Telecaster's bridge pickup knocks the socks off a standard Strat's any day of the week. And I think it would be fair to say that the majority of people (particularly the younger generations) who play electric guitar use the bridge pickup the majority of the time, hence the curried favour. I would argue that a Tele bridge pickup with Strat mid and neck might actually be the best config ever.
A Tele really is perfection in a sense. The same way the Steve Vai signature Ibanez is too. They are both a perfect expression of one or two priorities. That doesn't mean I'd play the Ibanez, but I still think the point stands.
Me too! Have wanted it for years.Justyn wrote:Sounds a bit like Richard Thompson's gitfiddle
Dood I want it sooo much
- hotrodperlmutter
- crescent fresh
- Posts: 16665
- Joined: Sat Apr 04, 2009 10:29 pm
- Location: Overland Park, KS, USA
i love the bridge pickup, and the neck/bridge pickups in combo, but hate the non-contoured body, and i'm not a huge fan of the neck size. perfection is such a stretch in my eyes, alas i can tell why so many others love them as they are.Fran wrote:Some old guy said that exact thing to me today. To him it is and i get his perspective but disagree at the same time.hotrodperlmutter wrote:LAL @ telecaster's being perfection.
dots wrote:fuck that guy in his bunkhole.
- Fran
- The Curmudgeon
- Posts: 22219
- Joined: Thu Apr 20, 2006 5:53 am
- Location: Nottingham, Englandshire.
I've been waiting for this.BacchusPaul wrote:A Tele really is perfection in a sense. The same way the Steve Vai signature Ibanez is too. They are both a perfect expression of one or two priorities. That doesn't mean I'd play the Ibanez, but I still think the point stands.
As much as i disagree that Blacktop models are what they say they are, Superstrats are essentially Stratocasters. Whether it be a Fender Richie Sambora Floyd Rose model or an Ibanez RG550. They are variations on a Strat.
Can we include Superstrat's in this discussion? Or not? What qualifies and does it need to say Fender on the headstock?
My Squier Stagemaster (Squier okay?) is one of the best guitars i've played incidently, also my BCR Gunslinger. I think Superstrats are the most versatile guitar ever built, but they do lack the soul of a standard Strat.
GeorgeF wrote:Jeff Beck?Justyn wrote:From what I tell, he hybrid/fingerpicks.
The dude is absolute best folk rock guitarist. Nobody else even comes close
Also I should mention that though I forgot about him a bit, I am a Rory Gallagher fan.
Better than the other white blues guy with a strat, by far
I never really had Jeff Beck pegged for a blues guy. Not when I hear Nadia and crap like that
You're standing on my neck
I dunno. Even an actual strat with a Floyd Rose and a hunbucker isn't a strat to me. Dunno why. For a long time I really wanted one, in olympic white. There was a band in Derry, awful cover band, but their guitarist had a Japanese strat with that setup that looked amazing.
I don't know when it stops being a strat, but it's maybe when you swap out the bridge for something so dramatically different, even though the Floyd is essentially a strat bridge with the strings stuck down mechanically instead of with glue.
That bridge and three single coils is a strat. To me, there's something more strattish about a Cyclone than that Japanese guitar I just mentioned.
EDIT, that goes for the Tokai Goldjobber too, it's more strat than that Japanese superstrat thing.
I don't know when it stops being a strat, but it's maybe when you swap out the bridge for something so dramatically different, even though the Floyd is essentially a strat bridge with the strings stuck down mechanically instead of with glue.
That bridge and three single coils is a strat. To me, there's something more strattish about a Cyclone than that Japanese guitar I just mentioned.
EDIT, that goes for the Tokai Goldjobber too, it's more strat than that Japanese superstrat thing.
- hotrodperlmutter
- crescent fresh
- Posts: 16665
- Joined: Sat Apr 04, 2009 10:29 pm
- Location: Overland Park, KS, USA