Mini Jazzmaster!
Moderated By: mods
Mini Jazzmaster!
Check this I found on eBay! A mini Fender Jazzmaster with built in speaker!
Apparently made in Japan between '95-'96
Loads of pics on the ebay listing: LINK
How cool is that? I wonder how much they cost when they were released.
"This is good to play for ladys guitar player."
Apparently made in Japan between '95-'96
Loads of pics on the ebay listing: LINK
How cool is that? I wonder how much they cost when they were released.
"This is good to play for ladys guitar player."
And they did a Strat version too is seems: LANK
- hotrodperlmutter
- crescent fresh
- Posts: 16665
- Joined: Sat Apr 04, 2009 10:29 pm
- Location: Overland Park, KS, USA
It's the small body that makes the neck seem wonky.hotrodperlmutter wrote:pretty good looking. neck makes it look weird somehow, but still great.
As a result, I'm really not sure I dig these at all. I like the concept, not so much the execution.
Donate to Ankhanu Pressekwatts wrote:That's American cinema, that is. Fucking sparkles.
- honeyiscool
- .
- Posts: 2072
- Joined: Tue Feb 01, 2011 11:36 pm
- Location: San Diego, California
Arrived from Japan, EMS, yesterday afternoon. I put a new 9V battery in, and played it for a couple of hours last night...
The body is wood, quite heavy, considering that it looks like a Rock Star plastic thingie. The paintwork and polyester varnish are flawless. It's pretty thick (full-sized JM thickness) to allow room for the speaker magnet.
The neck is satin-varnished, CIJ decal, N serial number, nice detailing and fretwork. Gotoh tuners.
I haven't pulled it down to have a look at the circuit board.
Strattish vibrato with weird JM-styled pickup that I'm pretty sure fits nothing else in the known universe.
Although the neck has a JM headstock and decal, it's 24" scale--roughly an inch longer than a Squier mini-Strat.
Which, incidentally it feels like, neckand stringwise. Not too appealing; loosey-goosey, hard to keep in tune, just like the Squier mini. Factory strings on both these suck. I'm gonna try something stiffer.
Two sound settings--"Clean" and "Distortion". Clean sounds as crappy as you'd expect through the onboard amp and 4" speaker, but Distortion puts you into the Hendrix Eternal Feedback camp right away. It howls and screeches with the best of them, and you can find the sweet spot with the whammy bar and wail away to your heart's content. My dog hated it immediately. A good thing IMO.
It does have a 1/4" output jack on the edge; I'm gonna try it through my Dual Showman tonight. Not expecting much, but you never know...
The body is wood, quite heavy, considering that it looks like a Rock Star plastic thingie. The paintwork and polyester varnish are flawless. It's pretty thick (full-sized JM thickness) to allow room for the speaker magnet.
The neck is satin-varnished, CIJ decal, N serial number, nice detailing and fretwork. Gotoh tuners.
I haven't pulled it down to have a look at the circuit board.
Strattish vibrato with weird JM-styled pickup that I'm pretty sure fits nothing else in the known universe.
Although the neck has a JM headstock and decal, it's 24" scale--roughly an inch longer than a Squier mini-Strat.
Which, incidentally it feels like, neckand stringwise. Not too appealing; loosey-goosey, hard to keep in tune, just like the Squier mini. Factory strings on both these suck. I'm gonna try something stiffer.
Two sound settings--"Clean" and "Distortion". Clean sounds as crappy as you'd expect through the onboard amp and 4" speaker, but Distortion puts you into the Hendrix Eternal Feedback camp right away. It howls and screeches with the best of them, and you can find the sweet spot with the whammy bar and wail away to your heart's content. My dog hated it immediately. A good thing IMO.
It does have a 1/4" output jack on the edge; I'm gonna try it through my Dual Showman tonight. Not expecting much, but you never know...