Which Shortie for Blues?

The original shortscale guitars; Mustangs, Duo-Sonics, Musicmasters, Jaguars, Broncos, Jag-stang, Jagmaster, Super-Sonic, Cyclone, and Toronados.

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lank81
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Which Shortie for Blues?

Post by lank81 »

So since I've let my Jag HH go to Haze I've been missing it. It was a great guitar. What I'm missing about it the most is the short scale, due to my small hands. I've been jammin the blues a lot lately and the Strat is just too damn wide for me since I've got those short stubby fingers with a pinky that curls in. Yea, not a great combo. Anyways, I was wondering Jag, Jag HH, or Mustang ... which one would fit the blues the best but also be able to play more modern rock/grunge? From what I've read/listened to ... haven't got to play anything other than the HH but the Mustang seems to be the best choice. Any thoughts?
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Post by Dave »

To be a bit of a pedant you can play blues-stylings on any guitar as such but what kind of blues sound are you looking for? That seems to be the question whose answer would point towards certain kinds of set ups. Do you need a trem? fat humbucker sounds? What is your blues style?
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Post by lank81 »

Very true ... I'd say my three most influential artists on my playing are T-Bone Walker, Buddy Guy, and Jonny Lang. I can name twenty other guys I love but they seem to be the most influential for me. So fat humbuckers wouldn't be needed based on the guys I enjoy.
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Post by Bacchus »

Jag-stang. The neck pickup is a lovely a bluesey clean sound as you can get.
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Post by endsjustifymeans »

Honestly I always thought the stocks in my old 90's RI DuoSonic had a nice bluesy feel to them.
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Post by lank81 »

I've thought about the Duo too but it seems that once I get up around the 12th-13th fret my fingers get a little too scrunched. My buddy has one .. maybe I'll play with it again but last I remember it was a little too tight. I'm thinking 24" scale is the ticket but not saying 22.5" wouldn't work.
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Post by Haze »

I'd find a shortscale neck that you love and get a hot single coil for the neck (like the texas special in the jagstang) I've been using my jagmaster for blues
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Post by endsjustifymeans »

lank81 wrote:I've thought about the Duo too but it seems that once I get up around the 12th-13th fret my fingers get a little too scrunched. My buddy has one .. maybe I'll play with it again but last I remember it was a little too tight. I'm thinking 24" scale is the ticket but not saying 22.5" wouldn't work.
That neck is awful for noodling. it has real nice strat sounding pups though.
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Post by hotrodperlmutter »

really any of them that don't have humbuckers. all the pickups are basically strat ones and everyone knows that strats are the ultimate in blues toanz.
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Post by Fran »

BacchusPaul wrote:Jag-stang. The neck pickup is a lovely a bluesey clean sound as you can get.
A warm 'bucker does'nt go a miss in Blues either. But no-one will ever listen to us Paul.
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Post by lank81 »

A lot of guys play with buckers (specifically les pauls) - Derek Trucks, Joe Bonamassa, Jonny Lang, Oli Brown. So I won't rule out the buckers all depends on the neck really. The Jag HH (Black CIJ) had a nice tone but the neck was a little too thick for my tastes. I enjoy the thickness of my strat just not the scale.
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Post by Fran »

Bridge bucker, neck single, smooth 'Stang trem. The Jag-Stang, best of both worlds ((dude))
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Post by jagsonic »

What about a CV Duo? It plays great and has a nearly teleeske bluestone. ... and looks really bluesy :-)
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Post by Haze »

I have one of those, damn good instrument. If I were to make it purely a blues instrument i'd put hotter pickups in it and GOOOOOOOOO
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Post by dezb1 »

Why did you sell your HH it sounds like this perfect guitar for the job?
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Post by hotrodperlmutter »

dezb1 wrote:Why did you sell your HH it sounds like this perfect guitar for the job?
lank81 wrote:The Jag HH (Black CIJ) had a nice tone but the neck was a little too thick for my tastes. I enjoy the thickness of my strat just not the scale.
dots wrote:fuck that guy in his bunkhole.
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Post by jagsonic »

Check out the cv duo. Mine has the same thick neck as my us standard strat - only shorter. And i love this guitar. Sounds really great...
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Post by taylornutt »

My CV Duo Sonic has a very bassy tone in the neck and is a nice choice for little bones.
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Post by Phil O'Keefe »

Mustang / Musicmaster or Duo Sonic - all came in 24" neck versions, and all of them would work well for blues and modern rock styles. Heck, if you're on a budget, go try out one of those current Squier Duo Sonics - they're pretty darned nice and dirt cheap, even new... and yes, they have a 24" scale neck too. :)
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Post by crazygoat »

Just find the right neck and the blues tone will follow 8)

I think any guitar can be used to give a good blues style, some guitars have become synonymous with the blues but that is because each blues guitarist was comfortable with that particular guitar.

Just my two pennies worth, but i could be wrong :D