Here was a topic I covered back in 2006, when my blog was on Myspace. The earlier blog entries such as that one didn’t make the transition to Blogger, so I’ll redo it.
Just this last Tuesday, I took my Gibson SG to the guitar
shop in Falls Church, Virginia, Action Music, for a setup (restring,
intonation, etc.) and saw they had various Stratocasters and a Twin Reverb
amp. A week or so before, I’d visited
Fox Music – within walking distance, down Lee Highway, of Action Music – and
saw they also had several Stratocasters – brand new (!) – as well as a Twin
Reverb.
Before I go on about Stratocasters, I’ll comment briefly
on the Twin Reverb. I’m a
Marshall guy, with a 2554 Jubilee 25/50 watt combo (1x12”) and a Dual Reverb
(4100) 100 watt head, 1960AV 4x12” cabinet half stack. I love the rich, full distortion sound. But for an amp with “reverb” in its name,
the Dual Reverb (JCM900) has an extremely weak reverb sound, practically
nonexistent. A few years ago I tried out
the Fender amp at Guitar Center, out of pure curiosity, and the reverb was
incredible. If there’s an amp that makes
a clean sound good, it’s that one. They
started out at 85 watts, Fender boosted it to 130 watts, and then dropped it
back down to 85. If I ever wind up with
another $1000 to spare, I might well buy one.
Not today.
To make matters even more interesting, marginally so, I
put off finishing up the blog until after I’d done what I had to on Friday,
which included a trip to Fairfax County’s courthouse. I swung by the Fairfax location of Guitar Center,
now re-opened, as it’s listed as the only Northern Virginia authorized Rickenbacker
dealer. Sure enough, high up in the rafters
is a 4003 bass, and off to the side is a used Ritchie Blackmore
signature Stratocaster: white, black pickups, scalloped rosewood fretboard and
large headstock – for $949. Of all the
signature models, his is my favorite. But I prefer my own Stratocaster, modified
over the years (2000 to present) to my own specifications.
History. Up until
the 1930s, there were no electric guitars, only acoustic. In the ‘30s, pickups – the electromagnetic
device which captures the strings’ sound so they can be amplified - were
invented, and slapped on acoustic guitars.
However, two men, Les Paul and Leo Fender, realized that a guitar with
pickups doesn’t need an acoustic chamber and can, in fact, be simply a solid
plank of wood. Les Paul developed his own
model, brought it to Gibson, but they laughed at him. Leo Fender, oddly enough not a musician
himself, developed the Telecaster (originally called the Broadcaster) and his
invention, the first solid body electric guitar, introduced in 1948, was a hit. Gibson realized their mistake and brought
back Les Paul, who gave them the guitar which bears his name, in 1952. In 1954, Fender upped the game with an
improved model, the Stratocaster.
Initially the Stratocaster had three single coil pickups,
a tremelo/vibrato bar, and was available in two color sunburst with a maple neck
(to my eyes, a pale yellow). By the late
50s, solid colors (e.g. black) became available; in 1959 the rosewood (dark
brown) fretboard was introduced. By
1965, Fender was in bad health and sold his company to CBS, the TV network. That company enlarged the headstock, a design
which lasted from 1966 to 1981. Since
then the standard headstock has been small, with various reissue models
available. The Strat also became
available with double coil pickups (aka humbuckers), which are usually
associated with Gibsons.
Single vs. Double Coil. Single coil pickups are thinner, more of a
twangier sound, whereas double coil pickups have a thicker, meatier sound. However, overdriven sufficiently, even an
otherwise insubstantial single coil bridge pickup will sound almost as nasty as
a humbucker. Jimmy Page likes to remind
people that the classic sunburst Les Paul he’s so often associated with, wasn’t
on his agenda until Led Zeppelin II, and the first Led Zeppelin album,
including “Dazed and Confused”, was recorded on the Telecaster he was using in
the Yardbirds.
Famous Players. Jimi Hendrix, Ritchie Blackmore, Eric
Clapton, Robin Trower, Jeff Beck, Mark Knopfler, David Gilmour, Dave Murray, Don
Felder, Uli Roth, Yngwie Malmsteen, among many others. Hendrix took right handed Stratocasters,
flipped them over, and played them left handed (although there were lefthanded
Stratocasters by then).
Vs. Telecaster. I never liked the Telecaster and have never
even played one. The lack of an upper
horn, the headstock shape, etc., it still looks like Leo’s first practice
attempt at a solid body electric guitar, which is what it was.
Vs. Gibson. As noted below, most of my guitars are
Gibsons, which is Fender’s main US competitor.
Fender can and does put double coils on Strats, and Gibson has its own
single coil pickup, the P90, which went on Les Pauls before the humbucker came
out, and continues to feature on Specials and Juniors. I like both companies’ guitars, and see no
reason why anyone’s collection has to be exclusively Fenders or Gibsons absent
budget constraints or an arbitrary preference.
My Strats. By now I’ve had several of my own. I have 5 guitars: 4 Gibsons (Firebird,
Explorer, SG, and Les Paul) and one Strat.
I’m not inclined to acquire more than one of any model, but rather pick
what I consider the best version of that model, and the Stratocaster is yet
another example. So my progression was
as follows…
1. Applause
Stratocaster Copy. In September
1985, following my brother’s cue, I started learning to play guitar: first song
I learned was “Saints & Sinners”, by Whitesnake. And almost immediately I fixated on the
Stratocaster. But US made versions were
expensive, and I had only just learned to play.
So I worked at the Visa Section of the US Embassy in Paris over
Christmas holiday 1985-86 – under the guidance of a French guy, Bernard, who
turned me onto Hawkwind - and in January 1986 I bought this. Cherry sunburst with a maple neck. Not great sounding, and the only “Strat” I
ever had with a maple neck, but I was happy for awhile.
** Copies. I may as well address this issue here. The Stratocaster may well be the most copied
guitar in the world. In addition to
faithful copies like my Applause, companies such as Ibanez, Jackson, and even
Gibson have produced Strat-shaped guitars by the thousands. Our own first guitar was an Ibanez Roadstar
II, black with three single coil pickups.
I’d just as soon have a real Stratocaster, even if it was made in Mexico
and not ‘Merica (California). As
Fender’s quality control went up and down over the years, some feel that there
are many copies which exceed Fender’s quality.
Maybe, maybe not. That being the
case, I’ve never owned a Squier, which is Fender’s budget brand.
2. Fender
Stratocaster (made in Japan). By
fall 1986 I was at college, University of Maryland, College Park. My parents agreed to buy me this for
Christmas 1986. It was a Fender
Stratocaster, made in Japan, black, rosewood fretboard, small headstock with
standard logo. It had a locking
tremelo. I liked it, and considered it a
major improvement over the copy.
Eventually, though, I wanted a US made model.
3. Fender
Stratocaster, ’62 Vintage Reissue (made in the US). I gave my Jap Strat and my Strat copy to my
guitar teacher, Joel, who sold them for me, in June 1990. I used the money to buy this, a US-made
reissue model: black, rosewood
fretboard, three single coil pickups, small headstock with “spaghetti”
(pre-CBS) logo. Very nice, much better
than the Jap Strat. I made no
modifications to this. By January 1990 I
had purchased my first Marshall, the 1x12” tube combo, 2554 Jubilee edition, so
I had a nice combination – in addition to the Gibson SG ’62 reissue I’d bought
in May 1989.
4. Fender
Stratocaster, Fat Strat Deluxe (made in Mexico). My current model. By summer 1999 I’d fallen in love with the
larger, CBS-style headstock, and saw this at the Ozzfest: black, black pickguard, humbucker in the
bridge position, rosewood fretboard, and the large headstock. By January 2000 I succeeded in trading in my
Vintage Reissue model for this – at Guitar Center in Seven Corners - and have been
happy ever since. I replaced the stock
humbucker with a DiMarzio Tone Zone zebra coil (one black, one, white),
replaced the stock tuners with locking tuners – just pull the string through
and it catches, and stays in tune better than stock tuner – and the standard
Fender tremelo with a Super Vee Blade Runner.
Pepper Keenan, in DOWN, can be seen playing what looks like one in the
live video, “Diary of a Mad Band”.
Humbuckers on a Strat? Yep, some
of us like it that way, especially through a Marshall….
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