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You can't beat a Gretsch in gold

Tue 2019 Oct 29

Gretsch definitely does gold better than anyone else.

One of these days I'm getting a Gretsch. And it might be the G5232T Electromatic Double Jet.

I've seen my fair share of gold guitars. While true I could go cheap (as in under-$200 cheap) and get an Oscar Schmidt OE20G, a gold Les Paul clone, that would work but the Gretsch just has more class to it.

I like the skinny headstock. I like the 24.6" scale, which is slightly shorter than a Les Paul 24.75" scale, making for a ridiculously easy-playing guitar. I like the thumb pad style fret inlays. I like the master volume is in the most useful place (towards the front) while at the same time the other volume and tone controls are behind the bridge and completely out of the way when strumming.

This guitar is just designed well.

Oh, and the gold is also color-matched on the headstock, and the back of the body and the back of the neck and headstock too. And the construction is neck-through. No bolt-on here.

Everything is done right all around. This is why I said one day I'll get a Gretsch.

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It takes balls to play an Avocado color guitar

Thu 2019 Oct 24

Are you up to the challenge?

Take the Reverend Double Agent in Avocado. This is obviously not a regular run color. But it surprisingly works well.

Here are the three reasons why this works:

First is something you won't notice immediately. There's a P90 pickup at the neck position. That soap bar shape pickup with its off-white color on this guitar in this finish looks great. Sounds great, too.

Second is the roasted maple neck. Were this just a natural color maple, it wouldn't work. But it's roasted darker, so now it does.

Third is something you probably also won't immediately notice. Telecaster-like controls. The chrome plate breaks up the look in a nice way. Without it, the body color would be too overbearing.

Now as far as the playability and sound of the instrument, Reverend knows how to build a guitar right. It's modernized but has enough traditional elements to it where yes, you can just pick it up and play it.

The only thing that may throw you off at first is that extra knob on the upper bout. That's the bass contour control, and it's a thing Reverend does. Some like the different tones you get from it while others don't. If you don't like it, just don't use it and you still have a great sounding guitar overall.

And where the neck feel is concerned, if you ever wondered what would happen if you took Fender and Gibson designs where you used the best from each and combined them into one neck, Reverend pretty much nailed that.

Lastly, Avocado is actually not the most daring color. If you're really looking for different, see the same guitar in Mulberry Mist with dark roasted maple.

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Two future collectible guitars, Squier and Fender

Tue 2019 Oct 22

One for cheap, one mid-priced, both awesome.

There are two axes I believe will be future collectibles just based on their colors.

First up is the cheap guitar, the Squier Bullet Strat hardtail in Tropical Turquoise. This is the same Bullet HT guitar you already know, but in a color that will absolutely stand the test of time.

Squiers have hits and misses with colors. One of them that absolutely doesn't work is the Mustang HH in blue. It just doesn't work. All you need to do is look at the Classic Vibe '60s in Sonic Blue to understand why. The Mustang doesn't take very well to darker colors...

...hence the reason why Tropical Turquoise is such a good choice. It's basically a Daphne Blue with a little green in it. Just a little. Very easy on the eyes and works very nicely with the dark fretboard.

Next up is the Player Stratocaster in Capri Orange. This is a guitar I'm 100% certain will appreciate in value once it goes out of production because you simply don't see orange Fender Strats with 1-piece maple necks that often.

Now to note, Capri Orange is absolutely not the same as Squier's Competition Orange. Squier's orange is loud. Fender's Capri Orange is lighter and more tangerine-like. "Softer", if you will.

Why am I 100% certain this Strat will appreciate in value? It's because I guarantee there are many, many guitar players out there too afraid to pull the trigger and get a Strat in this color. In just a year or two from now they'll all say the same thing. "I should have bought that guitar back when it was available new." You can say the same thing about the Squier. The turquoise color is good and suits the Strat very well.

And even if you're not the guitar collector type, both of these Strat just look cool. Why get a boring sunburst when you could get one of these?

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The secret that country guitar players use for clean tone

Thu 2019 Oct 17

Country guitar players have known this secret forever, but most blues, rock and metal players don't.

A word that guitarists use to value a guitar's tonal worth is sustain. Gotta have that sustain. Sustain for days. Sustain forever.

The old school way of getting the sustain-for-days sound out of an electric guitar is using a tube type guitar amplifier head cranked up to 11 and a set of speakers in an enclosure that sound right when pushed. The amp when cranked up and its tubes hot creates a natural compression. The loudspeakers when pushed in a big box (usually a 4x12) vibrates in such a way that "carries" the audio "further". The end result is, you guessed it, longer sustained notes and chords - even when playing completely clean with no overdrive or distortion at all.

There's a problem, however. You can't just crank an amp to 11 and blast out a 4x12 cabinet whenever you want. This will annoy neighbors, or worse yet destroy your guitar amplifier head. This can get rather expensive very quickly. Can't have that.

Something country players have known for many years is that the secret of clean electric guitar tone is...

Compression.

When the old school way of getting that compression proves to be too impractical (and it usually is), that's when you run out and buy a BOSS CS-3 pedal or the newer BOSS CP-1X. Or if you want to go the cheap route, there are plenty of others available.

Compression makes any electric guitar sound better when played clean

Yes, I said any electric guitar.

Whether you have a $150 Squier or a $3,500 Gibson, run that guitar through a compressor and you'll finally get that clean tone you were looking for.

Where should you place the compressor in your effects chain? First. You want the sustained note to be as clean as possible before any other effects are applied, and that's why you put a compressor as the first effect in the chain.

Will a compressor increase noise? Yes, but when played clean you should barely notice it. If the noise does bother you for whatever reason, there is a solution. Use a noise gate as the last pedal in your chain and that will allow you to keep your guitar's volume to 10 while at the same time shutting it up when you stop playing.

In the end, sure, we'd all like to crank a tube-type to 11 through a 4x12. But again, impractical. Get a compressor instead and your clean electric guitar tones will sing the way you want them to. It'll even sound great when playing direct, using guitar modeling and listening through ear buds!

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Whatever happened to the Washburn Nuno Bettencourt N4 guitar?

Tue 2019 Oct 15

The Washburn Nuno Bettencourt N4 used to be a really big deal, but not-so much these days.

Or is it?

We have to go back about 30 years here to see just what made this guitar desirable to begin with.

In 1990, the song Get The Funk Out was released by a band called Extreme. I'm going to mention the year again, 1990. I'll tell you why this is important in a moment.

Extreme (or the marketing department for the label they were with) decided to do whatever they could to get noticed by going the almost-vulgar route. The album this song was on was called Extreme II, and of course the word "funk" in the song is supposed to be interpreted as cursing. Like I said, almost vulgar but not quite.

Where the band really made their money was with the smash ballad song More Than Words. Every single high school couple said that was "their song" in 1990.

The guitarist in Extreme is Nuno Bettencourt. Nuno played a signature Washburn guitar and it was called the N4. This guitar is in fact still made today, although the "true" version is N4 Authentic because it has aging done to it and whatnot.

All the guitar players back in the day thought the N4 was some amazing feat of engineering specifically because of the extended cutaway, known as Stephen's Cutaway. The extra top piece above the neck at the body is not just for decoration. It secures the neck so that more wood can be taken away at the body under the neck. On the back of the guitar is a curved plate securing the neck in place. And yes, this actually works. You get ridiculously easy fret access because of this design...

...but does anyone care?

Maybe.

Now I'll talk about that year again, 1990. This was the very last year of glam rock, which was Extreme's style. In 1991, Nevermind happened from Nirvana, and uh-oh, glam rock is dead as a doornail...

...but Extreme soldiered on through the '90s regardless up until '97 when the lead singer decided to try singing for Van Halen. We all know how that turned out.

I could go on for what Extreme has done after their reformation 2004, but do you care? More importantly, do you actually care who the hell Nuno Bettencourt is at all?

Washburn hopes that you do.

But even if you don't, the N4 is in fact a very good guitar.

Although the N4 is not my style of axe, it is built how most soloists prefer their guitars. Volume only, no tone control, no fancy wood crapola, no wacky graphics. It's all-machine, so to speak.

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