It sure looks cool, but that humbucker...hmmm
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Joined: May 16, 2006 Posts: 91 Florianopolis SC Brazil |
It sure looks cool, but that humbucker...hmmm —http://www.myspace.com/cochabambas |
Joined: Nov 09, 2006 Posts: 140 Los Angeles, California |
90: |
Joined: Dec 27, 2006 Posts: 336 near Amsterdam |
I'm not much of a musician folks, have a strat, but I love the look of Phantom Frank's axe, he sounds pretty good with it too... |
Joined: Jan 15, 2007 Posts: 107 Lost Angeles |
New member Jim here - adding my two cents... I am a Surf Newbie, but for now I have to vote for my Mustang - let me explain... I've owned alot of guitars over the years including several Strats. But when I listen to the Surf classics from 1962 - 65 the sound I hear from the guitars reminds me mostly of Mustang pickups through a low wattage (15 - 25 watt) Tube amp. Very metallic with a bit of roundness to it - and the occasional out of phase sound. Now I know the Jaguar does all this (and has the Tone wheels to adjust for lead or rhythm) and I've played several Jags recently- but I have to say those are some fairly harsh sounding single coils to me. Almost too overwound in my opinion. The only way I got the sound I wanted from the Jag was running it through a massive 15 inch in a Fender RI amp - I think it was either a TremoVerb or Vibroverb or something but it weighed a ton and cost about $3000! I also prefer a curved fretboard - like a Strat or Mustang to the Jag which is fairly flat - more like a Gibson. But that is just my personal taste. I guess I am all alone on this one but I have to tsay the Mustang Dynamic Vibrato works great for those dipping and warbling Surg Chords ala Perfidia and Surf Rider. I don't even use the Arm - I justy lean on the tailpiece an shake the guitar - seems to work great for me. My MIJ Strat also sounds terrific for Surf - the only problem is Vibrato is a Floyd Rose (I know - sacrilege!) and there is a Dimarzio SD Humbucker at the bridge - - but I use it for the gorgeous sounding middle and neck pickups - I'm telling you, the sweet vintage Fender tone is to die for. I also have an American Tele I've owned more than 20 years that sounds AMAZING for stuff like YELLOW JACKET, DICK TRACY and other Spy Tunes. If it had a Vibrato arm I'd use it all the time but I wouldn't dare - it is totally stock (it also weighs twice as much as my Mustang). So I gues that's three cents, not two.. I can't comment on the Jazzmasters because I haven't had the pleasure of playing a real one through an amp - though I did like the look and feel of the neck on the one I played unplugged. JM's are awefully pricey... anyone have any experience with these JM knockoffs - I see them on eBay and they look pretty appealing for about 1/5 the price of a JM Reissue. Jay Turser JT-SFM (Surf Master) Thanks. Jim C. |
Joined: Feb 27, 2006 Posts: 1054 Chicago IL. |
I don't know what was wrong with the Jaguar you played but the Jaguar neck radius is the same as any other vintage styled Fender. The neck is shorter than a standard Fender neck however if you liked the Mustang neck then you should like the Jaguar neck because the Mustang essentially has a Jaguar's neck. Does that make sense? As for the sound your hearing that might just be old recordings. The Mustang wasn't even around during the majority of the first wave and Most of those guys were using higher wattage amps than a 15 or 25 . —"as he stepped into the stealthy night air... little did he know the fire escape was not there" https://www.facebook.com/reluctantaquanauts/ |
Joined: Jan 15, 2007 Posts: 107 Lost Angeles |
That is strange - because the Jaguar I played had a Fully Bound neck with Block inlays - it didn't seem at all like a Mustang Neck to me Almost felt like an SG... I think it was a Vintage one - not a resisue - because it was tagged at $2800. Jim C. |
Joined: Feb 27, 2006 Posts: 3832 netherlands |
there was an extended article/interview with phantom Frank in dutch guiat mag "gitarist" oct '06 issue. it's in dutch, but he says a few inetrsing things. first, he mentions he actually likes strats and esp. tele's over Jazzmasters. he's built some strats and teles himself from gathered parts. this goes for other projects, not the Ph4 though, he mentions Madhur was recorded with the JM. about his JMs: that guitar sounds KILLER live! WR Rules to live by #314: |
Joined: Feb 27, 2006 Posts: 1054 Chicago IL. |
That would have been a later one. Fender got all fancy in the later 60s. But the neck should still be the same spec as that Mustang neck. Maybe the inlays threw you. —"as he stepped into the stealthy night air... little did he know the fire escape was not there" https://www.facebook.com/reluctantaquanauts/ |
Joined: Dec 27, 2006 Posts: 336 near Amsterdam |
strat's still leading.. interesting read WR |
Joined: Feb 27, 2006 Posts: 3832 netherlands |
if you don't have it Ill scan it and send it to you by email (the offer extends to anyone else who reads Dutch ) —Rules to live by #314: |
Joined: Dec 27, 2006 Posts: 336 near Amsterdam |
You got mail, thanks! |
Joined: Dec 27, 2006 Posts: 336 near Amsterdam |
Maybe not new for the distinguished members and scolors of this forum, but I never heard of this 10 string Jazzmaster before. Must be a collecters item... |
Joined: Nov 09, 2006 Posts: 140 Los Angeles, California |
That Jazzmaster with the four extra holes is noneother than Fender's "Compton" model, factory bullit holes included. Next is the "Bay Area JM" model in "rainbow color burst" with an optional "commie red' sparkle finish, and last but not least the "Orange County Jazzmaster" in pure white. g |
Joined: Feb 27, 2006 Posts: 25541 Anaheim(So.Cal.)U.S.A. |
Funny FG, but Jeff(bigtikidude) —Jeff(bigtikidude) |
Joined: Feb 26, 2006 Posts: 12159 Seattle |
I heard a funny Stephen Colbert quote... Washington DC: "The chocolate city with a marshmellowy center with a graham cracker crust of corruption" |
Joined: Feb 25, 2006 Posts: 19268 Des Moines, Iowa, USA |
Actually those crazy Dutch "Indo-Rockers" in the 60's used to add strings to their Jazzmasters. See the Tielman Brothers. —Site dude - S3 Agent #202 "It starts... when it begins" -- Ralf Kilauea |
Joined: Dec 21, 2006 Posts: 45 |
Weird..... Where the hell did the strings go? They would have to be at a weird angle from the head stock to the fretboard, and I cant see how they would be tuned, or even keep from breaking. Anyone know how it was strung? |
Joined: Dec 27, 2006 Posts: 336 near Amsterdam |
It sure sounded better then it looks... |
Joined: Feb 25, 2006 Posts: 19268 Des Moines, Iowa, USA |
Google the Tielman brothers or Indo-Rock. There are pages out there and they tell you how they tuned. The Jazzmaster with it's saddles made it "easy" to add strings. The Tielman brothers also at one point had 2 Bass VI's in the band, each one tuned differently. Through the wonders of YouTube, we in the US can now see some of their performances. Wild stuff! —Site dude - S3 Agent #202 "It starts... when it begins" -- Ralf Kilauea |
Joined: Feb 23, 2007 Posts: 1650 Santa Rosa, CA |
Strats have always been "the one"..lately though have been playing mostly JM clones w/P-90's and a Strat type vibrato..no wheely pots. One I use often has a Strat pup in the middle along w/the P-90's and is pretty versitle. — |