I'm with you SanomaSurf.
Tele's are great for anything, add a Bigsby and even better.
Hard to beat.
http://www.facebook.com/CrazyAcesMusic
http://www.youtube.com/user/crazyacesrock
http://www.reverbnation.com/crazyacesmusic
sysmalakian:
HAPPY NEW YEAR!
330 days ago
SabedLeepski:
Surfin‘ Europe, for surf (related) gigs and events in Europe https://sunb...
291 days ago
SHADOWNIGHT5150:
I like big reverb and i cannot lie
224 days ago
SHADOWNIGHT5150:
Bank accounts are a scam created by a shadow government
224 days ago
sysmalakian:
TODAY IS MY BIRTHDAY!
210 days ago
dp:
dude
192 days ago
Bango_Rilla:
Shout Bananas!!
147 days ago
BillyBlastOff:
See you kiddies at the Convention!
131 days ago
GDW:
showman
82 days ago
Emilien03:
https://losg...
4 days ago
#ShallowEnd is empty.
No polls at this time. Check out our past polls.
No contests at this time. Check out our past contests.
Joined: Jul 31, 2012 Posts: 4052 Nashville, TN. |
I'm with you SanomaSurf. http://www.facebook.com/CrazyAcesMusic |
Joined: Sep 06, 2012 Posts: 1299 Lawrenceville , GA |
joebonni wrote:
I learned to play on a Les Paul. When I first decided to pick up guitar a LP was my guitar of choice. But when I started playing Surf I quickly realized I needed something different. For me, my Jazzmaster is number one followed by my Gretsch, Strat and Tele in that order. |
Joined: Sep 24, 2011 Posts: 1424 Wellington, NZ |
SanomaSurf wrote:
Check out my surfboardcaster —He who dies with the most tubes... wins Last edited: Jun 11, 2014 18:35:31 |
Joined: Feb 15, 2007 Posts: 2825 Fredericksburg, Virginia |
I love teles! —Matt "tha Kat" Lentz |
Joined: Aug 22, 2010 Posts: 611 Netherlands, Europe |
+1 on telecasters. My first electric was a (Tokai) tele and I have been in love with teles since. But my biggest love is ofcourse my 1965 Jazzmaster, wich is from the same year as I am. But since we both seen a lot of mileage, I let the old lady rest most of the time and only play it at home. For practice and live shows I usually grap one of my tele's, not just for sound, but mostly for playability. Here's a quick snap of my toys: Front row from left to right: Fender MIM Joe Strummer tele (my workhorse for everything else than surf), Fender MIJ telecaster & bigsby (original, the pickups really sound twangy and trebly like a jaguar), Fender MIM tele with bigsby (Texas special pups, gonna be exchanged for vintage) Second row: Fender MIM special player Jaguar (with 2 Duesenberg P90's), Fender USA Jazzmaster (1965), Fender MIJ Jaguar (Seymour duncan pickups), Gretsch G5120 Electromatic On the wall in back: Fender MIM Wayne Kramer Strat (I'm a huge MC5-fan!), Dearmond M75T with bigsby, Epiphone Riviera Custum —www.alohasluts.com Last edited: Jun 12, 2014 10:58:21 |
Joined: Sep 06, 2012 Posts: 1299 Lawrenceville , GA |
Nice collection Arny! I think Tele's are probably the most versatile guitar there is, but alas mine has no Bigsby so it doesn't work for surf as well as it could. |
Joined: Mar 15, 2011 Posts: 8528 Back in Piitsburgh, Pennsylvania, where I grew up. |
Arny, Wow! Fabulous collection. —This is Noel. Reverb's at maximum an' I'm givin' 'er all she's got. |
Joined: Aug 22, 2010 Posts: 611 Netherlands, Europe |
@Noel & Surfskater: Thanx for the compliments, I will send them to the 'boss' aka my wife Lucky me, she supports my expensive hobby www.alohasluts.com Last edited: Jun 12, 2014 12:05:59 |
Joined: Feb 14, 2010 Posts: 802 N.E. Ohio |
Arny, tell me about your Wayne Kramer Strat please. Funny, Joe Strummer, Jail Guitar Doors, Wayne Kramer. I see a pattern. |
Joined: Aug 22, 2010 Posts: 611 Netherlands, Europe |
Greg, what do you want to know about it? Talking about heroes, where is the signature Link Wray Dano Longhorn or Supro? Would love to have one of those Here's the original Fender pressrelease from jan 2011 for the Wayne Kramer strat. I think this answers most of your questions: Fender introduces a replica of the starred-and-striped Stratocaster guitar that infamous MC5 guitarist and Detroit proto-punk Wayne Kramer used back in the late 1960s and early 1970s to kick out the jams and kill hate. It bears his distinctive US flag finish, with a red-and-white striped body and white-stars-on-blue-background pickguard and headstock. "Every band needs its own identity," Kramer says of his homemade design. "When I founded the MC5 and we started to play out, I wanted to develop a look. I was a big fan of Pete Townshend, and I noticed that Pete had a sport coat made out of the Union Jack motif - the British flag - and I thought, 'What a great idea, but I'm American.' "I figured my motif could be the American flag, the stars and stripes, and so I decided to paint my guitar in that color scheme to advertise my patriotism and total opposition to the direction the country was going in 1968." Special features include a roaring Seymour Duncan '59 humbucking middle pickup and a commemorative neck plate engraved with "This Tool Kills Hate." Other features include an alder body, lacquer body finish, maple neck with C shape and large '70s-style headstock, 21-fret rosewood fingerboard with 7.25" radius and vintage-style frets, vintage-style single-coil Stratocaster neck and bridge pickups, American Vintage hard-tail string-through-body bridge, Fender/Schaller vintage-style 'F' tuners and chrome hardware. Deluxe gig bag included. —www.alohasluts.com |
Joined: Feb 14, 2010 Posts: 802 N.E. Ohio |
Arny, is the humbucker balanced in output with the bridge and neck pickup? Or is it much louder? — |
Joined: Aug 22, 2010 Posts: 611 Netherlands, Europe |
Hi Greg, www.alohasluts.com |
Joined: Feb 26, 2014 Posts: 68 Los Angeles, CA |
some of you guys have badass stuff |
Joined: Jun 04, 2014 Posts: 8 PNW |
Noel wrote:
Thanks, Noel. You can tell I'm the new guy in the forum! Thanks for the heads up on the search options. Still, there's always something to say about the Telecaster —sanomamusic.com |
Joined: Feb 26, 2014 Posts: 68 Los Angeles, CA |
|
Joined: Jun 17, 2014 Posts: 11 |
I notice there's a lot of Gretsch fans on here, which I'm chuffed about. I own a 5125 which I originally bought for Rockabilly, and I'd often wondered whether it was suitable for surf, but as it turns out, it is indeed, from what I've read. Time to dig her out again. I haven't played in a while. The other guitar I always liked was just the plain old surf green strat, preferably with maple fingerboard. Gonna pick up one of those one day. ^^^ That gold sparkle strat up there is great. I wonder - what do you lot think of things like Phantom guitars? I think these are pretty cool for surf too. Last edited: Jun 18, 2014 17:04:48 |
Joined: Apr 25, 2011 Posts: 52 |
5125 - I have a Phantom. Real good guitar for the money. Jack Charles at Phantom Guitarworks is great to work with. And yes, they surf just fine. |
Joined: Jun 21, 2012 Posts: 78 Garda Lake |
|
Joined: Nov 15, 2008 Posts: 124 Massachusetts |
When I was a kid...in 1966...I thought all the Mosrites hanging in the window of Bright Note Music were so ugly...exception the one with the parallel pickups... Though now I am just not an electric person, I look at them and go...ahhhhhh! —Of all the things I've lost, I miss my mind the most... Last edited: Jun 27, 2014 15:58:20 |
Joined: Feb 21, 2011 Posts: 513 Ontario |
Heres the surf guitar fleet. The surfcaster gets the most use followed by the Jazz master. The Tele is hiding but knows its my number one for everything else. Long live Telecasters....... —I am not obsolete, I am RETRO.... |