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SurfGuitar101 Forums » Surf Music General Discussion »

Permalink History of Surf and Teles

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I read this on the TDPRI and found it interesting. The comments are from Elliot Easton of The Cars:

"I believe that some of the biggest surf hits are played on Telecasters. Here's why: many of the "bands", like the Marketts were actually made up of studio musicians like Tommy Tedesco, Jerry Cole, Hal Blaine and other members of the "Wrecking Crew", the studio musicians who played on most of the hits out of LA in the '60's. If a record took off, as was the case with "Out Of Limits", the label would simply put together a group of nice looking kids who could play and put them on the road as The Marketts, but they didn't actually play on the records. The Wrecking Crew played on everybody's records, from the Beach Boys to Sinatra, from Phil Spector to the Tijuana Brass. Every one of those guitarists played Telecasters on the rock 'n' roll sessions. In any photo of them that's all you see. They were mostly jazz guitarists and they all went out and bought Telecasters that would enable them to get more work playing the top teenage sounds. Kessell, Howard Roberts, Bob Bain, Tedesco, Burton, Deasy, Cole; they all played Telecasters."

Paul

All true - but find me ONE surf guitarist that aspires to sound like the Marketts? The fact is that the studio guys' guitar tones were pale copies of what the real surf musicians were doing.

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Not so true. Elliot from the Cars must really like Tele's because I think he's over selling their use in surf session recordings.

Session ace Glenn Campbell who played on many surf sessions played a Strat, Davie Allan who played on Hondells stuff played a Jazzmaster and Paul Johnson who played on the Challengers stuff played a Strat.

Also, on the early Beach Boys Hot Rod and Surf Songs they didn't use session guys... Carl played a Jag and Al Jardine played a Strat. David Marks from the BB also played a Strat and in The Marksmen he used a Jag.

(edited for typos)

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Last edited: Jul 09, 2010 06:49:12

Elliot's argument is really broad, he is only able to list one example... A sweeping generalization.

Indeed!

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A Tele with a Bigsby is just as good a surf guitar as any other Fender guitar, IMO. Any bright guitar with single coil pickups and a good vibrato is going to be a good surf machine.

http://www.reverbnation.com/thedeadranchhands

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jZEW74mHjQk

UmaFloresta
A Tele with a Bigsby is just as good a surf guitar as any other Fender guitar, IMO. Any bright guitar with single coil pickups and a good vibrato is going to be a good surf machine.

I love teles and I've been using quite a bit of a tele and esquire at the moment, but for a surf band, I don't think they cut enough in the mix when you are playing with a full band at gig volume. When you apply copious amounts of reverb, without some overdrive, to those guitars they just get lost in the mix.

JakeDobner

UmaFloresta
A Tele with a Bigsby is just as good a surf guitar as any other Fender guitar, IMO. Any bright guitar with single coil pickups and a good vibrato is going to be a good surf machine.

I love teles and I've been using quite a bit of a tele and esquire at the moment, but for a surf band, I don't think they cut enough in the mix when you are playing with a full band at gig volume. When you apply copious amounts of reverb, without some overdrive, to those guitars they just get lost in the mix.

I don't see why. Teles are known for cutting through the mix like a knife. Granted I haven't had a stock Tele for some years now. Razz

http://www.reverbnation.com/thedeadranchhands

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jZEW74mHjQk

But just not reverberated in a loud surf band with two other reverberated guitars. They just never sounded right. We love telecasters, but they just never worked.

What did Podolor use? A strat?

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Brian
What did Podolor use? A strat?

That is my recollection.

Best feeling guitar i ever played was a old ass tele... and the neck pickup was just magic.. but man that bridge pickup. just painful:)

I wanna play just like him when i grow up...

JakeDobner
But just not reverberated in a loud surf band with two other reverberated guitars. They just never sounded right. We love telecasters, but they just never worked.

Three heavily reverberated guitars = sonic mess, anyway.

http://www.reverbnation.com/thedeadranchhands

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jZEW74mHjQk

my Boss, used to be in a 3 piece surf band called Green Room.
the Guitarist used a Tele and it sounded pretty good to me.

Jeff(bigtikidude)

Teles with Bigsbys are GREAT for surf. I don´t know if old bands use them, but they work awesome for us.

El Papu & los Fantasticos Reverberantes

I think the conclusion here is Tele's are great for surf as long as they don't have to compete with the other guitars.

Danny Snyder

"With great reverb comes great responsibility" - Uncle Leo

Playing keys and guitar with Combo Tezeta

Formerly a guitarist in The TomorrowMen and Meshugga Beach Party

Latest surf project - Now That's What I Call SURF

11's, Bigsby, Reverb + Tele = Surf Guitar that works for me.

Snappy and twangy on the bridge, warm on the neck. Simple and effective.

Monkey

It appears that one of the ways that Elliot Easton cuts through the mix is with an altered Tele:

http://www.tdpri.com/forum/telecaster-discussion-forum/105569-heres-another-one-my-collection.html

Paul

I think part of the reason I like the Tele is that it is not a mainstream popular guitar......On second thought, TELES SUCK DON"T BUY ONE..... Razz

Monkey

I believe that Jan Davis used a Telecaster.

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