Over in the Downloads section, in Gear Samples, I posted a song by my surf band, the Royal Aces, called "Midnight Surf", in which I'm playing an Esquire. You can check that out and see what your thoughts are regarding the tone, feel, etc.
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Joined: Jul 13, 2008 Posts: 779 |
Over in the Downloads section, in Gear Samples, I posted a song by my surf band, the Royal Aces, called "Midnight Surf", in which I'm playing an Esquire. You can check that out and see what your thoughts are regarding the tone, feel, etc. |
Joined: Aug 23, 2006 Posts: 2123 The jungle |
I made a special effort to haul my Bigsby Telecaster across the desert to play it in this year's member's jam at the SG101 Convention. I thought something heterogeneous was just what the day needed. Ha! Anyway, I played like absolute sh*t, but it sounded okay, I guess. Maybe a hair shrill but I had no control over amp settings. The following day I brought it to Matt Quilter's Wave Machine thing at Don the Beachcomber. It fit in just fine. No problems to my ears. — |
Joined: Sep 04, 2009 Posts: 1800 Temecula, CA |
LHR wrote:
Your fine Tele playing and that Quilter Microslant 200 were an unbeatable combination! |
Joined: Jun 20, 2007 Posts: 351 Toronto, ON |
fenderfan wrote:
Yeah, I'll check it out for sure. Thanks! —Augusto Vite |
Joined: Feb 15, 2007 Posts: 2826 Fredericksburg, Virginia |
Not surf, but OH MAN! I say the Telecaster works for surf perfectly fine as long as it has a Bigsby or another tremelo. Through a Fender amp, this would sound like any other single-coil Fender guitar. Matt "tha Kat" Lentz |
Joined: Feb 15, 2007 Posts: 2826 Fredericksburg, Virginia |
13 years before the Tiki Oasis show, same song: the Stranger. Differences: Jazzmaster, Fender amp, Fender Reverb. I bet his Tele would have sounded pretty much the same. Matt "tha Kat" Lentz |
Joined: Feb 09, 2010 Posts: 413 Goleta, CA |
I have 2 surf green Teles with Bel Air Green binding built by a friend. He took pains to make them sound more "surfy" than a "stock" Fender Tele. I don't play much lead, but I can say these guitars rank up there with my Strats and Jazzmasters when it comes to rhythm...both for surf and Shads. Matt, thanks for posting the clips of "The Stranger". Makes me want to grab Rotnroby by what little hair he has and force him into a Shads cover band. He absolutely nails the Hank Marvin sound, and anything else he puts his mind to! —You're not drunk if you can put your socks on while standing. Last edited: Oct 20, 2011 00:43:23 |
Joined: Oct 05, 2011 Posts: 744 France |
I play many styles (heretic! ) and my Tele copy is the only one of my guitars that's ok for surf... at least until I can lay my hands on an affordable CIJ Jag or that Mascis signature Squier Jazz. Anyway, while it doesn't completely nail THE surf tone, I think it's still great if you want something that's a bit different from the Holy Trinity (Jag-Jazz-Strat). And the really sharp twang makes it the best guitar for spaghetti western music in my opinion. And for those who are concerned with looks: Old punks never die... They just become surf rockers. |
Joined: Feb 15, 2007 Posts: 2826 Fredericksburg, Virginia |
Stokemon wrote:
LOL, you're welcome, and Yeah, get Robby out there playing again! Matt "tha Kat" Lentz |
Joined: May 19, 2009 Posts: 1263 Austin, Tejas |
It's funny how a lot of people say that a Tele is ok for surf as long as it has a tremolo bar. Dick Dale plays a Strat with no tremolo bar. So is a guitar required to have a tremolo bar in order to be considered a surf guitar, or is it just the guitar itself that determines that it's a surf guitar? —Ted James |
Joined: Feb 15, 2007 Posts: 2826 Fredericksburg, Virginia |
That's a good question and I think it's up to the individual. I answered the question for my own tastes, as I use the tremelo quite a bit, and I posted video of how a Telecaster sounds when used for Shadows' style instrumentals. Any guitar could be a surf guitar if that's the type of music you wish to create. Matt "tha Kat" Lentz |
Joined: Jan 04, 2011 Posts: 1588 Berlin L-Berg |
It all depends on the Twang. A BCRich or ESP Guitar for expample will never have that Twang. Because of the Humbuckers in the first place. But there are a lot of great (surf) guitar players that don't use a tremolo (DD, SCOTS, etc.) It's all a matter of taste/playing/style. For me, I played a Gibson Trini Lopez (without Trem) for years. After switching to a Mosrite Mark V I can't imagine to play a guitar without a trem bar ever again. And, imho, a Tele with Trem Bar looks weird...but that's just my opinion/taste. — |
Joined: Aug 29, 2009 Posts: 1556 Israel |
Not really surf, but close enough, I just had to post this:
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Joined: Mar 29, 2010 Posts: 324 Spain |
My main guitar has been always an ash and maple tele played through a clean but slighty overdriven amp, but recently I got a new amp (really clean and loud sound) and I am starting to think that clean loud surfy sounds and tele bridge pickups do not match very well (but the middle position it is heaven IMHO). —https://lospipelines.es/ |
Joined: Feb 28, 2006 Posts: 813 Boise, ID |
DreadInBabylon wrote:
Mmmmm. Parson's B-Bender. I had a red sparkle ASAT and used a Hipshot B-Bender...well, I tried to anyway. I quickly realized it was impossible to use sitting down! —Shawn Martin |
Joined: Feb 26, 2006 Posts: 12159 Seattle |
JakeDobner wrote:
Turns out I was wrong! Only the quality of the music coming out of guitars matters. |
Joined: Jun 14, 2006 Posts: 889 New York City area |
Anonymous, |
Joined: Feb 26, 2006 Posts: 12159 Seattle |
I'm not sure where the original tube amp comment is, but if you aren't using a tube amp you are missing out on a lot of expression you can get out of your guitar playing. |
Joined: Feb 28, 2006 Posts: 813 Boise, ID |
Anonymous wrote:
There's a reason very few guitars use wrap around tailpieces these days. They're impossible to intonate. I don't care what frilly words PRS, Gibson, or whoever uses to convince people they're just as good as a tuneomatic and a stop tailpiece. —Shawn Martin Last edited: Oct 26, 2011 20:07:04 |
Joined: Feb 28, 2006 Posts: 813 Boise, ID |
JakeDobner wrote:
It's way back on the 2nd page (i think) of the thread, along with the commnent that I replied to re: wraparound tailpieces —Shawn Martin |