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Quoted: Joe Duplantier of Gojira: https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/9/91/20170615-069-Nova_Rock_2017-Gojira-Joe_Duplantier.jpg/800px-20170615-069-Nova_Rock_2017-Gojira-Joe_Duplantier.jpg View Quote If you have dual humbuckers, it's really just a Tele body and neck. |
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Quoted: Lots of dudes use Tele shapes in metal. Is that a "true" Tele though? It's not to me, but not a big deal. View Quote Well, OP started this thread saying how he likes the feel and look of a Tele, but not a fan of the sound... which makes many of us point to the various HH (and other non-traditional configuration) Tele-style options out there. |
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Quoted:
I just don't want to bring three guitars with me to go play somewhere, so I like stuff that fits in multiple genres without much trouble. View Quote |
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View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: I just don't want to bring three guitars with me to go play somewhere, so I like stuff that fits in multiple genres without much trouble. It can be done! I recommend this guy: SD TeleBridgeBucker |
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Quoted: Quoted: Here is my new telecaster I got last Christmas... http://static.keymusic.com/products/279943/XL/gibson-les-paul-standard-60s-bourbon-burst.jpg $2500 from Sweetwater. My others are all Strats but I'm really impressed with this Gibson. |
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I've no problem with Teles (never owned one but sure wouldn't mind if I had the spare cash) but might I talk you out of G & L?
I had one back in the early eighties when they first started, that thing was god awful. Sounded thin, looked like someone carved it out of a kitchen table, wouldn't stay in tune, and had like 2 dozen coats of cheap polyurethane on it, making the fretboard a disaster as soon as you sweat a little. The only reason I bought it was because I desperately wanted a 'good' whammy and couldn't afford a Kramer with a Floyd Rose yet. Turns out the whammy wasn't all that on the G&L, no better than a typical strat. I eventually replaced that guitar with a classic Kramer Pacer 2 years later, it was like going from Hell to Heaven. I'm probably being overly harsh for a guitar I had nearly 40 years ago, but oh well. |
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Quoted:
I don't think I would swap out the MFD pickups, it's kind of the reason to get an ASAT Tele instead of a Fender. View Quote Also, keep the telecaster pics incoming all! I love to see all the things people have done to them over the years. |
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Quoted: Here is my new telecaster I got last Christmas... http://static.keymusic.com/products/279943/XL/gibson-les-paul-standard-60s-bourbon-burst.jpg View Quote Attached File Here's the other tele I picked up in Feb. I like it. Attached File |
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Quoted: Nice tele! I opted for an unburst model. https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/97217/front-laying_jpeg-1890214.JPG Here's the other tele I picked up in Feb. I like it. https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/97217/tele-front-1024_jpg-1890219.JPG View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Here is my new telecaster I got last Christmas... http://static.keymusic.com/products/279943/XL/gibson-les-paul-standard-60s-bourbon-burst.jpg https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/97217/front-laying_jpeg-1890214.JPG Here's the other tele I picked up in Feb. I like it. https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/97217/tele-front-1024_jpg-1890219.JPG |
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Talk OP out of a Tele? Bruce Springsteen plays one. Do you really want to be like him?
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Quoted: Well technically, an ASAT from G&L. I like the way it looks and feels, but I have never been able to get over how every Telecaster sounds just like any other Telecaster. I mostly play blues, rock and also metal, I know it can chug, but I don't want the twang everywhere I go. What do? View Quote Learn Pretenders songs |
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Quoted: I have a Tele that's pretty decent quality. I almost never play it. My go-to always seems to be my old Strat. Still, I have a lot of different guitars for different sounds and playing styles. The custom I just put together has an odd mix of .12 - .54 string sizes on it, because I want the "deeper" resonance out of it, but I sure as shit can't sit and play bends all day on that guitar. In short, if you have a style void that needs to be filled and a Tele will do it, go for it! Always remember the formula for the number of guitars you need: n + 1 Where n is the number of guitars you currently have. View Quote This. If I had to settle for one guitar it would be my Strat, but they all bring something different to the table. |
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Can’t do, because they’re the best. Feel the best, play the best, sound the best for what it is. I would forget the asat and just get a 90s-2000s Mexican tele with maple neck, swap the pickups for some Rio Grande’s and the bridge with brass saddles.
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Quoted: I built the butterscotch about 12 years ago, the cream one about 3 years ago. https://i.postimg.cc/HxFgNs4V/6-BFEAFCD-3-BAE-4372-8-A78-763-F00674308.jpg https://i.postimg.cc/tJPjGQ2D/6-CBB927-E-F502-4760-BB48-C3-F99616-C573.jpg View Quote Nice work. Did you do the finishes? What pickups ya got in there? |
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So I ordered a beer colab with Speciation and Zao and I was going through their music a little before I drank it. Look at these soft-ass bitches with their 24.75" scale guitars
ZAO - The Rising End |
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Led Zeppelin 1 wasn't too twangy.
Get whichever guitar is comfortable and appeals to you. A modeling amp can make it sound however you want. Of course, a Les Paul Junior with single P-90 is always the right answer. |
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Quoted: The Stairway solo is a Tele. I'm pretty sure he used Teles on just about every record. View Quote Page used a Tele, a borrowed Flying V, and a borrowed Gibson acoustic on the first album. By 2, he was using the Les Paul both on stage and in the studio. The Tele did return for Stairway. |
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Quoted: Yeah, I used Guitar Reranch nitro on both of them. I don’t remember what pickups I put in either one now, but they were genuine Fender. The butterscotch was meant to replicate a ‘52, and the blonde/cream to replicate an early 60s model. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Nice work. Did you do the finishes? What pickups ya got in there? Yeah, I used Guitar Reranch nitro on both of them. I don’t remember what pickups I put in either one now, but they were genuine Fender. The butterscotch was meant to replicate a ‘52, and the blonde/cream to replicate an early 60s model. Both are beauties, but that white guard is a real looker! |
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Quoted: Among most "common" guitars yea you are right Fender is up there, much better than Gibson. Still dont prefer the neck size and shape of a tele for a lot of metal playing. Sweep picking becomes harder with narrow fret boards. There's a reason Ibanez, Schecter, etc... started using more flat fretboards. View Quote It all depends on what size hands you have, I know a 5ft tall girl that thrashes hard on a Fender Jaguar, she has hands the size of a child, and then there is Buckethead, he plays baritone Les Pauls because he has huge monkey hands. as far as the sound, It`s mostly the amp. My Mesa MK IIC+ makes almost anything I plug into it sound like the Voice of God. |
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Quoted: It all depends on what size hands you have, I know a 5ft tall girl that thrashes hard on a Fender Jaguar, she has hands the size of a child, and then there is Buckethead, he plays baritone Les Pauls because he has huge monkey hands. as far as the sound, It`s mostly the amp. My Mesa MK IIC+ makes almost anything I plug into it sound like the Voice of God. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Among most "common" guitars yea you are right Fender is up there, much better than Gibson. Still dont prefer the neck size and shape of a tele for a lot of metal playing. Sweep picking becomes harder with narrow fret boards. There's a reason Ibanez, Schecter, etc... started using more flat fretboards. It all depends on what size hands you have, I know a 5ft tall girl that thrashes hard on a Fender Jaguar, she has hands the size of a child, and then there is Buckethead, he plays baritone Les Pauls because he has huge monkey hands. as far as the sound, It`s mostly the amp. My Mesa MK IIC+ makes almost anything I plug into it sound like the Voice of God. Not fair, a IIC+ would would make my 8 year old sound like the voice of god |
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I love my Tele so ,uch that I put a Tele neck on my Strat to make it play correctly.
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I have been playing for 40 years,you NEED a tele!
Pro tip, when auditioning have at least a single coil guitar and a humbucker type with you |
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The guy from Gojira plays a Charvel Tele copy. It has humbuckers, but it's also 25.5" Fender scale and 22 frets.
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Quoted: The guy from Gojira plays a Charvel Tele copy. It has humbuckers, but it's also 25.5" Fender scale and 22 frets. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Quoted: If you are serious about metal do not get a telecaster. 6 strings, 22 frets, short scale length, single coils, mediocre high fret access. None of those sound great for a metal guitar. John-5 would beg to differ. Hmmm yes the Telecaster is made out of Telecaster |
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Quoted: https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/346593/MVIMG_20190929_101308_2_jpg-1890378.JPG Lots of different Telecasters. View Quote Indeed! I used to hang out on Telemodders.com & machine all kinds of interesting knobs, saddles, and even a strange looking tremolo bar for a Bigsby. Those guys made some great guitars! Years ago on the Fender forum a bunch of us donated parts and services for a raffle Tele. I made the knobs, but this is the only photo I have of the completed guitar anymore. BTW, those knobs should nestle down over the pot nuts, they are counter bored , I think the guy that put it together used long shaft pots is why they sit so high. |
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Quoted: If you come across a Washburn Laredo, get it. Made in the early 90's in their Chicago Custom Shop. https://scontent-dfw5-2.xx.fbcdn.net/v/t1.6435-9/38841985_10160758951350471_8171040495976316928_n.jpg?_nc_cat=106&ccb=1-3&_nc_sid=84a396&_nc_ohc=AbpAKxCkuTYAX9JbJtF&_nc_ht=scontent-dfw5-2.xx&oh=382fa7304e13ee78c7ab02af51593218&oe=608CF696 View Quote Early Lyon by Washburn guitars were made in Korea and had necks right off the same line as the regular Washburn models. Got one for $80 as a host for a build...nothing is original except the neck, body, and pickguard. |
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