I take almost every new strat apart and throw everything away,put in the best of everything,wire to my liking,all soldered by hand with the best wire and solder,then it couldn't sound better,and doesn't cost thousands
You do a great job at blending the three guitars one after the other with the same lick. Makes it so easy to hear the differences. I think the Fender CS has a much more polished sound than the other two, and looks better but 4K? I don’t know. I have a 1990 fender USA Strat and it’s unreal. Dad bought it for me at 12...first guitar...I was spoiled....lol. Awesome channel brother. BTW, I changed from 10s to 9s after watching your comparisons.
Possibly wasn't the best move to compare a maple boarded stainless fret guitar with two rosewood boarded with nickel frets??? Brighter guitars generally feel sterile to me because I'm used to rosewood and nickel.... there's something about the low end that disappears that makes everything sound and feel all wrong...
Just bought a classic vibe. I compared it playing with a Mexican made classic style strat, I think it was called a Ventura, for a while and just couldn’t justify the massive price difference. The squire classic vibe felt good and sounded good too so that’s what I went with
I own a 64’ Fender Custom Shop Journeyman Strat ($4100). I will say having something so beautifully crafted and easy to play keeps it in my hands longer and encourages me to practice more. Because the instrument is so intuitive, attractive, and I made the investment, I find myself walking across the room to play it much more than my old Epiphone (also a great guitar)!
I bought a 63' Fender Custom Shop Telecaster(NOS) and man, the thing plays like a charm. Every time I look at it I end up picking it up and playing. Spent($4000) on it and it is totally worth it, I practice all the time and plan on keeping it for the rest of my life, so the money is irrelevant.
I have multiple ultra strats and I've swapped the pickups and pickguards...meticulously set all of them up and shaped the nuts. I would recommend it to anyone. My #1 Is a texas tea with a replica pickguard and pickups from David gilmours black strat. Can't see ever needing anything more than these. The build quality on the ultra line is the best fender has to offer without getting into custom shop etc.
I love the mario martins. Get one!!! They make amazing guitars! Of course me being me i swapped nearly everything out on it though. (Had em put in virgil arlo pickups, pots, cap, pickguard, tremolo and saddles.) Haha I'm a weirdo though!! 😄 🤣
Not discounting the fact that these are obviously all finely crafted instruments, I can't help but remind myself of the fact that Rory Gallagher, played one, single, very slightly modified, stock, off the shelf Strat his entire life, that Clapton's "Blackie" was a mongrel guitar, pieced together from used, stock, bargain bin instruments, and of course, Hendrix's Woodstock Strat was also a stock, off the shelf, mass-produced, instrument.
Makes me feel better about the multiple rebuilds of my A.S. Strat. Next is the 3 mini hb mod and a 24.75" scale neck. I'll make up for the sacrilege some day with a C.S.
David, I've been saying this since I picked up my first guitar. How is it these guys could play outstanding with stock stuff; Clapton with pieced together guitars - all having tiny vintage frets with 7.25" radius boards. Probably talent. I think we let our emotions carry us away today. Listening to Rhet, clearly his assessment was purely emotional. Count the number of times he reference "looks" and "vibe." Vibe being a completely made-up, mind-game.
David Mahoney back then there was no custom shop or «vintage» strats.. ofcourse the factory strats are getting better and better, however the cs og master built fenders have a selected wood, selected parts and so on. I know the price is alot more than what you Get. Bet if i had 4000 to blow on a guitar i would buy a custom shop 60’s strat. Improved but still classic and full of tone
@@michaelluczak3019 You mean like all the other companies? The patent, if there was one, has expired. Fender only has the rights for the headstock shape now.
South paw here to... not sorry. I'm glad that others look at my guitars, comment on the beauty then ask to play them, only to realize they can't because they play backwards. Lol
As a new, left handed player (I've been playing for about 2 months) should I learn right handed instead? I started out with the mindset of doing what was most comfortable. But I've already noticed that it seems like it would be easier to just bite the bullet and learn righty. Particularly when it comes to guitar selection and availability. I also want to collect vintage guitars and it would be great to be able to play them instead of them just being show pieces. Any advice? Thanks in advance!
@@zachattack2775 personally, I started out playing right handed for about 6 months and progressed very slowly, then switched to left handed and it was night and day. I was ambidextrous as a kid but still just chose the left hand for writing and guitar. It's up to you though, but consider this: when you play left handed, your guitar is like Excalibur, only the Trve King can wield it.
I wish you had added in a run-of-the-mill Am Std Strat to the comparison...I would have liked to see how it compared to the premium and above guitars you looked at here...
DavidSJ I get this, but there’s literally 100s of others demos on RUclips of American standard strat vs custom shop strat and squire vs custom shop and squire vs American. This demo is great for people who are going for a custom shop fender, but maybe there’s something else out there within that custom shop realm that they didn’t know about.
@Boston Mike: Exactly the reason I wish he'd included a Nash in this look :-) though I realize this line of thinking might lead you down a path that never ends . . .
Major difference is going to be the nitro finish. I love how nitro guitar ages with cracks in the finish and all of that. I also have poly guitars and they never age, well except for swirl marks :) One thing that I do prefer nowadays, is recessed heel so I can reach the upper frets. I also like 9" radius, two point bridge for stability, old kluson tuners, basically some old mixed with some new appointments. If I was buying a strat today, I would either buy a used american fender strat or the new mim player's series that come awfully close to am std. strats.
It's all subjective at this point. No strat in the world is "better" than an American standard, it's just slight differences which anybody may or may not like.
Agreed, me too, Rory Gallagher custom shop, just a beast, what a neck, smooth as silk, I will have it until the end of my days!!! I have gone through a ton of strats throughout the years, never real happy with any of them, traded 4 guitars for this one, worth it!!! Playability and tone!!! Pro guitar!!!
@@jim21jam I have a Rory Gallagher custom shop too, and fully agree about your comments, smells wood, smells leather, body vibrates long looking for you playing, neck so smooth ... AND the tones of those pick ups, warm, powerfull, still sparkling through an AC15 or 30. Really honoring the great Rory Gallagher.
Absolutely, Ive had Squiers, Mexican Strats, AM standard strats and finally found a 1959 fender custom shop that is just incredible. There’s nothing like it.
I own a 59 sunburst heavy relic CS. Best guitar that I’ve ever played. It just sings and is easier to play. Everything sounds better. I have a Fender American Standard as well, which is a great guitar, but there is no comparison. If you really feel like spending the money, don’t be afraid. The guitar will keep you happy for many years.
I bought a PRS Silver Sky about a year ago and love it, PRS does a great job on quality control and it was less than all of these options, but, hey, everyone has their preference
I say prs core over fender anything any day. That’s my personal opinion. You can build and finish a strat for about 1k that rivals a suhr or fender if you know a good luthier, you get boitique pickups, get the fretboard radius width and nut you want from warmouth and sand and finish yourself. If you don’t or can’t dp those things can then I can see why you prob can’t do that. But i think fender custom shop looks cool but it’s just overpaying by 3k imho. They are nice but why be stuck with a reproduction old guitar from fender for 5k. I’d rather have 2-3 custom 22’s or a real vintage gibson or whatever else
To my ear the Suhr did not sound as rich in overtones. It sounded solid and fat in the low frequencies but didn't have much "air", which is were all the expression of an instrument is. I kinda liked the Mario better than the Fender, at least in the clean tones.
I agree completely. so for everyone who wants to get semantic, based on the audio through a computer using headphones. wtf else we supposed to base our opinion on?
Never buy a guitar that doesn't inspire you. I don't think there's anything responsible about buying something less expensive if it doesn't excite you because you're never going to play it and then it's a total waste of money. Oh, and definitely the Fender. I picked it right away before I knew which was which. The Suhr sounded about as good as my Squire Strat to my ears, which isn't bad, but my Squier would cost around $500 tops.
Joe Chip Great point. I have a Suhr Modern that I absolutely love and some really nice Fender strats that I also love, but the Suhr Standard series does nothing for me. Build quality you would expect from Suhr but just doesn’t have the strat feel. I don’t care about SS frets, compound radius, locking tuners, etc on a strat. I have plenty of modernized super strats for that. I want it to feel like a strat with all of its perfect imperfections. That’s what makes it a strat.
Your advice is wise and accurate and true. Buy the real American made fender, You will love it for decades and respect it. If anyone needs a discount guitar, fender makes their own discount guitars, called the Fender Squires! I bought four imported discount guitars this year, the Danelectro is the only one I can play on stage because that is the only novelty guitar brand that rock audiences respect. It also plays pretty freaking awesome, it's effortless to play their 12 string Danelectro, amazing. All the other imports that I got this year, felt good that I was saving money when I purchased them, but they just don't have the sentimental value of an American made fender, I should've just bought one American made fender. I was foolish to nickel and dime myself, and eventually deprive myself of an American made fender because I bought three discount copies instead. Doh!
In the opening of the clip the Sunburst immediately stood out, tone wise. The Suhr sounds very modern. Rhett, great playing as always. Keep it up and yes, a Gibson shoot out would be great.
@@magnushallmundsson6927 It's my understanding that "white" guitars have a brighter tone while sunburst guitars sound more colorful, maybe more mid-range. I was going to have a white guitar finish on the front and a sunburst on the back to even out my tone!
The Mario Martin just sounded so fine I couldn't believe the difference. Pure heaven made into a strat style guitar. The Fender was in the middle and the Surh was last.
Indeed. Hendrix or Rory or any number of other guys couldn't have cared less about boutique labels. Maybe these guys are spending far too much time comparing apples with apples when they should just be playing.
@@bm7760... you are right in playing... but how good you re in kontact with jimi an rory.... perhaps they hear the difference between the sound of different instruments better than you and me
Yes you're right. Talent plus a cheap DIY kit with the right measurements, setup and a nice fret work will put to shame to those overpricing Fenders and Gibsons.
I agree. The good thing about a custom shop guitar is that the person making it maybe spent little bit more time on it to make it more playable. About Hendrix, let's not forget that he didn't have an access to a 60 year old guitar when he was playing. He played guitars that were just made by fender and didn't have time to age. I think this point is mostly ignored by those buying vintage gear. It's all in the fingers baby.
I would take the Mario just for the look. The Fender sounded a little sweeter/melower sometimes but that may have been the picking. The Mario as you said has vibe for days. That's mine!
$4500 was not an option. I wanted a Strat, bad...I put together my own parts-caster from Warmoth. My take was a Post Modern style Strat. Pretty much like the current Black Fender version? I chose all the options, some vintage, some modern and did all the finishing work. $1300 All those guitars look and sound great. Feel, playability and Vibe are important. If money were no object, I’d get a really nice true Vintage Strat. If I had the budget, I would definitely get the Custom Shop...though probably not the sunburst? If/when I have the money, I might build another one? I’m glad I finally have a great Strat! The spec’s are custom, sounds “right” and plays well. Didn’t break the bank. It’s a weird thing how things come together? Sometimes you have to try different options to find the “right” part. Sometimes, the parts have to live together for a while before a really good guitar becomes a really great guitar. Sometimes difficult
I've owned Suhr, Silversky and Fender Strat. My verdict, Suhr makes the best quality guitar not the sounding guitar, Silversky the best sounding guitar not the best quality. However, Fender specifically Custom Shop, makes the imperfect sound and not too perfect quality, but Fender Customshop able to make the right combinations to make it the best of all. Fender, afterall is the rightful owner of stratocaster no matter how other builders try to replicate it. Cheers.
Honestly, a blindfold test is really the only way to be fully unbiased. Seeing that Fender name will usually spark a sense of that certain "something" that may not really be there if you didn't see the name. Or at the very least, may not be there at that price range. I'd like to see a test of midrange Strats with Rhett blindfolded. Andertons does this on occasion and it's a real eye-opener - egregious pun intended. Hope to see one in the near future, Rhett! Nice playing by the way!! 🎶💜
They don’t do them because they are afraid of saying a squire sounds better than a 5k fender . Confirming what I’ve always said ..they all sound the same.
@@son0fsocal I think you're right. They really do sound the same. Which is a testimony to Leo's amazing design in the first place. The thing for me is, does a $5000 dollar custom shop feel that much better? As a lefty, I've never played a custom shop Strat or Tele. So I'm not one to say. But after rolling the fret board edges and dialing in the fret ends, is there really a $4500 dollar difference? I'm guessing not.
Yep. I have two awesome Mex Road Worn Strats from 2009 - Rosewood and Maple - both have Ron Ellis PUs in them. They sound like custom shop Stratocasters and one of the Strats I purchased used for $600!! 4K for a Strat? Total rip off man!!
Great video Rhett! I completely agree with your final analysis, if you're thinking of buying a "real" 60's Strat for $30K, go with a Custom Shop one. I was given the same advice back in 2002 and have played my Cunetto Custom Shop 60's Start to the point that it's gone from a Relic to a Heavy Relic. It's been a work horse.
I don't know. Maybe it's just me but from playing for over 35 years in the music industry, I've personally found that if a guitar feels good in my hands, stays in tune and has great sounding pickups, no matter what the price point be it $3500 or $350, it's all that matters. Inspiration is key. Everything else is marketing to separate the consumer from their money.
These overly relic'd Strats are just investments with value growth potential. There's nothing wrong with that, if you don't break them or have them stolen they're a great investment with value that will always rise. But the monetary value of a custom shop Strat is just a religious story that guitarists have told themselves and choose to believe.
Stratocaster sounded the best to my ears. I owned a 62 Stratocaster at one time unfortunately I had to let it go. Custom Shop Stratocaster it's what I play nowadays it's a great guitar strange as it may seem it can hang with a lot of vintage strats I have played.
I played a Strat that John Cruz built once and it was the greatest guitar that has ever graced my hands. It was also $7,000. Still an awesome Strat though. I had my wife take my picture while I was playing it. LOL!
Yeah, people knock John Cruz prices and CS prices but I agree totally, a John Cruz 59 Strat I played was the best guitar that I ever played, ever, and I've played a LOT of guitars.
I'm a Tele guy, all the 3 Strats sounded pretty much the same to me. But I understand the points you make. When I picked up a Tele Elite at the store, while it sounded pretty much as my MIM Tele, and not worth more than 3 times the price of the MIM, there was something special about the Elite, it resonated with me, it felt great, I could play it day, so I laid out the 3 grand and bought the Elite.
I gotta say the custom shop sounds the best to my ears. I also recall playing a Fender John Cruz Custom Shop and it sounded better than any Suhr, Anderson, whatever, that I've ever played. Great video Rhett!!!!
I dream about the day when I’ll be a good enough player where these differences matter to me LOL! Oh well, gotta go practice on my MIM Strat that feels and sounds fine to me! 😉✌🏻🎸
some of the biggest bands in the world don't care so much, they play average guitars , and dont spend so much money on a super pricey guitar and worry about micro feels and all. Any guitar can be good, price doesn't matter. I think this is more of a hobbyist thing for sure. An actual musician will learn to write on any guitar and a better one can write to the tonal qualities of each guitar.
I have been playing guitar for over 25 years, 15 of that as a professional touring musician. That being said… You are a phenomenal guitarist. Great taste in music. Strongly opinionated, and relatable. Thanks for bringing honest, great content to the world of guitar. Lmao literally just heard you say “that being said” like 30 seconds after i wrote it up there 🤦🏻♂️
John Suhr makes the best value guitar imo. Hand built, true single coil pickups with noiseless system built in, stainless steel frets that don’t wear, locking tuners and Gotoh hardware. It’s the guitar Fender should be making for the modern/classic player.
Jack Horvat The ML has a higher midrange frequency plus a high output. Therefore a fatter tone which also leads to less clarity compared to CS pickups that have less output and are wound to have less of those midrange frequencies. Pickups are easy to replace so I’d rather spend less $ on the suhr (that will stay in tune and have frets that won’t wear) instead of the CS and get pickups to my liking.
I absolutely LOVE my custom shop p bass. What’s also great is that you can find them used as low as $1600 thru around $2000-2800, depending. These will typically be the Teambuilt stuff, but the Teambuilt Custom Shop stuff is the best of the best “production” guitars that Fender makes. It’s a much smaller operation than the US production line, they use the same machines that they used back in the 50’s, and wood selection is completely separate from the standard US production line’s selection, and quite a bit better. So the way I look at it, is if you were planning on buying, say, a brand new American vintage re-issue, then you’re putting down close to the same money that you could put toward a used Custom Shop instrument. It’s an awesome way to get into owning an instrument with that type of sentimentality if that’s what you’re looking for/into. And if you’re not into that, then hey, there’s a shitload of options for you as well, and we can all respect eachother as players and be happy for one another’s purchases, regardless of price point or manufacturer.
There had better be a "feel" difference to justify the difference in price, because there is no way I could pick one from the other in a band setting. I had to strain to hear any difference at all. Enough to wonder if I imagined it.
It’s crazy how either our ears or what we’re listening through accentuates different frequencies. I had it playing in the background and noticed every time the CS came on. I was actually pretty amazed at the difference. (Not saying it’s worth the price difference, just swap the pickups and it’s gotta sound near identical)
Scut Monkey IDK man, I’m listening to this on iPhone speakers and even with RUclips’s immense compression I can hear a pretty clear difference between each guitar. It’s not that one is necessarily way better sounding than the other but just different. I’d happily pay around $2k for a nice strat but I think $4,500 is getting pretty over the top for a strat. Just my opinion. If the CS feels amazing to you and you have the pocket for it then by all means go for it.
Absolutely yes. The way I think about it really good craftspeople are still working on these and trying to create instruments that will sound fabulous now and age well. Same for boutiques. And we all gotta make a living...
My Mexican Strat in Polar White is the only one I've ever owned and I love it. If I opened my guitar case tomorrow and had that 4k custom shop Strat in it, I'd sell it, buy another Polar White Mexican Strat and 3 other guitars.
That’s why it’s so important to play guitars first. I’ve got a few real pricey guitars which I love. But my current favorite is my mim Tele. Every guitar is unique even the mass produced ones. Just get one that feels good and makes you want to pick it up!
The opening sounds for all three, the Fender was and still is ahead for the rest of the video . Used head phones and sonically you can hear and feel the differences. Very cool and useful ! Thx
Suhr has the favored sound to me, much more huge mid-range squawk......not too bright like the mario and much more punch than the fender...............imho
I've owned both Fender American Strats and Fender Custom Shop strats. Now, I only have Suhr and Tom Anderson strats. I will take those over Fender every time.
Suhr and Anderson’s fit and finish are second to none. Their necks are smooth as butter, fretwork is perfect, and they sound great. I also don’t like that fender doesn’t use stainless steel frets. You really need to try a suhr or Anderson next to a Strat. Even though they are similar styles the feel and attention to detail is way different. Some guys prefer strats and that’s cool. Whatever works.
Why in gods name to they still make you take the neck off to get at the truss rod. Living it CT, it's bone dry in the winter and humid in the summer and truss rods need need to be tweaked often. Is it just to honor a 60 year old 'vintage' design flaw????
@@lockedowng I have MIM thinline with the headstock bullet - 2 second tweak. I have a nice 30 year old MIJ telecaster with that old design which I never play it because it needs adjusting and I can't be bothered. Think of the tech in the store taking the neck OFF 3 times to get it right.....
@@jmendi55 - That's why they charge you so much money for what should be normal operators adjustments. A hint: the shop calls it a "set-up" and some take 10 minutes - and some take most of a morning(or afternoon, you're still talking about a couple of hours) to dial it in. Remember, string guage, height, action, ALL have to be addressed. So if you don't have a Strobo-tuner or the experience to do it, be ready to pay your money.
It's a Custom Shop Guitar, couldn't you just specify the truss rod be adjustable up at the nut or the new wheel type adjustment. I mean for over $4000 you can order just about any option you want.
The answer? Find a used Custom Shop Strat. I just scored a 2018 for roughly $1,000 off the cost of the same model new. In fact, it cost about the same as the Suhr in this video. They're out there.
Rhett, if you haven't yet, try grabbing the dropped 5th interval on the opening chromatic climb on Wind Cries Mary. The reason you can never get the same tone as you get with a vintage instrument is because *wood ages.* I've been a woodworker as well as a guitarist most of my life, and I know for a fact that this is true. If you are a carpenter that does remodeling of old homes, then you have probably pulled some old douglas fir studs out and found them hard as nails as compared to new douglas fir. Just driving a nail through fir that's been sitting in an old house for 100 years is super hard comparatively. Over time wood not only hardens, but it becomes more stable as well. These qualities greatly effect the tone of any instrument. These strats all have very slight differences tonally (like any guitar even in the same model there are differences). I think it comes down to how it feels for you and the options you want.
I have a Fender strat build in the custom shop (avri 62 hot rod from 2006). The QC did not blow me away; one fret has air under it (cause they cut too deep), the nitro lacquer had blemishes out of the box, the fret-work is only ok, can't get low action. I would never sell it, though, cause it just sounds and plays so well. It's even loud acoustically. It's my only strat, so I can't compare it to the cheaper ones.
$4K for a bolt on neck guitar is in a sense outrageous. It's just alder wood and maple and it's all cut on a machine LOL Parts casters can be great, especially if u have someone local who can do nitro finish. I'm also a big fan of Warmoth's compound radius necks which I don't think Fender makes.
One thing I can say is that I'm glad I bought my guitars when I did. I have two Strats, a white '62 Reissue and a sunburst '79. Both would be out of my price range today. When I go to a big chain store I'll go pick up a $200 Squier and see how it compares with mine. With craftsmanship there is no comparison. With tone sometimes I'm pleasantly surprised. I think the next time I see one I'll try a brand I'm not familiar with.
Good review and to me with headphones all sounded very similar so I suspect it is how you connect with the Instrument. Also why not next time include some cheaper fender strats around $2000, $1500 then $1000.
My guess is Hendrix was playing an off the shelf strat from Manny's that he paid $150 for in 1965. Then he'd set that on fire and get another one. So much for connecting with a guitar.
I said this in another comment, there’s 100s, if not 1000s, of cheap vs expensive guitar reviews/demos on RUclips. There’s almost no custom shop vs boutique or custom shop vs vintage or vintage vs boutique. Why does everything have to be compared to something cheap in the guitar world?
Heard more dynamics and frequencies in the fender. the Mario was in the middle to me and suhr didn't have the chime the others did. Much darker. Over all I def preferred the fender
Awesome review, and being a Fenderholic and playing Fender instruments since 1969 I really loved the great shootout you provide us all with, your vids are the best, thanks much Rett!!!
For the price of the Fender I could build two Warmoth strats with the most insane wood choices and the nicest components and still have money left over. The price of the Suhr could still build two strats with nice wood and impressive components. If you are a DIY-er I'd highly recommend that route if you really need/want a custom instrument on a "budget." I put that in quotes because my guitars still cost more than an American strat, but I still got to choose every aspect of the guitar. I just had to put it together myself. No idea what getting a tech to build it for you would be, but I'd bet it would still be cheaper than going thru Fender/Suhr/others.
Building your own Guitar and choosing all aspects of the instrument is the best thing ever. It's like designing a girlfriend from the ground up for yourself...............
Warmoth builds are hit or miss IMO. There’s more to a great guitar than neat specs. Crazy figured woods do nothing for me personally anymore besides being pretty to look at. Kiesel is a great example of being able to spec out a guitar to the moon and back with exotic woods and finishes and ending up with a $4k guitar that plays like a $900 guitar with a cold and sterile feel. Of course it’s all subjective. I’m not arguing you need to spend anywhere near $4k for a CS strat if you go the Fender route. I’ve played some pretty great MIM strats that felt and sounded wonderful. Just don’t want people to make the mistake of thinking that buying super fancy woods from Warmoth is going to automatically give them an equivalent or superior guitar to a properly built Fender.
@@MK4vDubbin Agreed Bolting the parts together is about 20% of the project. Setting it up and fine tuning is the rest. I think with Warmoth parts you are assured a certain level of quality that you can fine tune and set up the guitar to be a superior instrument, the Devil is in the details. And if a person doesn't know how to properly set up a guitar and is building/assembling an instrument they really should learn how and what to do. The information is out there and accessible. Myself, I'm self-taught and have had very good results so far. 3 builds and three winners. That said, I have attempted to work on some really cheap guitars with mixed results. I've had examples of a truss rod not responding and/or the bridge/neck not even properly aligned, again that was with cheaper components. You only get what you pay for, and that's if you're lucky! I still contend that building a guitar for yourself can be a wonderful/rewarding experience. As with most things in Life, Your Mileage May Vary..........
@@MK4vDubbin IMO, Warmoth is only hit or miss of the person building it/buying the parts doesn't know what they are doing. The niceness of the specs isn't what makes them special, it's the fact you get to choose every tiny detail, even if it's the cheapest options, you still got to chose. That's what makes it "custom". Truth be told, I've heard some horror stories about Warmoth or similar companies, but everything I've built is way better (for me) than whatever I pick up at a guitar store, and the quality of construction is superb. If you don't know exactly what to get you can definitely end up with a less than perfect guitar that might only look nice, but then it's on you not the company.
I completely agree with you Mr. Shull. This was the comparison that I needed to see. I’d really like to see the Gibson Custom Shop, Gibson Standard comparison. Thank you very much for your informative videos. I was considering purchasing the Fender 64 Custom Deluxe Reverb after playing it and I actually bought it after seeing your review. Thank you!
Soundwise these guitars sound as identical as a set of identical triplets look. Yeah, maybe some super subtle differences, but you have to squint to notice. As far aesthetics go, I was not won over by the white over blue on Mario Martin. It looks contrived. A genuine Fender headstock and logo is always going to beat the competition because it's, well, the original.
Stephen Feldman vintage style strats all sound the same to me. A MIM with custom shop pickups will cop near identical tones for under a grand. And I won’t melt down when I spill my beer on it.
So that black suhr antique in the background during the first 1:30...I bought that one (from Righteous). Actually, my wife bought it for me as a gift. I have spent the past year trying to love it because it has sentimental value...but I hate it. The neck feels so off and it has a sterile sound unfortunately. Obviously, I'm not Andy Wood or Pete Thorn so I can't make anything sound amazing; however, my mexican road worn strat sounds and plays 100 times better. I'm sending it back to suhr to have the neck reshaped...will update after I get it back in March.
I 'd buy the Fender not only for the playability but the resale on the Fender will be the best . Love the vid and yes please do a Gibson ES 335 vs Collings vs Heritage video . Cheers Rhett !
@@filiprogina1753 Heritage and Collings are great guitars and while the Heritage resale can be lackluster the Collings hold theirs so I guess that's why .
@@toddflowers8052 Agreed, and...I did not mean to insult you, sorry. Damn, I'd probalby be the first one buying a guitar because of the name.😂 I don't know much about Heritage, but I'm falling more and more in love with Collings, thanks to Joey Landreth. Since I'm GASing for a 335, it would definitely be useful to get a comparison video ;)
That choc burst strat absolutely blows the others out the water… I want to like those boutique strats, they’re great, but you can’t argue that strat sounds gorgeous.
I have one Jazz Bass exactly the same, a sunburst Fender custom shop 1960 replica, and believe me, is absolutly amazing. Also have a Jazz Fender 1972, real thing. Both are complementary, they are the best example of two kinds of JB, because 72 is the first year they changed the bridge position and two different pot configurations, the 60s is stack knob, the 70s, the three knob sistem. I agree with you, the work at Fender CS is incredible, sounds and play pro and inspiring!
One of the things that makes Rhett Shull's channel my favorite amongst the several that I follow is the quality of the recording. I listened to this episode again last night on my desktop which has a pretty good nearfield monitor setup I also use for recording. Listening to the three guitars as he played the Hendrix riff I was literally turned around when he played it through the Fender Custom Shop Strat. Rhett and that guitar NAILED the tone and texture in a way that just jumped out of the speakers compared to the other two "strats". This is not a knock on the Suhr or the Mario which was new to me. I have an older USA made American Deluxe and a really very nice Made in Mexico version. Both play well, and they 'spoke' to me when I bought them, and I've made a few minor mods, but neither cops that tone the way Rhett and that Custom shop do. I've been looking at the Fender Custom Shop Jimi Hendrix Voodoo Child Stratocaster Journeyman Relic guitars (could the name be any longer?) as a way to get as close to that tone as my fingers will allow. Does anyone have insight into how those measure up? I haven't found one near me to try out. SoCal.
There is so much variation between individual guitars that a question like this is nearly impossible to answer. Looking at names on headstocks or models is pointless. Play as many as you can and when you find the right one you will know. Having to ask others their opinion about a guitar by model most likely means you haven't found the one you are looking for. Fender, G&L, Schecter, Nash, Suhr, John Page, and many others make great guitars - play as many as you can as often as you can.
I ended up getting a Fender Ultra (about $2k). Compound radius, 2 point trem, locking tuners, push button pot to enable neck pickup at any switch setting, nice thin neck (tried a 60s reissue and it felt like a baseball bat). I love the sound even when it's unplugged. No, it's not vintage and I'm guessing since it doesn't have the small radius throughout the neck, you might liken it to the Suhr and really not dig it but I do. I have a 67 mustang with the 7-1/4" radius and love that too but there's still something about the Strat.
Me too. When I learned to play guitar, my friend, a right-handed player, taught me the basics. He had a Gibson LG-1 and an old Harmony archtop, so naturally I played the Harmony. I had no idea about lefty or righty, the question never arose, and anyway, I had no option.
I bought a Tom Anderson in 1994, Drop Top, too this day I haven’t found anything close except an ESP Horizon Custom Shop, for sound, playability and craftsmanship. However I love Telecasters but for all around performance, Anderson for me.
people buy a reliced guitar so they (some of them) don't have to worry about - damaging it. while loving the look of a damaged guitar. but no wanting to do their own damaging. jesus.
Blows my mind. I'll never understand. People always make that same silly argument: that way you don't have to worry about dinging it and scratching it. Bullshit. As you say, who would buy a new, luxury car with dents and scratches on it, just so you won't have anxiety about damaging it?
Simple, if you are an old man blues player playing in a smokey beat bar, showing up with a new shiny immaculate guitar kills the vibe and the sound quality. What you see matters.
in the first part where you were playing them and you couldn't see the headstocks so i didn't know which was which i liked the sound of the sunburst one best, which interestingly turned out to be the fender.
Have a Warmoth neck made to your specs, put it on any cheap Strat body, change the hardware if you like, and you have the best Strat for you for about a grand. Forget about this vintage, custom shop BS. Your only contact point with the guitar is the neck. That is the only thing that you can "feel" that matters. Also, forget about "tone woods". Ninety percent of the sound comes from the pickups, the amp, the cabinet, and the speaker.
Sometimes a guitar just sounds dead, and how are you going to know unless you play it before you buy? By all means, buy a partscaster and put it together; but just because you spec a neck out to be perfect for you, doesn't mean the guitar is going to end up a keeper.
sillyak dude what he is saying is: instead of spending over $4k on a custom shop fender, buy a cheaper strat, replace the pickups, replace the neck with a neck made to your specs, and replace any needed hardware... you literally save a lot of money. While I disagree with his opinions of tone woods, I agree that the majority of tone comes from the pickups and the amp. Just replace a cheap strats stock pickups with some good vintage pickups and your already 50% of the way of attaining the custom shop fender feel and tone. Just get a well made neck to reach that 100% and you’ll save thousands of dollars. The custom shop fender sounds great. But it’s retarded to pay that amount of money for a “vintage” remake of a guitar that has flaws that are not on par with today’s standards. This whole “mojo” with vintage fender strats is fine but to spend close to $5k of a guitar that isn’t even a real vintage guitar from the 50/60s with relic that you didn’t even do is delusional. Idc what mojo it has; I want a guitar that will not only sound good and feel good but is also reliable. Id rather spend the money on that type of guitar than a remake of a guitar that I’m paying extra for dings, debts and scratches that were artificially made with some “mojo”.
I have a guitar shop and have 3 custom shop strats. I can tell the difference in not only quality but feel too the team built custom shops are absolutely fantastic and the wood does make a difference
I say buy whatever the fuck you want, whatever you can afford, whatever you love and whatever inspires you. I like vintage reissues, some people don’t. I like real nitro lacquer finishes, some don’t. To each his own, do what makes you happy life’s too short do whatever you want with your money and fuck everyone’s opinion as long as it makes you happy and you’re satisfied.
@@toddsteele72 dang I gotta find these places, I coulda played some expensive things myself at Chicago Music Exchange but they looked like they needed repair and were mostly metal monsters, I got to play a sweet gretch and the most expensive thing I've played is a normal Player Series strat (didn't like it too much)
@@adrianramirez7122 Well sky music is in Melbourne Australia so that might be a bit of a stretch to get to. For yourself I would suggest Southpaw Guitars in Houston Texas and Jerrys lefty Guitars in Sarasota Florida. If I was in America they would be the first two I would visit. 😁🤘🏼🎸
I'll take Warmoth anytime. And relic is stupid. For that pricing I'll rather have a new shiny that will relic on it's own thru years from my own playing.
ss you know what’s stupid, your ignorance. Store owners are in the business of making money by giving customers what they want! If they purchased 10 relics, and 10 non relics, the relics would be gone in 6 months, and most of the non relics would still be there a year later
Southeastern777 No people just want what they want. If you could go to the sporting goods store and buy a stiff new baseball glove for $40, and you could buy the same new glove oiled up and broken in for $50, which one would you buy?
Great take on mondo strats! I was discussing the merits of buying a custom Suhr with a player and he finally said "Why not just get a custom Fender?" I did, a 2015 Journeyman that hung on the wall at the Fender booth Winter Namm with a huge neck. It was so worth it!
My first video course, The Tone Course, is available now! Check it out here.
flatfiv.co/collections/rhett-shull/products/the-tone-course
I take almost every new strat apart and throw everything away,put in the best of everything,wire to my liking,all soldered by hand with the best wire and solder,then it couldn't sound better,and doesn't cost thousands
You do a great job at blending the three guitars one after the other with the same lick. Makes it so easy to hear the differences. I think the Fender CS has a much more polished sound than the other two, and looks better but 4K? I don’t know. I have a 1990 fender USA Strat and it’s unreal. Dad bought it for me at 12...first guitar...I was spoiled....lol. Awesome channel brother. BTW, I changed from 10s to 9s after watching your comparisons.
Possibly wasn't the best move to compare a maple boarded stainless fret guitar with two rosewood boarded with nickel frets???
Brighter guitars generally feel sterile to me because I'm used to rosewood and nickel.... there's something about the low end that disappears that makes everything sound and feel all wrong...
n n n nn n n bbn*
I'd buy the botique for the white and blue relic finish
Price shouldn't be an issue. A REAL guitar player gets his girlfriend to buy it...
Marry a nurse!
Swing that handbag!
Good luck with that!!😎😎🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
If you don't have a girl friend fine someone else
Srv levels
Part of me says you should have thrown a Squier in there for good measure.
Agree! I hear the Classic Vibe Squiers are really good instruments.
@@Craig_Fussell They are. Definitely. Plenty of Strat for few bucks. Check out the Tellys too...
Just bought a classic vibe. I compared it playing with a Mexican made classic style strat, I think it was called a Ventura, for a while and just couldn’t justify the massive price difference. The squire classic vibe felt good and sounded good too so that’s what I went with
To me Fender just build good guitars. All the guitars across the price range from Squier to CS plays super nice
The fender vintera, not ventura lol
*walks out of the jam room filled with 12k worth of strats*
"...Yeah, I'm just here to buy strings... Thanks."
You said it right.
😂😂👍👍👍
Robert Nolan yes. Not to mention the $4000 boutique amp playing through high end boutique pedals.
*picks
You've gotta do it to them at least once.
God, the prices are so relative! As a violinist, dropping $5K is pretty much an entry level professional instrument...
Just curious, what is the most expensive violin you ever played?
Clint Wilson $15 million Guarneri del Jesu.
As a doublebassist .. 5k$ Doublebass is a very cheap entry level one ... very far from a profesional one ... 15k... 30k ... 100k and so on
Marcel by the Strings so true! Let’s not even get started on how much cheaper guitar strings are in comparison!
How much did your bow cost?
Fender should hire that guy from the store. He is knowledgable, passionate about guitars and good on camera
Agree!
I totally agree, he most certainly has been around the Block with a Stratocaster. He was good on camera too. Would like to see video of him playing.
Let's pay him 3 times more and keep him independent. There are enough people praising chinese made fenders out there all ready.
As an executive of course, vp of sales or what not.
Someone should tell Rick Beato.
I own a 64’ Fender Custom Shop Journeyman Strat ($4100). I will say having something so beautifully crafted and easy to play keeps it in my hands longer and encourages me to practice more. Because the instrument is so intuitive, attractive, and I made the investment, I find myself walking across the room to play it much more than my old Epiphone (also a great guitar)!
I bought a 63' Fender Custom Shop Telecaster(NOS) and man, the thing plays like a charm. Every time I look at it I end up picking it up and playing. Spent($4000) on it and it is totally worth it, I practice all the time and plan on keeping it for the rest of my life, so the money is irrelevant.
@jarredhicks that's how it should be.
I have multiple ultra strats and I've swapped the pickups and pickguards...meticulously set all of them up and shaped the nuts. I would recommend it to anyone. My #1 Is a texas tea with a replica pickguard and pickups from David gilmours black strat. Can't see ever needing anything more than these. The build quality on the ultra line is the best fender has to offer without getting into custom shop etc.
I dug the Mario
I love the mario martins. Get one!!! They make amazing guitars! Of course me being me i swapped nearly everything out on it though. (Had em put in virgil arlo pickups, pots, cap, pickguard, tremolo and saddles.) Haha I'm a weirdo though!! 😄 🤣
Not discounting the fact that these are obviously all finely crafted instruments, I can't help but remind myself of the fact that Rory Gallagher, played one, single, very slightly modified, stock, off the shelf Strat his entire life, that Clapton's "Blackie" was a mongrel guitar, pieced together from used, stock, bargain bin instruments, and of course, Hendrix's Woodstock Strat was also a stock, off the shelf, mass-produced, instrument.
Makes me feel better about the multiple rebuilds of my A.S. Strat. Next is the 3 mini hb mod and a 24.75" scale neck. I'll make up for the sacrilege some day with a C.S.
You left our Jack Pearson (former Allman Bros. Band) and his Squier strat.
David, I've been saying this since I picked up my first guitar. How is it these guys could play outstanding with stock stuff; Clapton with pieced together guitars - all having tiny vintage frets with 7.25" radius boards. Probably talent. I think we let our emotions carry us away today. Listening to Rhet, clearly his assessment was purely emotional. Count the number of times he reference "looks" and "vibe." Vibe being a completely made-up, mind-game.
Walt Coyle - "it isn't a great guitar" let's see you make something better
David Mahoney back then there was no custom shop or «vintage» strats.. ofcourse the factory strats are getting better and better, however the cs og master built fenders have a selected wood, selected parts and so on. I know the price is alot more than what you Get. Bet if i had 4000 to blow on a guitar i would buy a custom shop 60’s strat. Improved but still classic and full of tone
Seldom come across comparison that have suhr as the cheapest guitar hahaha
Funny isnt it...
That's when you start talking about professional-level axes. If you can get a tax write-off for it, $2500 starts to look a little smaller.
@Possumlove Jack Pearson comes to mind...he plays Squiers.
@@michaelluczak3019 You mean like all the other companies? The patent, if there was one, has expired. Fender only has the rights for the headstock shape now.
"lefthanded...mistake I made long time ago". I feel you, bro. I feel you
South paw here to... not sorry. I'm glad that others look at my guitars, comment on the beauty then ask to play them, only to realize they can't because they play backwards. Lol
@@russk1971 Exactly, THEY play backwards, not us. Mwahaha!
As a new, left handed player (I've been playing for about 2 months) should I learn right handed instead? I started out with the mindset of doing what was most comfortable. But I've already noticed that it seems like it would be easier to just bite the bullet and learn righty. Particularly when it comes to guitar selection and availability. I also want to collect vintage guitars and it would be great to be able to play them instead of them just being show pieces. Any advice? Thanks in advance!
@@zachattack2775 personally, I started out playing right handed for about 6 months and progressed very slowly, then switched to left handed and it was night and day. I was ambidextrous as a kid but still just chose the left hand for writing and guitar. It's up to you though, but consider this: when you play left handed, your guitar is like Excalibur, only the Trve King can wield it.
@@seinmstudio3646 I'm VERY left handed, so I may find it difficult to try to switch. And you have a good point with the uniqueness of it!
Teles next, please. And yes Gibson, please. Mahalo!
@@CocoKoi321 Guild Bluesbird and S-100
and why not PRS, gretsh, ibanez while you're at it
@@JohnFoxBass S-100? I prefer SOX10 most of the time (this is not a medical advice)
I wish you had added in a run-of-the-mill Am Std Strat to the comparison...I would have liked to see how it compared to the premium and above guitars you looked at here...
DavidSJ I get this, but there’s literally 100s of others demos on RUclips of American standard strat vs custom shop strat and squire vs custom shop and squire vs American.
This demo is great for people who are going for a custom shop fender, but maybe there’s something else out there within that custom shop realm that they didn’t know about.
@Boston Mike: Exactly the reason I wish he'd included a Nash in this look :-) though I realize this line of thinking might lead you down a path that never ends . . .
Major difference is going to be the nitro finish. I love how nitro guitar ages with cracks in the finish and all of that. I also have poly guitars and they never age, well except for swirl marks :) One thing that I do prefer nowadays, is recessed heel so I can reach the upper frets. I also like 9" radius, two point bridge for stability, old kluson tuners, basically some old mixed with some new appointments. If I was buying a strat today, I would either buy a used american fender strat or the new mim player's series that come awfully close to am std. strats.
Agreed, but I don't think they carry those at Righteous Guitars.
It's all subjective at this point. No strat in the world is "better" than an American standard, it's just slight differences which anybody may or may not like.
I own a custom shop heavy relic Fender and i can tell you it s a war weapon ,the kind of guitar you can keep and play all your life long and more !!!
Agreed, me too, Rory Gallagher custom shop, just a beast, what a neck, smooth as silk, I will have it until the end of my days!!! I have gone through a ton of strats throughout the years, never real happy with any of them, traded 4 guitars for this one, worth it!!! Playability and tone!!! Pro guitar!!!
@@jim21jam I have a Rory Gallagher custom shop too, and fully agree about your comments, smells wood, smells leather, body vibrates long looking for you playing, neck so smooth ... AND the tones of those pick ups, warm, powerfull, still sparkling through an AC15 or 30. Really honoring the great Rory Gallagher.
Absolutely, Ive had Squiers, Mexican Strats, AM standard strats and finally found a 1959 fender custom shop that is just incredible. There’s nothing like it.
Yeah. I have a 57’ heavy relic customshop (2010 roadshow) strat with Abby’s pickups and a very light ash body. So good compared to the standard.
I own a 59 sunburst heavy relic CS. Best guitar that I’ve ever played. It just sings and is easier to play. Everything sounds better. I have a Fender American Standard as well, which is a great guitar, but there is no comparison. If you really feel like spending the money, don’t be afraid. The guitar will keep you happy for many years.
I bought a PRS Silver Sky about a year ago and love it, PRS does a great job on quality control and it was less than all of these options, but, hey, everyone has their preference
The SE model? I bet they are good guitars but the headstock just destroys the look imo.
I say prs core over fender anything any day. That’s my personal opinion. You can build and finish a strat for about 1k that rivals a suhr or fender if you know a good luthier, you get boitique pickups, get the fretboard radius width and nut you want from warmouth and sand and finish yourself. If you don’t or can’t dp those things can then I can see why you prob can’t do that. But i think fender custom shop looks cool but it’s just overpaying by 3k imho. They are nice but why be stuck with a reproduction old guitar from fender for 5k. I’d rather have 2-3 custom 22’s or a real vintage gibson or whatever else
To my ear the Suhr did not sound as rich in overtones. It sounded solid and fat in the low frequencies but didn't have much "air", which is were all the expression of an instrument is. I kinda liked the Mario better than the Fender, at least in the clean tones.
you could tell that through a youtube video?
@@jfar3340 exactly.
@@jfar3340 exactly, listening to any of these videos for any sort of accurate representation of audio is silly
I agree completely. so for everyone who wants to get semantic, based on the audio through a computer using headphones. wtf else we supposed to base our opinion on?
Never buy a guitar that doesn't inspire you. I don't think there's anything responsible about buying something less expensive if it doesn't excite you because you're never going to play it and then it's a total waste of money.
Oh, and definitely the Fender. I picked it right away before I knew which was which. The Suhr sounded about as good as my Squire Strat to my ears, which isn't bad, but my Squier would cost around $500 tops.
Joe Chip Great point. I have a Suhr Modern that I absolutely love and some really nice Fender strats that I also love, but the Suhr Standard series does nothing for me. Build quality you would expect from Suhr but just doesn’t have the strat feel. I don’t care about SS frets, compound radius, locking tuners, etc on a strat. I have plenty of modernized super strats for that. I want it to feel like a strat with all of its perfect imperfections. That’s what makes it a strat.
Your advice is wise and accurate and true. Buy the real American made fender, You will love it for decades and respect it.
If anyone needs a discount guitar, fender makes their own discount guitars, called the Fender Squires!
I bought four imported discount guitars this year, the Danelectro is the only one I can play on stage because that is the only novelty guitar brand that rock audiences respect. It also plays pretty freaking awesome, it's effortless to play their 12 string Danelectro, amazing. All the other imports that I got this year, felt good that I was saving money when I purchased them, but they just don't have the sentimental value of an American made fender, I should've just bought one American made fender. I was foolish to nickel and dime myself, and eventually deprive myself of an American made fender because I bought three discount copies instead. Doh!
Agreed, though I own some cs fender and ibanez, my 2 « cheap » wasburn are the only ones to inspire me.
only view these videos with your ears
In the opening of the clip the Sunburst immediately stood out, tone wise. The Suhr sounds very modern. Rhett, great playing as always. Keep it up and yes, a Gibson shoot out would be great.
Used fender Mexican strat. Just put in whatever pickups you want. $500.
The Suhr pro series still go through the same build process as the Suhr custom guitars. They just have a predetermined specification.
Something about the sunburst finish makes the tone sing hahaha
Wynn Yang lol you sound like Billy Corgan when he said paint color changes the sound of a guitar
Dude everyone knows white sounds better loool
@@magnushallmundsson6927 It's my understanding that "white" guitars have a brighter tone while sunburst guitars sound more colorful, maybe more mid-range. I was going to have a white guitar finish on the front and a sunburst on the back to even out my tone!
It's just your mind playing tricks
Either playing tricks, or extrapolating unwarranted assumptions based on anecdotal evidence.
The Mario Martin just sounded so fine I couldn't believe the difference. Pure heaven made into a strat style guitar. The Fender was in the middle and the Surh was last.
Same here
It's the talent that makes a guitar sing.
Indeed. Hendrix or Rory or any number of other guys couldn't have cared less about boutique labels. Maybe these guys are spending far too much time comparing apples with apples when they should just be playing.
.... wisely spoken... but it needs the guitar itself... and.... there are so many differencies
@@bm7760... you are right in playing... but how good you re in kontact with jimi an rory.... perhaps
they hear the difference between the sound of different instruments better than you and me
Yes you're right. Talent plus a cheap DIY kit with the right measurements, setup and a nice fret work will put to shame to those overpricing Fenders and Gibsons.
I agree. The good thing about a custom shop guitar is that the person making it maybe spent little bit more time on it to make it more playable. About Hendrix, let's not forget that he didn't have an access to a 60 year old guitar when he was playing. He played guitars that were just made by fender and didn't have time to age. I think this point is mostly ignored by those buying vintage gear. It's all in the fingers baby.
I would take the Mario just for the look. The Fender sounded a little sweeter/melower sometimes but that may have been the picking. The Mario as you said has vibe for days. That's mine!
$4500 was not an option. I wanted a Strat, bad...I put together my own parts-caster from Warmoth. My take was a Post Modern style Strat. Pretty much like the current Black Fender version? I chose all the options, some vintage, some modern and did all the finishing work. $1300
All those guitars look and sound great. Feel, playability and Vibe are important. If money were no object, I’d get a really nice true Vintage Strat. If I had the budget, I would definitely get the Custom Shop...though probably not the sunburst? If/when I have the money, I might build another one?
I’m glad I finally have a great Strat! The spec’s are custom, sounds “right” and plays well. Didn’t break the bank.
It’s a weird thing how things come together? Sometimes you have to try different options to find the “right” part. Sometimes, the parts have to live together for a while before a really good guitar becomes a really great guitar. Sometimes difficult
I've owned Suhr, Silversky and Fender Strat. My verdict, Suhr makes the best quality guitar not the sounding guitar, Silversky the best sounding guitar not the best quality. However, Fender specifically Custom Shop, makes the imperfect sound and not too perfect quality, but Fender Customshop able to make the right combinations to make it the best of all. Fender, afterall is the rightful owner of stratocaster no matter how other builders try to replicate it. Cheers.
I bought a Custom Shop Stratocaster, the 1964 in super faded Sonic Blue. No regerts...seriously, I love it.
Crispy Rice's Mellifluous Sonic Chamber 😮😳😍
I've got the 1964 custom shop super faded Fiesta Red version... yeah the best strat I've played hands down
Jon Evans, gorgeous color! Yeah, they definitely have the mojo. Instantly became my #1.
Custom Shop 65 in shell pink checking in 🤪
Honestly, a blindfold test is really the only way to be fully unbiased. Seeing that Fender name will usually spark a sense of that certain "something" that may not really be there if you didn't see the name. Or at the very least, may not be there at that price range. I'd like to see a test of midrange Strats with Rhett blindfolded. Andertons does this on occasion and it's a real eye-opener - egregious pun intended. Hope to see one in the near future, Rhett! Nice playing by the way!! 🎶💜
They don’t do them because they are afraid of saying a squire sounds better than a 5k fender . Confirming what I’ve always said ..they all sound the same.
@@son0fsocal I think you're right. They really do sound the same. Which is a testimony to Leo's amazing design in the first place. The thing for me is, does a $5000 dollar custom shop feel that much better? As a lefty, I've never played a custom shop Strat or Tele. So I'm not one to say. But after rolling the fret board edges and dialing in the fret ends, is there really a $4500 dollar difference? I'm guessing not.
Mexican strat with hand wound pups and a fret job, spend the rest on lessons.
That would cost you as much as a used custom shop genius
Yep. I have two awesome Mex Road Worn Strats from 2009 - Rosewood and Maple - both have Ron Ellis PUs in them. They sound like custom shop Stratocasters and one of the Strats I purchased used for $600!! 4K for a Strat? Total rip off man!!
dezionlion, not true man.
I bought a used MIM, vintage noiseless pickups, locking tuners, a rolling string tree and got a fret job for under 600 man.
LOL... you kids are hilarious and totally dead wrong.
undergroundjohnny road worns are amazing..
Life is too short to play a crappy guitar.
Preach brother!
Rhett: *Life is too short to interact with viewers*
👎
But you don't have to spend thousands either. Not even one thousand.
I think the Suhr sounded more muffled because of the hum canceling pickups. I’m sure it kills some high frequencies.
Absolutely
Great video Rhett! I completely agree with your final analysis, if you're thinking of buying a "real" 60's Strat for $30K, go with a Custom Shop one. I was given the same advice back in 2002 and have played my Cunetto Custom Shop 60's Start to the point that it's gone from a Relic to a Heavy Relic. It's been a work horse.
Absolutely! That fender does look great !
I don't know. Maybe it's just me but from playing for over 35 years in the music industry, I've personally found that if a guitar feels good in my hands, stays in tune and has great sounding pickups, no matter what the price point be it $3500 or $350, it's all that matters. Inspiration is key. Everything else is marketing to separate the consumer from their money.
Ron Williams exactly! You know what we called a 59 Les Paul when I was a kid? A used Les Paul. Marketing hype 101.
These overly relic'd Strats are just investments with value growth potential. There's nothing wrong with that, if you don't break them or have them stolen they're a great investment with value that will always rise. But the monetary value of a custom shop Strat is just a religious story that guitarists have told themselves and choose to believe.
That Fender sounded like it was right off Jimi's album. Pure gold for my ears
Stratocaster sounded the best to my ears. I owned a 62 Stratocaster at one time unfortunately I had to let it go. Custom Shop Stratocaster it's what I play nowadays it's a great guitar strange as it may seem it can hang with a lot of vintage strats I have played.
I’d like to see a blindfold strat shootout! Have a few strats at different prices, and go by feel and sound only!
I wished that you had included a lower end MIM Fender Strat.
Or perhaps a high end Squire...just for comparison, much of our hearing is with our eyes.
Awesome video! I just grabbed up my first Fender Custom Shop 1960’s Stratocaster this week, and I’m not disappointed at all!
I played a Strat that John Cruz built once and it was the greatest guitar that has ever graced my hands. It was also $7,000. Still an awesome Strat though. I had my wife take my picture while I was playing it. LOL!
Yeah, people knock John Cruz prices and CS prices but I agree totally, a John Cruz 59 Strat I played was the best guitar that I ever played, ever, and I've played a LOT of guitars.
I'm a Tele guy, all the 3 Strats sounded pretty much the same to me. But I understand the points you make. When I picked up a Tele Elite at the store, while it sounded pretty much as my MIM Tele, and not worth more than 3 times the price of the MIM, there was something special about the Elite, it resonated with me, it felt great, I could play it day, so I laid out the 3 grand and bought the Elite.
I gotta say the custom shop sounds the best to my ears. I also recall playing a Fender John Cruz Custom Shop and it sounded better than any Suhr, Anderson, whatever, that I've ever played. Great video Rhett!!!!
I love the way you change guitars so quickly, makes it really easy to hear the differences
I dream about the day when I’ll be a good enough player where these differences matter to me LOL! Oh well, gotta go practice on my MIM Strat that feels and sounds fine to me! 😉✌🏻🎸
some of the biggest bands in the world don't care so much, they play average guitars , and dont spend so much money on a super pricey guitar and worry about micro feels and all. Any guitar can be good, price doesn't matter. I think this is more of a hobbyist thing for sure. An actual musician will learn to write on any guitar and a better one can write to the tonal qualities of each guitar.
Agreed! Have you seen what Jack Pearson can do on a Squier Stratocaster? Mind blowing! ✌🏻
I have been playing guitar for over 25 years, 15 of that as a professional touring musician.
That being said…
You are a phenomenal guitarist. Great taste in music. Strongly opinionated, and relatable. Thanks for bringing honest, great content to the world of guitar.
Lmao literally just heard you say “that being said” like 30 seconds after i wrote it up there 🤦🏻♂️
John Suhr makes the best value guitar imo. Hand built, true single coil pickups with noiseless system built in, stainless steel frets that don’t wear, locking tuners and Gotoh hardware. It’s the guitar Fender should be making for the modern/classic player.
Dweebs noiseless system built in? The pickups sounded dead compared to the fender.
@@jackhorvat7979 Scott Henderson and Pete Thorn seem to get pretty good tone from their Suhr guitars.
Jack Horvat The ML has a higher midrange frequency plus a high output. Therefore a fatter tone which also leads to less clarity compared to CS pickups that have less output and are wound to have less of those midrange frequencies. Pickups are easy to replace so I’d rather spend less $ on the suhr (that will stay in tune and have frets that won’t wear) instead of the CS and get pickups to my liking.
Dominick Ortega most classics come with the V60LP these days
I absolutely LOVE my custom shop p bass. What’s also great is that you can find them used as low as $1600 thru around $2000-2800, depending. These will typically be the Teambuilt stuff, but the Teambuilt Custom Shop stuff is the best of the best “production” guitars that Fender makes. It’s a much smaller operation than the US production line, they use the same machines that they used back in the 50’s, and wood selection is completely separate from the standard US production line’s selection, and quite a bit better. So the way I look at it, is if you were planning on buying, say, a brand new American vintage re-issue, then you’re putting down close to the same money that you could put toward a used Custom Shop instrument. It’s an awesome way to get into owning an instrument with that type of sentimentality if that’s what you’re looking for/into.
And if you’re not into that, then hey, there’s a shitload of options for you as well, and we can all respect eachother as players and be happy for one another’s purchases, regardless of price point or manufacturer.
There had better be a "feel" difference to justify the difference in price, because there is no way I could pick one from the other in a band setting. I had to strain to hear any difference at all. Enough to wonder if I imagined it.
On point bro !!!
It’s crazy how either our ears or what we’re listening through accentuates different frequencies. I had it playing in the background and noticed every time the CS came on. I was actually pretty amazed at the difference. (Not saying it’s worth the price difference, just swap the pickups and it’s gotta sound near identical)
Louder cleaner sound from fender. But....strings...cords...amp setting? Same amp or no?
Scut Monkey IDK man, I’m listening to this on iPhone speakers and even with RUclips’s immense compression I can hear a pretty clear difference between each guitar. It’s not that one is necessarily way better sounding than the other but just different. I’d happily pay around $2k for a nice strat but I think $4,500 is getting pretty over the top for a strat. Just my opinion. If the CS feels amazing to you and you have the pocket for it then by all means go for it.
Absolutely yes. The way I think about it really good craftspeople are still working on these and trying to create instruments that will sound fabulous now and age well. Same for boutiques. And we all gotta make a living...
Ben seems like a super nice guy. Would be alot of fun making a video like this. What an amazing collection!
4k for a strat... ouch... I will keep my Mexican and be happy with it. I will say the custom shop sounded the best to me.
just get some good custom shop pickups and you're like 98 percent there.
Dude I’d love a Mexican strat! Gotta save up when you have kids, but I’ll get one and let my young ones have it someday.
My Mexican Strat in Polar White is the only one I've ever owned and I love it. If I opened my guitar case tomorrow and had that 4k custom shop Strat in it, I'd sell it, buy another Polar White Mexican Strat and 3 other guitars.
That’s why it’s so important to play guitars first. I’ve got a few real pricey guitars which I love. But my current favorite is my mim Tele. Every guitar is unique even the mass produced ones. Just get one that feels good and makes you want to pick it up!
From the first chord at the beginning of the video, that was the sound. Sparkly and rich tone.
Play as many strats as possible,pick the best attributes of each then build your own.Who knows,you may learn something
The opening sounds for all three, the Fender was and still is ahead for the rest of the video . Used head phones and sonically you can hear and feel the differences. Very cool and useful ! Thx
Suhr has the favored sound to me, much more huge mid-range squawk......not too bright like the mario and much more punch than the fender...............imho
THEMASTEROFYOU2000 don’t forget the SSCII system as well. It’s dead silent. The V60LP’s are amazing sounding pickups.
I've owned both Fender American Strats and Fender Custom Shop strats. Now, I only have Suhr and Tom Anderson strats. I will take those over Fender every time.
Strings And Wings 61 me too. I play suhr and my buddy plays Anderson. I’ll never give fender another dime after the American elite I owned.
Brandon Powers what makes those options better, in your opinion?
Suhr and Anderson’s fit and finish are second to none. Their necks are smooth as butter, fretwork is perfect, and they sound great. I also don’t like that fender doesn’t use stainless steel frets. You really need to try a suhr or Anderson next to a Strat. Even though they are similar styles the feel and attention to detail is way different. Some guys prefer strats and that’s cool. Whatever works.
The custom shop sounded best to my ears. Rich and warm
The custom has such clarity, it's amazing.
exactly
Why in gods name to they still make you take the neck off to get at the truss rod. Living it CT, it's bone dry in the winter and humid in the summer and truss rods need need to be tweaked often. Is it just to honor a 60 year old 'vintage' design flaw????
NY here. I feel your pain. Every guitar should have a truss wheel. They put them on the elite strats, it should be on everything.
@@lockedowng I have MIM thinline with the headstock bullet - 2 second tweak. I have a nice 30 year old MIJ telecaster with that old design which I never play it because it needs adjusting and I can't be bothered. Think of the tech in the store taking the neck OFF 3 times to get it right.....
@@jmendi55 - That's why they charge you so much money for what should be normal operators adjustments. A hint: the shop calls it a "set-up" and some take 10 minutes - and some take most of a morning(or afternoon, you're still talking about a couple of hours) to dial it in. Remember, string guage, height, action, ALL have to be addressed. So if you don't have a Strobo-tuner or the experience to do it, be ready to pay your money.
It's a Custom Shop Guitar, couldn't you just specify the truss rod be adjustable up at the nut or the new wheel type adjustment. I mean for over $4000 you can order just about any option you want.
@@hkguitar1984 That's using your noodle
The answer? Find a used Custom Shop Strat. I just scored a 2018 for roughly $1,000 off the cost of the same model new. In fact, it cost about the same as the Suhr in this video. They're out there.
Rhett, if you haven't yet, try grabbing the dropped 5th interval on the opening chromatic climb on Wind Cries Mary.
The reason you can never get the same tone as you get with a vintage instrument is because *wood ages.* I've been a woodworker as well as a guitarist most of my life, and I know for a fact that this is true. If you are a carpenter that does remodeling of old homes, then you have probably pulled some old douglas fir studs out and found them hard as nails as compared to new douglas fir. Just driving a nail through fir that's been sitting in an old house for 100 years is super hard comparatively. Over time wood not only hardens, but it becomes more stable as well. These qualities greatly effect the tone of any instrument.
These strats all have very slight differences tonally (like any guitar even in the same model there are differences). I think it comes down to how it feels for you and the options you want.
Same about old pine, old larch and sometimes alder. Also i used old alder for making my tele. But how it REALLY affects the tone? I don't know
I have a Fender strat build in the custom shop (avri 62 hot rod from 2006). The QC did not blow me away; one fret has air under it (cause they cut too deep), the nitro lacquer had blemishes out of the box, the fret-work is only ok, can't get low action. I would never sell it, though, cause it just sounds and plays so well. It's even loud acoustically. It's my only strat, so I can't compare it to the cheaper ones.
$4K for a bolt on neck guitar is in a sense outrageous. It's just alder wood and maple and it's all cut on a machine LOL
Parts casters can be great, especially if u have someone local who can do nitro finish.
I'm also a big fan of Warmoth's compound radius necks which I don't think Fender makes.
Yes its all about the nitro finish.... poly finishes just take too long to sing.
No its not just alder and maple...its a part of your body that at times feels like it has a soul
@@WilhelmWilder uh ok
@@whowho8470 you don't play guitar do you lol
@@WilhelmWilder everyone approaches the guitar differently
One thing I can say is that I'm glad I bought my guitars when I did. I have two Strats, a white '62 Reissue and a sunburst '79. Both would be out of my price range today. When I go to a big chain store I'll go pick up a $200 Squier and see how it compares with mine. With craftsmanship there is no comparison. With tone sometimes I'm pleasantly surprised. I think the next time I see one I'll try a brand I'm not familiar with.
Good review and to me with headphones all sounded very similar so I suspect it is how you connect with the Instrument.
Also why not next time include some cheaper fender strats around $2000, $1500 then $1000.
My guess is Hendrix was playing an off the shelf strat from Manny's that he paid $150 for in 1965. Then he'd set that on fire and get another one. So much for connecting with a guitar.
I said this in another comment, there’s 100s, if not 1000s, of cheap vs expensive guitar reviews/demos on RUclips. There’s almost no custom shop vs boutique or custom shop vs vintage or vintage vs boutique. Why does everything have to be compared to something cheap in the guitar world?
Heard more dynamics and frequencies in the fender. the Mario was in the middle to me and suhr didn't have the chime the others did. Much darker. Over all I def preferred the fender
I thought.the suhr sounded the best clean on those Hendrix licks.
Yea the suhr was not “hipster” enough
Awesome review, and being a Fenderholic and playing Fender instruments since 1969 I really loved the great shootout you provide us all with, your vids are the best, thanks much Rett!!!
For the price of the Fender I could build two Warmoth strats with the most insane wood choices and the nicest components and still have money left over. The price of the Suhr could still build two strats with nice wood and impressive components.
If you are a DIY-er I'd highly recommend that route if you really need/want a custom instrument on a "budget." I put that in quotes because my guitars still cost more than an American strat, but I still got to choose every aspect of the guitar. I just had to put it together myself. No idea what getting a tech to build it for you would be, but I'd bet it would still be cheaper than going thru Fender/Suhr/others.
Building your own Guitar and choosing all aspects of the instrument is the best thing ever. It's like designing a girlfriend from the ground up for yourself...............
Warmoth builds are hit or miss IMO. There’s more to a great guitar than neat specs. Crazy figured woods do nothing for me personally anymore besides being pretty to look at. Kiesel is a great example of being able to spec out a guitar to the moon and back with exotic woods and finishes and ending up with a $4k guitar that plays like a $900 guitar with a cold and sterile feel. Of course it’s all subjective. I’m not arguing you need to spend anywhere near $4k for a CS strat if you go the Fender route. I’ve played some pretty great MIM strats that felt and sounded wonderful. Just don’t want people to make the mistake of thinking that buying super fancy woods from Warmoth is going to automatically give them an equivalent or superior guitar to a properly built Fender.
@@MK4vDubbin Agreed
Bolting the parts together is about 20% of the project. Setting it up and fine tuning is the rest. I think with Warmoth parts you are assured a certain level of quality that you can fine tune and set up the guitar to be a superior instrument, the Devil is in the details.
And if a person doesn't know how to properly set up a guitar and is building/assembling an instrument they really should learn how and what to do. The information is out there and accessible.
Myself, I'm self-taught and have had very good results so far. 3 builds and three winners. That said, I have attempted to work on some really cheap guitars with mixed results. I've had examples of a truss rod not responding and/or the bridge/neck not even properly aligned, again that was with cheaper components.
You only get what you pay for, and that's if you're lucky!
I still contend that building a guitar for yourself can be a wonderful/rewarding experience.
As with most things in Life, Your Mileage May Vary..........
@@MK4vDubbin IMO, Warmoth is only hit or miss of the person building it/buying the parts doesn't know what they are doing. The niceness of the specs isn't what makes them special, it's the fact you get to choose every tiny detail, even if it's the cheapest options, you still got to chose. That's what makes it "custom". Truth be told, I've heard some horror stories about Warmoth or similar companies, but everything I've built is way better (for me) than whatever I pick up at a guitar store, and the quality of construction is superb. If you don't know exactly what to get you can definitely end up with a less than perfect guitar that might only look nice, but then it's on you not the company.
I completely agree with you Mr. Shull. This was the comparison that I needed to see. I’d really like to see the Gibson Custom Shop, Gibson Standard comparison. Thank you very much for your informative videos. I was considering purchasing the Fender 64 Custom Deluxe Reverb after playing it and I actually bought it after seeing your review. Thank you!
Schecter USA custom shops are amazing to me and not outrageous on cost
I would have liked to have seen a Silver Sky in this video, but I'm a huge PRS fan.
The MM has slightly more bottom end than the Fender or Suhr.
Suhrs left me a bit cold too (prefer SilverSky or Cutlass). Think Nash’s are better value than Mario. CS’s are hard to beat though.
Soundwise these guitars sound as identical as a set of identical triplets look. Yeah, maybe some super subtle differences, but you have to squint to notice. As far aesthetics go, I was not won over by the white over blue on Mario Martin. It looks contrived. A genuine Fender headstock and logo is always going to beat the competition because it's, well, the original.
Stephen Feldman vintage style strats all sound the same to me. A MIM with custom shop pickups will cop near identical tones for under a grand. And I won’t melt down when I spill my beer on it.
So that black suhr antique in the background during the first 1:30...I bought that one (from Righteous). Actually, my wife bought it for me as a gift. I have spent the past year trying to love it because it has sentimental value...but I hate it. The neck feels so off and it has a sterile sound unfortunately. Obviously, I'm not Andy Wood or Pete Thorn so I can't make anything sound amazing; however, my mexican road worn strat sounds and plays 100 times better. I'm sending it back to suhr to have the neck reshaped...will update after I get it back in March.
I was amazed that the while all 3 guitars sounded good, I thought the fender sounded amazing. It sounded the way I think that a strat should sound.
So what amp and caninets pedals input cord etc was used? Next
R2 did you actually watch the video? It was a Divided by 13 amp and he discussed the pedals.
@@speedriff believe all you see and hear? I dont . Hopefully it was as it appeared.
@@speedriff so no freedom to have a diff opinion.
R2 ? It’s not a matter of a different opinion, he clearly stated what he was using.
I couldn’t agree with you more. I just got my first Fender Custom Shop Stratocaster this week.
I 'd buy the Fender not only for the playability but the resale on the Fender will be the best . Love the vid and yes please do a Gibson ES 335 vs Collings vs Heritage video . Cheers Rhett !
I'm guessing you'd choose a Gibson, so what would be the point then? :P
@@filiprogina1753 Heritage and Collings are great guitars and while the Heritage resale can be lackluster the Collings hold theirs so I guess that's why .
@@toddflowers8052 Agreed, and...I did not mean to insult you, sorry. Damn, I'd probalby be the first one buying a guitar because of the name.😂
I don't know much about Heritage, but I'm falling more and more in love with Collings, thanks to Joey Landreth.
Since I'm GASing for a 335, it would definitely be useful to get a comparison video ;)
@@filiprogina1753 Up until I played a Collings I would have been 100% Gibson for that style guitar. Collings instruments are worth every Penny.
@@filiprogina1753 Joey is friggin' awesome !
That choc burst strat absolutely blows the others out the water… I want to like those boutique strats, they’re great, but you can’t argue that strat sounds gorgeous.
I totally agree
When you played that amazing strat in another video, you acquired strat-fever.....no Silver Sky in the mix?
Definitely should've added a Silver Sky in the mix...
Carlos Rodriguez I played a Silver Sky and it’s a nice guitar. But, the pickups are noisy as hell. I’ll take the Suhr.
I have one Jazz Bass exactly the same, a sunburst Fender custom shop 1960 replica, and believe me, is absolutly amazing. Also have a Jazz Fender 1972, real thing. Both are complementary, they are the best example of two kinds of JB, because 72 is the first year they changed the bridge position and two different pot configurations, the 60s is stack knob, the 70s, the three knob sistem. I agree with you, the work at Fender CS is incredible, sounds and play pro and inspiring!
Also try Nash strats and Fender Eric Johnson strat for non-custom shop prices and great strats!
hatuliko2009 Ditto, EJ strats are great as far as strats go.
I went to Sweetwater expecting to get the elite - but really like the EJ much better. but I came home with a Music Man Cutlass RS HSS.
My Nash t63 is the best guitar I’ve ever played
One of the things that makes Rhett Shull's channel my favorite amongst the several that I follow is the quality of the recording. I listened to this episode again last night on my desktop which has a pretty good nearfield monitor setup I also use for recording. Listening to the three guitars as he played the Hendrix riff I was literally turned around when he played it through the Fender Custom Shop Strat. Rhett and that guitar NAILED the tone and texture in a way that just jumped out of the speakers compared to the other two "strats". This is not a knock on the Suhr or the Mario which was new to me. I have an older USA made American Deluxe and a really very nice Made in Mexico version. Both play well, and they 'spoke' to me when I bought them, and I've made a few minor mods, but neither cops that tone the way Rhett and that Custom shop do. I've been looking at the Fender Custom Shop Jimi Hendrix Voodoo Child Stratocaster Journeyman Relic guitars (could the name be any longer?) as a way to get as close to that tone as my fingers will allow. Does anyone have insight into how those measure up? I haven't found one near me to try out. SoCal.
You are Correct. His Channel is The Best. He, Is the Best.🥇👊
I’m curious to hear your opinion of the American Original Strat vs the CS 60.
There is so much variation between individual guitars that a question like this is nearly impossible to answer. Looking at names on headstocks or models is pointless. Play as many as you can and when you find the right one you will know. Having to ask others their opinion about a guitar by model most likely means you haven't found the one you are looking for. Fender, G&L, Schecter, Nash, Suhr, John Page, and many others make great guitars - play as many as you can as often as you can.
I ended up getting a Fender Ultra (about $2k). Compound radius, 2 point trem, locking tuners, push button pot to enable neck pickup at any switch setting, nice thin neck (tried a 60s reissue and it felt like a baseball bat). I love the sound even when it's unplugged. No, it's not vintage and I'm guessing since it doesn't have the small radius throughout the neck, you might liken it to the Suhr and really not dig it but I do. I have a 67 mustang with the 7-1/4" radius and love that too but there's still something about the Strat.
the other 2 sound more stiff.. the custom shop strat sounds more fluid to me
I love how you played the intro of the wind cried marry in the begging and then you played the solo at righteous guitars
"Left handed. Mistake I made a long time ago."
That's why I learned to play guitar right-handed. (I'm left-handed)
I was born a lefty and raised a righty. Therefore I do nothing well.
I'm a lefty playing lefty, I feel the same as him, it makes finding guitars so much harder!
This. I always try to encourage lefties looking to take up the guitar to learn on a right handed guitar. They end up fine.
Me too. When I learned to play guitar, my friend, a right-handed player, taught me the basics. He had a Gibson LG-1 and an old Harmony archtop, so naturally I played the Harmony. I had no idea about lefty or righty, the question never arose, and anyway, I had no option.
I'm a lefty but learned to play on my dad's guitars who's right handed. So, I play right handed guitar.
I bought a Tom Anderson in 1994, Drop Top, too this day I haven’t found anything close except an ESP Horizon Custom Shop, for sound, playability and craftsmanship. However I love Telecasters but for all around performance, Anderson for me.
I can't wrap my head around wanting a new guitar that looks worn out. Would you want to buy a new Vette with the paint rubbed off?
people buy a reliced guitar so they (some of them) don't have to worry about - damaging it. while loving the look of a damaged guitar. but no wanting to do their own damaging. jesus.
Blows my mind. I'll never understand. People always make that same silly argument: that way you don't have to worry about dinging it and scratching it. Bullshit. As you say, who would buy a new, luxury car with dents and scratches on it, just so you won't have anxiety about damaging it?
Relic guitars look cool to me, though I'd rather not have the relic unless it's very unique. Different strokes for different folks.
@@YaoEspirito cause a car doesn’t get nearly as dinged and guitars don’t look bad dinged cars do
Simple, if you are an old man blues player playing in a smokey beat bar, showing up with a new shiny immaculate guitar kills the vibe and the sound quality. What you see matters.
Worried about copyright strike due to store background music...proceeds to play "Wind Cries Mary" note-for-note.
Sanford Rogers they flag the sound recording, not a solo cover. It’s in the algorithm
Lol.. Good one..
Sanford Rogers
You don't know how the algorithms work do you bud
Well, Rick Beato got pinged for his covers sounding too close to the original. Coz RUclips are a pack of tossers with that stupid algorithm.
John Cougar I just got smoked for a video with no background music - said I had a Sony copyright infringement.
in the first part where you were playing them and you couldn't see the headstocks so i didn't know which was which i liked the sound of the sunburst one best, which interestingly turned out to be the fender.
Have a Warmoth neck made to your specs, put it on any cheap Strat body, change the hardware if you like, and you have the best Strat for you for about a grand. Forget about this vintage, custom shop BS. Your only contact point with the guitar is the neck. That is the only thing that you can "feel" that matters. Also, forget about "tone woods". Ninety percent of the sound comes from the pickups, the amp, the cabinet, and the speaker.
Sometimes a guitar just sounds dead, and how are you going to know unless you play it before you buy? By all means, buy a partscaster and put it together; but just because you spec a neck out to be perfect for you, doesn't mean the guitar is going to end up a keeper.
sillyak dude what he is saying is: instead of spending over $4k on a custom shop fender, buy a cheaper strat, replace the pickups, replace the neck with a neck made to your specs, and replace any needed hardware... you literally save a lot of money. While I disagree with his opinions of tone woods, I agree that the majority of tone comes from the pickups and the amp. Just replace a cheap strats stock pickups with some good vintage pickups and your already 50% of the way of attaining the custom shop fender feel and tone. Just get a well made neck to reach that 100% and you’ll save thousands of dollars.
The custom shop fender sounds great. But it’s retarded to pay that amount of money for a “vintage” remake of a guitar that has flaws that are not on par with today’s standards. This whole “mojo” with vintage fender strats is fine but to spend close to $5k of a guitar that isn’t even a real vintage guitar from the 50/60s with relic that you didn’t even do is delusional. Idc what mojo it has; I want a guitar that will not only sound good and feel good but is also reliable. Id rather spend the money on that type of guitar than a remake of a guitar that I’m paying extra for dings, debts and scratches that were artificially made with some “mojo”.
I have a guitar shop and have 3 custom shop strats. I can tell the difference in not only quality but feel too the team built custom shops are absolutely fantastic and the wood does make a difference
I say buy whatever the fuck you want, whatever you can afford, whatever you love and whatever inspires you. I like vintage reissues, some people don’t. I like real nitro lacquer finishes, some don’t. To each his own, do what makes you happy life’s too short do whatever you want with your money and fuck everyone’s opinion as long as it makes you happy and you’re satisfied.
Also I hate relicing/aging. Screw that fake aging crap, however I do love a nice resonant sunken-in nitro finish
Mario's was the best sounding for me... love the look too!
I sympathise with Adam. I'm a lefty too. Interesting way to say "Tremolo"... lol 8:20
Lefty gang, whats the highest price lefty you've ever been able to play
@@adrianramirez7122 Les Paul Standard (that blueberry colour) at Sky Music. Asking price was $5,100 AUD at the time.
And the most expensive eve ever bought was a Les Paul Classic (Honeyburst) for about $3,200 AUD from the same time I tried the blueberry.
@@toddsteele72 dang I gotta find these places, I coulda played some expensive things myself at Chicago Music Exchange but they looked like they needed repair and were mostly metal monsters, I got to play a sweet gretch and the most expensive thing I've played is a normal Player Series strat (didn't like it too much)
@@adrianramirez7122 Well sky music is in Melbourne Australia so that might be a bit of a stretch to get to. For yourself I would suggest Southpaw Guitars in Houston Texas and Jerrys lefty Guitars in Sarasota Florida.
If I was in America they would be the first two I would visit. 😁🤘🏼🎸
I have a narrow radius strat too, and it sort of sounds like the fender custom there. That's the one I liked the most actually.
I'll take Warmoth anytime.
And relic is stupid. For that pricing I'll rather have a new shiny that will relic on it's own thru years from my own playing.
Never understood relicing. Old beat up guitars just have history. You can't buy that.
ss
you know what’s stupid, your ignorance. Store owners are in the business of making money by giving customers what they want! If they purchased 10 relics, and 10 non relics, the relics would be gone in 6 months, and most of the non relics would still be there a year later
@@dezionlion you're a fool!
Southeastern777
No people just want what they want.
If you could go to the sporting goods store and buy a stiff new baseball glove for $40, and you could buy the same new glove oiled up and broken in for $50, which one would you buy?
Southeastern777
Let me know when they start discounting vintage strats
Great take on mondo strats! I was discussing the merits of buying a custom Suhr with a player and he finally said "Why not just get a custom Fender?" I did, a 2015 Journeyman that hung on the wall at the Fender booth Winter Namm with a huge neck. It was so worth it!
Forget simple truss rod tweaks with the Fender . Is there any good reason to make a guitar with such
an obvious flaw ?