The Fender Stratocaster: A Short History

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  • Опубликовано: 26 дек 2024

Комментарии • 2,1 тыс.

  • @RickBeato
    @RickBeato 5 лет назад +2726

    Just watched the whole thing in my car parked in a parking lot drinking coffee. Fantastic Hypes!! Love it!

    • @fivewattworld
      @fivewattworld  5 лет назад +94

      Thanks Hypes!

    • @stratcat7162
      @stratcat7162 5 лет назад +31

      Very informative super cool video

    • @moonkef
      @moonkef 5 лет назад +12

      Rick any plans for WMTSG on zz top?

    • @tomp538
      @tomp538 5 лет назад +6

      @Jason Reding even for guys like me that just have ears to listen.

    • @sf-gl7tr
      @sf-gl7tr 5 лет назад +10

      Just watched the whole thing in my pool drinking cuba libre. Fantastic Hypes!! Love it!

  • @noaht6723
    @noaht6723 5 лет назад +740

    "Who'd want a coloured guitar? Especially a red one?"
    I looked over and saw my red Strat staring at me.

    • @derpderpington100
      @derpderpington100 5 лет назад +19

      SAME
      I have my red 2002 Squier hanging across the wall from me. It's definitely getting played now

    • @captainalex8003
      @captainalex8003 5 лет назад +13

      Who wouldn't want a coloured guitar? I'd go for a red one. I currently have a surf green LTD copy.

    • @SealedKiller
      @SealedKiller 5 лет назад +13

      When he read that Mark Knopfler popped up in my head

    • @BrianVallotton
      @BrianVallotton 5 лет назад +3

      I have a red 97 Strat and I LOVE it! American made.

    • @SealedKiller
      @SealedKiller 5 лет назад +6

      @@BrianVallotton I have a cheap start copy but I'm in between beginner and intermediate so i can make it sounds quite nice sometimes. I'm learning Sultans of Swing and I've gotten down half of the song, now just solos left haha

  • @MiketheNerdRanger
    @MiketheNerdRanger 2 года назад +61

    *THE* electric guitar; I knew what a strat was before I knew what a strat was, and I've recently come to appreciate what it actually is.

  • @oldgittarist
    @oldgittarist 5 лет назад +192

    Probably one of the greatest pieces of industrial design ever produced, form and function so beautifully integrated. I always return to my Strat and never tire of it. It's a big part of my life story as it is for many of us watching this!

    • @ryangunwitch-black
      @ryangunwitch-black 2 года назад +6

      I always go to click "like" on this comment every time I come back to watch this comfort food video.

    • @MiketheNerdRanger
      @MiketheNerdRanger 9 месяцев назад

      It's a testament to the design and appeal of the guitar that Fender is making them pretty much the exact same way 70 years later. Seeing them in the pictures from the 50s with them looking the same as the one I just finished playing is surreal.

  • @twootters7433
    @twootters7433 5 лет назад +1693

    I miss my '56 Strat. I hope the person who stole it has had the worst life possible a person can have.

    • @joer.alvarado1993
      @joer.alvarado1993 4 года назад +143

      I know how you feel. I had an old Fender Tweed that was stolen while I let my best friend use it in Austin, Texas. He looked all over for it but couldn't find it. So he looked for one like mine but all he could come up with was the Fender Blues Deluxe Reissue. I told him: "Damn dude!! You really don't get it!"

    • @gregs5985
      @gregs5985 4 года назад +110

      @@joer.alvarado1993 I love my girlfriend to death but I would loan her out before I would loan out my strat. I couldn't take losing her.

    • @joer.alvarado1993
      @joer.alvarado1993 4 года назад +35

      @@gregs5985 Oh believe me I learned my lesson. He use to be my best friend. I haven't seen him in over 20 years since that happened.

    • @winstonlanda7731
      @winstonlanda7731 4 года назад +28

      Damn I feel it. I had my 01 Standard stolen but it wasn't its rarity of anything that i valued. it was intonated and set up and just had the perfect sound and feel. It was stolen out of my car and I know whoever has it isn't loving it or playing it. If I knew it would be loved and played, i'd feel better but I know nobody is playing it. I miss it so much. :(

    • @johnbaird7549
      @johnbaird7549 4 года назад +24

      That guitar’s still out there somewhere.

  • @erickleefeld4883
    @erickleefeld4883 4 года назад +70

    The single greatest electric guitar.
    Rock, country, blues, funk, even jazz - it can keep up with them all.

  • @User57186-y
    @User57186-y Год назад +44

    Even as someone who works for Fender, this is a great channel and resource for information and history, as we all know there is plenty of misinformation out there, kudos to Keith and FWW.

  • @AgentXPQ
    @AgentXPQ 4 года назад +259

    I have one of the 1962 reissues, made in Japan.
    I have had it for years, but I still sometimes marvel at the thing. It's such a beautiful, perfectly designed object.

    • @MrCamarokid83
      @MrCamarokid83 4 года назад +3

      Me too.. just a magnificent guitar

    • @handle433
      @handle433 4 года назад +2

      Hi brother, what year is your ‘62 reissue? Is it a T serial plate ? I just bought one, 2010 but it’s a Japanese domestic model not for export in Torino red and rosewood slab neck. It’s beautiful, but I can’t find much info on other versions because it’s a domestic model only.

    • @BeefheartLynch
      @BeefheartLynch 3 года назад +2

      I had a buddy who bought one of the Candy Apple Red Strat reissues of 1962 (64?) Can't remember which year, this was back in the 80's. But he let me play it, and I just remember that guitar being incredibly great to play. To this day that Strat reissue rivals anything I've ever played. There was just that unexplainable quality to it.

    • @NickRage.
      @NickRage. 3 года назад +1

      I have an 86 to 87 Japan 62 reissue I got it when I was 15 its been 17 years still by far one of my favorite guitars I've played

    • @rob_in_stowmarket_uk
      @rob_in_stowmarket_uk 3 года назад +1

      In 1985, when it seemed (bizarrely, looking back) that Fender might not survive, I bought a new 1957 ‘JV Series’ Japanese Strat Reissue, in black (fitted, as standard, with US manufactured pickups), that was made in 1983. I sold the guitar, back in the late 90s, to buy a Mexican 60s reissue Tele and (regardless of the massive increase in the value of the original JV Series, over time - they can now fetch around £1000.00!) have regretted it ever since.
      The guitar had so much more visual ‘presence’ than either of my current Strats due, significantly, to the beautifully executed and authentic 50s period shaping of the body and rim contours, as well as the neck to headstock transition and actual headstock shape (until quite recently many of the US reissues, and even Custom Shop so-called ‘replicas’ - including, remarkably, early Clapton Signature models - sported a slightly convex, rather than the ‘correct’ subtle concave, curve on the ‘blade’ portion of the headstock, that just looked... well, just ‘wrong’ - no idea why they did that!).
      None of the reissues I have played, or owned, since have managed to recapture the ‘magical beauty’ of that superb Japanese instrument.

  • @blacktoothfox677
    @blacktoothfox677 3 года назад +35

    I just utterly adore this channel. In a RUclips smothered by people talking guitar, this is a rare corner of quiet enthusiasm and love of our craft.
    No 'big I am', no egotistical pontification... Just pure refreshing appreciation of the tools of our trade.
    10/10 content

    • @blacktoothfox677
      @blacktoothfox677 3 года назад +2

      13:16 - Isn't that Daphne, rather than Sonic, Blue???

    • @fivewattworld
      @fivewattworld  3 года назад +1

      With fading and yellowing its hard to say. You may well have it right.

    • @blacktoothfox677
      @blacktoothfox677 3 года назад +1

      @@fivewattworld I've never had a daphne Blue Fender - always wanted one with a maple fretboard. I used to be guitar tech for a band called Nine Below Zero - Dennis Greaves, a wonderful UK player, had a lovely Daphne Strat, but with a rosewood (almost ebony black) board... Many happy sneaky memories of quietly bussing that case into me hotel room & licking my chops for a few hours on a proper living 60's Stratocaster. I have adored that colour ever since. Looks good under stage lights too. I'd like something a bit unusual in that livery; perhaps a Starcaster or humbucker Tele Deluxe... Anyhooch, as ever, I waffle. stay healthy out there, it's bloody crazy... though hopefully things will settle a bit now. Big Love from the UK!

    • @Richard_Lush
      @Richard_Lush 2 года назад +1

      Agreed. It’s great!

    • @Bbbbad724
      @Bbbbad724 Год назад

      I have a Silvertone Strat that is so much like a “ real “ that I wonder if Leo made it, it had a black head stock and a 3 tone Sunburst and a relatively heavy trem block. The pots are dime sized but were daisy chain soldered and grounded to the bottom of the bridge plate. It sounds great and it is a 9.5 radius. No date codes or serial numbers, but I see touches like a single ply mint color pickguard. The pots are dime sized but the ground is good. Just have to wonder. My 50s Telecaster made in Mexico reissue is good quality but the pots are grounded to the cover plate instead of the bridge. I want to drill an angled hole and solder from the pots to the bridge. I can’t trust my sight, but that’s a little odd.

  • @calsurflance5598
    @calsurflance5598 2 года назад +41

    So glad you mentioned my old friend Dick Dale. (May he rest easy) He played that same gold chartreuse sparkle Strat until the end. Sitting on his living room sofa, we once swapped Strats and I got to play “The Beast”.
    I remember the neck was was very thick.
    He kidded me about the lite strings on my guitar, as he used very heavy strings. Lol
    Long live surf music!🎸

  • @erickleefeld4883
    @erickleefeld4883 4 года назад +41

    The shape of the Strat headstock has always reminded me of a treble clef.

  • @stevenhaskell9025
    @stevenhaskell9025 5 лет назад +236

    Eric Clapton - Was alive to see Buddy Holly live on TV
    Shared a flat with Johnny Cash
    Played in The Beatles song “while my guitar Gently Weeps”
    Was mates with Jimi Hendrix

    • @user-ne6nz2lb6w
      @user-ne6nz2lb6w 4 года назад +30

      And still performs

    • @bradcarroll3719
      @bradcarroll3719 4 года назад +10

      In 2 bands that somehow sound almost like its another GREAT guitarist in the the band, because he played to the vibe of THAT music, and didnt trh and be the"hey look at how good I am" type of band guitarist. Thats my favorite thing about Clapton, and the list is long.

    • @lsilvaj
      @lsilvaj 4 года назад +8

      Married Pattie Boyd

    • @johnlemon8689
      @johnlemon8689 4 года назад +4

      Is one of the greatest guitarists that ever lived

    • @andymullarx6365
      @andymullarx6365 4 года назад +3

      He will likely go down as the most prolific guitar player to date.

  • @charleydowd3126
    @charleydowd3126 5 лет назад +716

    Who would’ve thought there was a time in history where the Stratocaster was more expensive than a Les Paul?

    • @iamanovercomer3253
      @iamanovercomer3253 5 лет назад +20

      Where ? The average Gibson is $3000 . A good 🇺🇸 strat 🎸 goes for about $1000

    • @charleydowd3126
      @charleydowd3126 5 лет назад +57

      I AM AN OVERCOMER Not “Where”. “When”. When the Strat started it’s production in the 50s.

    • @Tonetwisters
      @Tonetwisters 5 лет назад +52

      The price of glue must have been low back then!

    • @subeyguy66
      @subeyguy66 5 лет назад +9

      @@Tonetwisters lol, shots fired

    • @TelecasterLPGTop
      @TelecasterLPGTop 5 лет назад +12

      My local dealer (vintage guitars only, no new stuff) did a swap. My Historic 1956 Goldtop for a Custom Shop Strat. I did well I hardly played the LP but can't put the Strat down, it's beautiful.

  • @EdVanMeyer
    @EdVanMeyer 4 года назад +48

    Hank Marvin was the reason the Fiesta Red guitars were in such demand, he is one of the finest players in the world to have used this iconic guitar. It is the swiss army knife of guitars, it works on anything from jazz to country and just about anything else.

    • @ellisscott9840
      @ellisscott9840 4 года назад +8

      Ed Van Meyer hank Marvin was the reason the strat gained any momentum in the uk at all. All the big strat players, Clapton, gilmour etc all say it was cause they saw hank Marvin playing one and that's why they wanted one. Even legends have their idols

    • @malcolmrandall8672
      @malcolmrandall8672 Год назад

      So was Jet Harris, the SHADOWS BASE GUITARIST

  • @The_whimsickal_artist
    @The_whimsickal_artist 6 месяцев назад +2

    Fender strat..👍🏻🎸💯my favourite guitar..I have a fender in all black and black and white. The lime green is nice colour. I've seen the 40th anniversary standard strat with hollow aluminum body.. absolutely brilliant, beautiful...for 4$ 😅 I can't afford that..one day 👍🏻

  • @AJMjazz
    @AJMjazz 5 лет назад +19

    Yes, the Strat is the greatest and most versatile electric guitar ever made. Every Strat I've played has accomplished everything I wanted it to do. I've owned a number of them, and still do.
    Great video, Keith!

  • @RobertBakerGuitar
    @RobertBakerGuitar 5 лет назад +166

    Yes! been waiting on this :)

    • @blacktoothfox677
      @blacktoothfox677 3 года назад

      man... so many good channels here on my fave channel! Bless you man - UK

  • @RisikoAO
    @RisikoAO 5 лет назад +107

    I am super happy with my 1996 made in mexico Stratocaster!

    • @commentfreely5443
      @commentfreely5443 5 лет назад +3

      i've got a 93 mim. skunk stripe still intact, but missing some polyurethane. sunburst.

    • @roddygogo7772
      @roddygogo7772 5 лет назад +4

      And that is all that matters. You and your strat...the bond.....right on

    • @rosendocardenas2726
      @rosendocardenas2726 5 лет назад +2

      Have a 96 and 98 mim 90s made some great guitars imo

    • @angeloriggi6370
      @angeloriggi6370 4 года назад +4

      '95 - '96 Light Blue Strat with an M serial number here too
      This thing sounds like a dream, stays in tune
      I guess the Mexican Strats of the mid 90s were exceptional

    • @guitarobot
      @guitarobot 4 года назад +5

      I just picked up a 95 m.i.m . Lake placid blue. Thing is like brand new. Plays like a dream.

  • @prajnachan333
    @prajnachan333 Месяц назад +1

    I've had a Stratocaster, white with ebony fingerboard for 20+ years now. It's been an extension of my body almost immediately.
    Hey, my fellow Strat players. The most incredible players have them just like us.(!) I love videos going into details on guitars.
    I saw Jeff Beck about a dozen times, watching him effortlessly manipulating his guitar like a wizard! So fantastic.

  • @eoghainmurphy4441
    @eoghainmurphy4441 5 лет назад +13

    Thanks for mentioning Rory! He's the reason I picked up a guitar

  • @truckercowboyed2638
    @truckercowboyed2638 5 лет назад +368

    I hope next is on the Jazzmaster. I always wondered where the idea came from for something that was neither a strat or a tele design.

    • @ahiwalter9153
      @ahiwalter9153 5 лет назад +16

      Edward Enterline from what I read Leo really felt it to be an improvement on the Stratocaster & couldn’t see why people didn’t favour it haha much like the Strat was to the tele, he made these generally because he felt they were better than the previous iterations

    • @sassycat
      @sassycat 5 лет назад +7

      I think naming it something along the lines of Surfcaster and not adding the tone controls above the pickups would have gone a long ways towards it being a more readily initially accepted model. The old line of "no Jazz master would ever play a Jazzmaster" comes to mind.

    • @Walks-With-Pride
      @Walks-With-Pride 5 лет назад +11

      The Jazzmaster is a fantastic guitar. I bought a new one last summer, and it quickly became my number one go to guitar. I've owned many Fenders over the years, but my favorites have always been the Offset Body Series....Jaguars, Jazzmasters, and Mustangs. For some reason I have never been a big fan of Strats or Teles, although I have owned many of those models too.

    • @truckercowboyed2638
      @truckercowboyed2638 5 лет назад +1

      @@Walks-With-Pride I recently played a fender sonic guitar it was oldschool

    • @vampolascott36
      @vampolascott36 5 лет назад +1

      The company built it as a jazz guitar. They hoped jazz players would switch to their solid body design. It didn't happen.

  • @colorcodetrader4032
    @colorcodetrader4032 5 лет назад +16

    So good I watched this twice. There's just something about a sunburst maple neck Strat. What a beauty.

  • @danmayes4657
    @danmayes4657 5 лет назад +132

    Again NICE JOB That was a lot of work. Much appreciated.
    Out of curiosity I looked up $248.00 in 1954 to today's money - $2325.54

    • @sassycat
      @sassycat 5 лет назад +6

      $2325.54 is the realm of Custom Shop builds. Maybe that's what all the American made ones should be?

    • @barbmelle3136
      @barbmelle3136 5 лет назад +9

      We are in an amazing time for guitarists. Modern manufacturing, modern finishes, standardized parts and effective distribution has made really good guitars available to almost everyone. For the $248 quoted, you can find a lot of brand new guitars that actually play pretty well if you are even a little careful shopping. At that price in the used market, you end up with a pretty good guitar. That is why so many people have multiple guitars, at these prices you can. We can custom shop guitars from $1500 and up. I believe these really are better than the majority of the old classics.

    • @misterknightowlandco
      @misterknightowlandco 5 лет назад +10

      So strats are even cheaper now than then, but the les paul has blown past that price point. Yet, Gibson wonders why people have turned on them.

    • @johnthooker
      @johnthooker 5 лет назад +4

      @@misterknightowlandco They charge what they see their old good guitars sell for and build them as cheaply as possible. Then they have a hundred different "artist" models for 8000 dollars. I could get 2 custom shop Jacksons for the cost of a shitty Gibson.

    • @misterknightowlandco
      @misterknightowlandco 5 лет назад +3

      @@johnthooker then go get some jacksons.

  • @NikkoBalbedina
    @NikkoBalbedina 5 лет назад +36

    The Fender Strat: Fixing something that isn’t broken.

    • @ajh.7
      @ajh.7 4 месяца назад +1

      Umm did you watch the video about previous vibrato systems going out of tune?

  • @mrnobodyinvr9762
    @mrnobodyinvr9762 5 лет назад +39

    I've played a Strat all my life, and I never tire of learning a little more, or spending a little time with someone else who loves a good Stratocaster, thanks, very well done, very well worth my time, thanks for taking the time to make such a lovely clip about such a meaningful instrument. \\m// \\m//

  • @jonnorris4204
    @jonnorris4204 4 года назад +11

    Back in 1997, I went into a guitar center (Arlington Heights) and played a Custom Shop Strat Relic. It was either Tahitian Coral or Shell Pink that was probably a 1960 to 1962 model. It was on sale at $1795 and was the sweetest guitar that I have ever had my hands on. When I went back a couple of weeks later, it was sold. Sad that I didn't buy it when I had the chance.

    • @SixtoLezcano1
      @SixtoLezcano1 4 года назад +1

      In ‘99, I went into Guitar Center in Villa Park, and they had a ‘66 Sunburst Strat on the wall for $4,000. I played it and it was amazing, but I thought that was just a ridiculous price. They rep said I could get it if I offered $3,500 in cash. It was gone the next week when I went in, but I did get a used ‘96 Strat that day for $400, so not all was lost. Ah, the good old days. The 90’s... ahhhh!

  • @chrisg5271
    @chrisg5271 Год назад +4

    I love my two Strats even thought I never bought a valuable one they still embody the intention they had as it’s been hard to change what was originally designed. Subtleties have got us nearer to what’s so important about the classic Strat. As a player who unlikely will make any thing other than love of my guitars, I am happy with mine and love the Stratocaster.
    More recently I have learnt to love my tele too ! Which equally is awesome considering I am only a hobbyist I couldn’t ask for more

  • @michaeleaster1815
    @michaeleaster1815 5 лет назад +136

    Imagine if humanity placed objects in a space capsule to demonstrate to other worlds what we are all about. Imagine further that we include an electric guitar. Of course, it would be a Fender Stratocaster. (And perhaps a legal filing document by Gibson.)

    • @Tonetwisters
      @Tonetwisters 5 лет назад +15

      LOL on the Gibson thing! And that Stratocaster would probably be the most futuristic, outer space looking object and yet, timeless thing, in all the universe!

    • @profd65
      @profd65 5 лет назад +4

      Oh, a Gibson joke. How original. What a clever guy.

    • @Peasmouldia
      @Peasmouldia 5 лет назад +1

      If you really want to mess up your aliens mind, include a Watkins Rapier 33 instead!

    • @zachjollimore4339
      @zachjollimore4339 4 года назад +14

      you couldn't put a Gibson in there, cause the headstock would snap, even in microgravity

    • @gwugluud
      @gwugluud 4 года назад +2

      Do you know that's actually been done? Not the guitar part, but NASA included a proprietary record and player which also conveys video images. Had general info about the earth, and detailed diagrams of the human body, etc. But from what we're learning about exo-solar systems, the galaxy seems to be nothing but useless "gas giants" like Jupiter, and other places which are either too far or too close to their suns to be of any use. So I don't think it will ever be found by anyone.

  • @scottnewellguitar
    @scottnewellguitar 4 года назад +1

    I watched this sitting with my '82 reissue Tobacco burst Strat, which my old man bought for me in June of '83 for $945 ($2245 in 2020 $), we traded up from my Hondo II Les Paul copy and the shop owner took off $200. Still have the receipt. A few jumbo frets jobs later, flattened 12" radius and experiments over the years with different vibratos and pickups (yikes the 80's), it's beautifully banged up and my best-playing guitar today. I had to stop at 7:45 at the Buddy Holly part, because that's about all my Dad knew was that "this guitar is the one b/c he played it". He wasn't all that hip but he got lucky. Thanks Dad.

    • @fivewattworld
      @fivewattworld  4 года назад +2

      Great story Scott, thanks for sharing that.

  • @martygould5114
    @martygould5114 2 года назад +2

    I bought a Japanese Squier brand new in 1987 and it has been my main axe ever since. It's a great playing guitar I've put a lot of miles on it.

  • @williamsanderson9279
    @williamsanderson9279 5 лет назад +5

    Fantastic episode Keith. I love 5 watt world! Like the Stratocaster itself, this is my favorite of the series. Keep up the good work.

  • @SK8ChristianSK8
    @SK8ChristianSK8 5 лет назад +21

    Very nice video Keith! Its nice to hear someone mention Hank Marvin in the great story of the Stratocaster! many people belive that it was Hendrix & Clapton that made the Stratocaster so popular. They are of course a part of why the guitar is so popular, but it all started with Buddy Holly, and Hank Marvin! David Gilmour said that he wanted a Strat beacuse of Buddy Holly & Hank, same with Mark Knopfler, and Clapton too was inspired by Hank's Stratocaster!

    • @pabloperez4063
      @pabloperez4063 4 года назад

      Clapton by Buddy Guy, Winwood, y Buddy Holly

  • @cr0wnest
    @cr0wnest 3 года назад +3

    I'll never get tired of that shape. I have a 2010 MIJ standard stratocaster in candy apple red that I bought back in 2011 when I was only 19. I remember always starring at the many guitars through shop windows. But it was that particular one that always caught my attention since red is my favourite colour. The shop had two variants, one with a rosewood and the other with a maple fretboard. When I saved enough allowance from internship, I purchased the rosewood fretboard one and its still with me today. Its since been modified with fender locking tuners, Suhr V70 pickups on the neck/middle, and V60LP on the bridge. I had my guitar tech add the american 5-way switch and have modern wiring for bridge tone control too. Plays really amazingly, I love it.

  • @johndeskins9518
    @johndeskins9518 10 месяцев назад +1

    This video is just such a gem. It's truly an asset to the entire guitar community. Thank you, Keith, for giving us this wonderful content.

  • @guitartim2128
    @guitartim2128 Год назад +1

    I miss my 54 Strat...While doing yardwork for an elderly widow I saw her pass out,so I thought. I ran to her and discovered she had quit breathing so i did CPR and it turned out she was ok Thank God. Showing her appreciation( she already knew that i played guitar,she said I want you to have this--- it was her late husbands 54 Strat. Two tone burst with the finish worn off in places,ciggarrette burns on the headstock and peeling finish on the maple fretboard - this was before relic was cool---1998. Went on vacation with my girlfriend to Nashvile,had it appraised by George Gruhn( valued at $5000). Some shithead broke my truck window out and stoled it. I would like to find the guy and really let him have it. Awesome video. Thanx 5 Watt World--your a Class Act👍🎸

  • @shaalis
    @shaalis 5 лет назад +6

    Man for history and thoughtful, tasteful content, your channel is by FAR one of the bet I've seen. And this video is lovely. Well researched and narrated so well.

  • @timcastle165
    @timcastle165 5 лет назад +6

    Great video! I have a MIM Strat and a PRS SE guitar and even though I like them both, I seem to turn to the Strat to play at least 98 to 99% of the time, Love it!!

  • @TheLuismaBeaTle
    @TheLuismaBeaTle 5 лет назад +5

    I tried to restore a replica without any training about a year ago, I still remember every part shown in this video as I discovered them by dissecting the guitar

  • @joesteers1940
    @joesteers1940 4 года назад +2

    Such a beautiful product!! Well done Leo Fender and team.. thank you for everything!!

  • @NotUrBlader
    @NotUrBlader 2 года назад +2

    Stratocasters are honestly my all time favorite guitar. My first guitar was a stat and I have lots of good memories with it. Strats are one of those guitars that I never get bored of.
    They are easy to find, afordable ( for the squire line and othe off brands ), easy to mod, and food for pretty much every genre.

  • @5tw8se74
    @5tw8se74 5 лет назад +8

    Loved it. I own Strats, and Teles. There's just something about them that I'm deeply drawn to. Don't no why, but out of hundreds of guitars I owned I always come back Stats or Teles. Love the show.

  • @raymondlugo9960
    @raymondlugo9960 4 года назад +5

    "Ing-Vay" What a great album Yngwie put out. My first guitar is a 1984 American Standard Stratocaster I got new in 1988. It's a great guitar.

  • @jts3339
    @jts3339 5 лет назад +25

    Keith, every time you feature a different guitar, you’re compelling me to buy another guitar that I can no longer resist. The more I watch your channel, the more guitars I seem to acquire!

    • @fivewattworld
      @fivewattworld  5 лет назад +18

      Things can be beautiful and you don’t have to own them,

    • @jts3339
      @jts3339 5 лет назад +2

      Can I just “borrow” them for a while if I promise to return them when I’m done?

    • @fivewattworld
      @fivewattworld  5 лет назад +1

      @@jts3339 Well sure...that's completely different. :)

    • @jts3339
      @jts3339 5 лет назад +3

      Keith, all kidding aside; I attended the Ohio Guitar Show in Hilliard, Ohio on June 23 with a lifelong friend who purchased 2 guitars and (another) practice amp. I lusted after a mint Rickenbacker 620 in jetglo for a reasonable $1300, a rebuilt Tweed Bassman in the original cabinet, a Gibson ES-335 with a figured top and back in a natural finish and many, many others. My wife even told me to “enjoy myself and to get something nice”. But, at the end of the day I returned with a cute little $10 vacuum tube night light for my music room and the knowledge that I had a great time without touching my E*TRADE account. And, I’m okay with it... I’m learning.

    • @davidewing55
      @davidewing55 5 лет назад +1

      But every serious guitar player should own a Strat (I do) and a Tele (I don't ... yet).

  • @ronbzoom8531
    @ronbzoom8531 4 года назад +2

    Man I love geeking out on these videos. Thank you. Great job. And keep 'em coming!

  • @BritishBeachcomber
    @BritishBeachcomber 2 года назад +2

    Great piece of history. Sound city, London, was my local guitar store and I also saw Jimi Hendrix at the Isle of Wight festival 1970. Rory Gallagher was there too, with Taste. Awesome gig.

  • @SteeringSteel
    @SteeringSteel 5 лет назад +24

    “The very definition of an electric guitar”...Amen to that Keith! 🤘🏻✌🏻

  • @sonofboar13
    @sonofboar13 5 лет назад +32

    The best guitar ever made

  • @johnwescott1500
    @johnwescott1500 4 года назад +21

    Fun fact - the "boing" sound at the beginning of the Looney Tunes theme is Freddy Tavares on slide guitar.

  • @madswellejus
    @madswellejus 4 года назад +1

    Thank you for this. Since 1999 I have loved my 62 reisue, Sherwood green sweetheart! Thank you Fender for making that

  • @prajnachan333
    @prajnachan333 Месяц назад

    I bought my Strat in around 1997. It was great to hear you comment about the guitars made in 1996-97, being excellent. I loved it immediately, the first one I tried.
    Cheers 🍻 👏 ✌️ 🎸

  • @andrewdeane917
    @andrewdeane917 5 лет назад +5

    I like the comment made by Keith that the 1980s Japanese Squier Stratocaster was more accurate to the original Stratocaster design than anything Fender were making at the time other than the Fullerton Re-issue guitars. I bought a new Squier Stratocaster in January 1987, and the truth is I didn't have the money for a USA made Fender at that time. It seems that was a blessing in disguise. I still have my Squier to this day. It's a great guitar and will never part with it.

  • @sonsauvage
    @sonsauvage 4 года назад +7

    The strat framework is still the best convergence of ergonomics, styling, and features that we have as guitarists

  • @nicholastotoro7721
    @nicholastotoro7721 5 лет назад +8

    Another shortcoming of the CBS-era Strats (particularly post-'72) is the change in the tremolo from a separate steel base plate and block to a one-piece cast unit comprised of pot metal.

  • @benmcdowell1784
    @benmcdowell1784 4 года назад +1

    How is every video on this channel impeccable quality regardless of how far I go back.
    You are timeless and I love your history series.

  • @FushaStrat
    @FushaStrat 5 лет назад +8

    I always gigged with Gibson & Epi "F" hole arch tops. After quitting altogether for around 30 years a friend sent a Strat to me. It was a heavier than lead Squire but I fell in love with the body contours. That inspired me to begin playing again. But not with that Strat. I built several Strats from Warmoth parts, and I never play anything but Strats since those days. Before that I always told people that I thought God would smite me if I ever played a guitar with a bolt on neck. He didn't, I'm still here, and I think the Strat is the most perfect guitar ever designed in my opinion. A friend once said to me "Once you play Strat you never go bat" Irregardless of his choice of words he was right on as far as I'm concerned. Thank you for the history of my favorite guitar. Just watched your vid on the Tele, and that made me search for the Strat video. Thank's again for your efforts to track down the history of the Strat and share it with us. I realize that it took a lot of time and effort on your behalf.

    • @Bartockamus
      @Bartockamus 4 года назад +1

      A friend of mine told me and my old boss the same, and I really didn't want/like a stratocaster, but I couldn't find an sg,so I thought, I may as well give a stratocaster a try,it's similar to an sg,and basically their a slab of wood, and I will get a whammy bar to play around with too. Best musical decision ever, for me!! I've had 6 stratocasters since, and the best is a Squier '51,vintage modified reissue. This is the first guitar Fender copied from Squier.Their incredible!!! Try one, if you haven't,their very unusual.

  • @fredsmith901
    @fredsmith901 5 лет назад +4

    Great Video.
    Easily one of the greatest guitars ever made. I love my American Standard tri-color with a Maple neck. Just beautiful! An all time classic. Wow!
    The other greatest guitar ever made is the Gibson Les paul.
    Two totally different sounds, but both are Excellent! I love them both equally.

  • @graxjpg
    @graxjpg 3 года назад +3

    A strat was what my dad got me as my first (and second) electric guitars. First a sunburst squire with the tiny amp, then a black HSH that I made a terrible choice with and would love to have back. Now I play an ‘04 Mexican strat that looks very much like a 70s with a 6 screw trem. It is by far my favorite guitar I’ve ever played or owned, it’ll likely be my number one guitar forever ❤️

  • @johnk-ht4yj
    @johnk-ht4yj 5 лет назад +9

    I was fortunate to see SRV four times during the 80's as he cemented himself the new 'king of the blues'. his sound was always what i had hoped Clapton would evolve to using a Strat, but Clapton donning the Stratocaster signaled a change in 'his' tone, that was not as good as his Gibson days IMO. However the same change caused Jeff Beck to stand out & find a signature tone far superior & easily recognized above the crowd.David Gilmour with his slower, less flashy style and mastery of string bending & focus on 'tone' really epitomizes what the Stratocaster is capable of for most of us 'average' players.

    • @bensblues
      @bensblues 5 лет назад +1

      Which srv concerts were they?

    • @johnk-ht4yj
      @johnk-ht4yj 5 лет назад +2

      @@bensblues 1983 Beacon Theatre NYC
      1984 Pier '84' NYC, 1988 -w/Robert Plant @ Meadowlands NJ & 1990 -w/Joe Cocker Waterloo Village NJ.

  • @dandylyonwine
    @dandylyonwine 4 года назад

    Can I say this channel is fantastic. It's raw and pure with the mistakes/stumbles with words.
    I'll be digging through all of these videos

    • @fivewattworld
      @fivewattworld  4 года назад

      Just a guitar player making videos. Thanks for watching Dandy.

  • @grahamb5930
    @grahamb5930 5 лет назад +2

    Keith, this flashed up after I subscribed as a recommendation and I'm glad it did! Another great video, the real value in it isn't just in your knowledge of the guitar itself but, also in the history of the people involved. Thank you, great video

  • @johnduckworth474
    @johnduckworth474 5 лет назад +7

    Excellent short history of the Strat with some interesting detail. Although quality control may have suffered during the period of CBS ownership, the sound of a seventies Strat still does it for me.

  • @pensiveboogie
    @pensiveboogie 2 года назад +8

    I’m glad you mentioned Hank Marvin of The Shadows, Cliff Richard’s backing band (note, it’s Cliff Richard not Cliff Richards). The Shadows were one of the most influential bands in the world. I’m in Australia, and in my teen years, just about every band was playing instrumentals in Shadows line-ups, using Fenders. The bands tried to colour match, two identical strats and a Precision bass. Some of the greatest strat sounds came from Hank. Listen in particular to The Shadows playing Apache, Kon-Tiki, Man Of Mystery, The Savage and Gonzales. The Shadows used Vox AC15 amps initially, and it was Hank who lobbied JMI, manufacturers of Vox amps, to come up with the Vox AC30, used by The Beatles, Brian May, and many others. I have three Strats, one is a 50th Anniversary model, and a 57 vintage red strat like Hanks with gold hardware. It barks

    • @TAM-gz5tc
      @TAM-gz5tc 2 года назад

      The Shadows. The reason I became a guitar player at 12 ,pro by 16. Question for people interested in real music. How did the shadows come up with so many great tunes. ??

  • @davidkieltyka9
    @davidkieltyka9 5 лет назад +4

    Great stuff as always. If I remember my reading correctly…George Fullerton’s wife, Lucille, not only came up with the phrase “comfort-contoured body” to describe the Strat in marketing efforts, she also suggested the output jack design.
    My own fav Strat is an ‘82 Japanese JV series ‘62 reissue. The one I let get away was a ‘96 Vince Cunetto-built Mary Kaye relic. A phenomenal guitar, but there was this Gretsch Chet Atkins I fell for and funds were a little short…

  • @johndiloreto3738
    @johndiloreto3738 3 года назад +4

    Another million views. Nicely done Keith. Keep the great videos coming.

    • @fivewattworld
      @fivewattworld  3 года назад +1

      Thanks John! I knew this was getting close but I missed the cross over.

  • @flwolf2000
    @flwolf2000 2 года назад +2

    Excellent video! I've been a Strat player all my adult live. Hank Marvin of the Shadows was my teacher and guitar hero. I actually got to spend time with him during a TV show recording in Germany. We compared recordings and talked about lots of things - except Cliff. 😅

  • @Merjia
    @Merjia 3 года назад +4

    This was phenomenal! I adore Strats, and music history!

  • @AmericanConstellation
    @AmericanConstellation 5 лет назад +6

    I was just given a Mex strat with Texas specials....I set it up....and I'm really impressed! It plays like butter....

    • @rdickinsondickinson
      @rdickinsondickinson 5 лет назад

      I just got a Vintera strat. One the best I’ve ever had.🤘50s modified

  • @easygoin2887
    @easygoin2887 5 лет назад +4

    Even though I grew up in this period and knew pretty much everything the video covers, I still found it fascinating and perfectly presented. Well done.

  • @paulog516
    @paulog516 5 лет назад +1

    Superb video. Your delivery is so concise and moves
    at a great pace. thanks!

  • @LZcool
    @LZcool 4 года назад +2

    I watched it almost 6 months ago and i am rewatching it now. I love the explanation.

  • @JohnGadzaJr.
    @JohnGadzaJr. 5 лет назад +4

    This is an awesome short story. In my eyes, Fender Stratocasters are definitely the number one electric guitars that can be used for all musical styles and genres. I have various Fender Stratocasters myself and I love the Fender brand. I have used some of them in my videos where I play and sing various cover songs. Otherwise, this is very informative story. Great job and thanks, Keith.

  • @gdscheiwe01
    @gdscheiwe01 5 лет назад +16

    Great info. Your history videos are some of the best out!
    Peace

  • @peterulrich497
    @peterulrich497 2 года назад +5

    Thank you Five Watt World for being the Smithsonian of guitar history

  • @jimbocarrino763
    @jimbocarrino763 4 года назад +1

    I just got my first Strat, and really my first American made guitar and I must say I am blown away by the quality. It makes me so proud to be part of the Fender family. I used to think it was overrated, but my oh my I was wrong. I get what the Strat love is all about and I'm overwhelmingly blessed to have one of these bad boys.
    Great Vid Keith, keep it up!

  • @EdVanMeyer
    @EdVanMeyer 3 года назад +2

    Tokai TST50 from 1983 - the best stratocaster Fender never built! I do have a 59 and a Custom Shop 59 all in Fiesta Red. Hank Marvin played through a Vox AC15 when he first got the Red stratocaster, the Shadows were responsible for the Vox AC30 being produced - they needed more sound to get over the noise of the screaming girls!

  • @numanuma20
    @numanuma20 5 лет назад +16

    I have to say that the American player series sound awesome. I love how some of them have built in humbucker pickups along with the single coils to give that huge gain sound while keeping that start sound at a good price. Thanks for the video, I had no idea that the Starocaster was used for various genres. I don't think of the Strat when I think of hard rock, blues or metal, mainly surf rock, surf rock, 60s pop rock, and todays alternative rock. I usually think of Les Pauls and SGs for that classic hard rock, semi hollow bodies for blues, and Jacksons for metal.

  • @SealedKiller
    @SealedKiller 5 лет назад +51

    Who wants a coloured guitar?
    Especially a red one?
    Mark Knopfler

    • @IAmInfinitus208
      @IAmInfinitus208 5 лет назад

      Daryl Strummer? Andy Summers?

    • @countryboy6767
      @countryboy6767 5 лет назад

      Can we get down????? m.facebook.com/story.php?story_fbid=3005250196185823&id=100001026151518

    • @SealedKiller
      @SealedKiller 4 года назад

      @Doogie Carpit Burger Yeah I've heard in that documentary his bassist did

    • @mrlionel1965
      @mrlionel1965 4 года назад

      Brad Gillis, Paul Dean, Bryan Adams

    • @jimhood1202
      @jimhood1202 4 года назад +1

      I'm about the same age as Mark and my earliest memory of a strat was also the red one of Shadows guitarist Hank Marvin. Is it just coincidence that he got a strat? Look at a photo of Hank side by side with Buddy Holly and you'll see what I mean. 😏

  • @KimchiDronie
    @KimchiDronie 5 лет назад +4

    Fender Stratocaster is the pinnacle of all guitars. I’ve been playing guitar for 25 years, and tried different guitar brands; from Jackson to Ibanez, ESP, Gibson, Carvin, well, you name it!, but the Fender Strat, it’s the only guitar that can play any type of music genre, without sacrificing tone when it comes to whatever you wanna play on it. Even if you use a cheap amplifier to play a Blues Chord Progression, once you plug a Fender Strat, and play it, everybody will know that the sound coming from that amplifier, it is from a Fender Strat! There’s something about the Fender Strat that carries that undeniable tone and sound quality that until this day, some other companies wants to emulate, but cannot top.

  • @ammarnaeb
    @ammarnaeb 3 года назад

    This is one of the few channels I truly enjoy and appreciate. Thank you Keith.

  • @robertcaffrey6097
    @robertcaffrey6097 2 года назад +1

    Very enjoyable well detailed. Im a Buddy Holly fan and have always been preaching about how his enforcement of the Fender Strat was the very launch of that model of guitar into the Stratosphere., as I understand it it was Buddys older brother who loaned him the money to buy the Fender and a Gibson amp I think. Buddy was decades ahead of his time and is without doubt the Father of Rock music.

  • @markregan8907
    @markregan8907 5 лет назад +3

    I do not play electric often, but when I do, I always reach for one of my strats first. I have dozens of 1950's and 1960's (mostly Fender) guitars, but my 1969 stratocaster is what always calls me. When playing alone, I almost always play an acoustic, usually my 1964/65 Villager XII, or maybe even a semi-hollow Gibson whatever the hell that thing is called, it's a great guitar too. But often, even if playing alone, quietly, not amplified, in the dark, on my front porch, I'll play the 1969 Strat. I have a 1979 G&L bass guitar, it is a beast, serial number 000007(plus or minus a zero), hand built and signed by Leo Fender. When I have a bass jones, I reach for that, but that is rare. When I want to play amplified, again, I reach for the 1969 Stratocaster amplified through a 5W Fender Champ cranked until it gets the tone we all know, love and want. I love all guitars, even crappy one's and God knows I have a few of those, but the aforementioned Strat, is my go to no matter what. For anyone who may not be able to afford a 1950's or 1960's Strat, try a musicmaster. I have a 1962 musicmaster and though short scale, that little bastard, through the right amp, plays and sounds like a million dollars. Have a beautiful day everyone and enjoy! No go play whatever guitar you have and again, enjoy!

  • @JC-11111
    @JC-11111 3 года назад +4

    There's a guy named Joseph Bythewood aka JB Money that played Strats professionally, as well. You can here his glassy tones on all sorts of top rap and R&B records from the 80s/90s until his death in 2015, when he was murdered by his adult son.
    One of his greatest solos is on the Instrumental of PWA by 5th Ward Boyz. Possibly the greatest guitar solo ever recorded on a rap song. Joe was incredible. There's a vid on RUclips of him playing Maggot Brain. So you understand who his influences were.
    Rest in Peace, Joe.

  • @rkoz55
    @rkoz55 5 лет назад +6

    Just dropped Eric Johnsons and a blender circuit in my "86 Japanese Squire, loving it!

  • @prewettcr
    @prewettcr 3 года назад

    My 62' was $125 in 1971 West Palm Beach FL piano store downtown - amazing it's still with me. Amazing history I never knew - many thanks!

  • @stephenbirang3488
    @stephenbirang3488 2 года назад

    Best documentary series on guitars ever,thankyou so much for your excellent work Mr Williams.

  • @vapporiesat3125
    @vapporiesat3125 5 лет назад +12

    I love Strats because often there is a Tele hidden in them.
    My favourite strats are the early 80s Ibanez Blazers. Great wood, great neck profile, great frets. The electrics are pretty decent, and can also be changed easily (another reason to love the strat)

    • @njuham
      @njuham 5 лет назад +1

      I had a blue Ibanez blazer in the early 80's. I sold it before 1985 and bought an Ibanez FA100 (Gibson ES-175 copy) which I could never intonate so I had it in a case under the bed until 1995 when I finally sold it.

    • @the-LeoKnightus
      @the-LeoKnightus 5 лет назад

      First thing I do with a strat is re-wire it. I use pos 4 to run Front and back pickups together. Then I like to run push-pull polarity to run em in phase or parrellel. This literally makes a strat + Tele + phase reverse (oh and it cancels hum)

    • @vapporiesat3125
      @vapporiesat3125 5 лет назад +1

      @@njuham "sky blue" (light blue) BL470? with brass parts, tremolo and SSS? that would be my go to strat :D i play it every day.
      i have an 80s OBL Humbucker in the bridge and some very old fender pickups in the other two positions. i love that thing. especially the colour.

    • @tomformanek3312
      @tomformanek3312 5 лет назад +1

      I put a Duncan Twangbanger in my MIM bridge position. It countrifies the stat tone somewhat toward a tele, but also stands alone as just a great stat pickup. Matched it with two Fralins. Fralin also uses an optional metal plate under the bridge pickup. So much fun to play. The strat was just made to mod.

  • @SionAfterEarth
    @SionAfterEarth 5 лет назад +7

    Just bought a Strat mere hours ago, perfect timing :D
    And there is a little typo with the Gretsch name in the subtitles when you mentioned the Duo Jet.
    Love the series, cheers

  • @rdmkeytohwy
    @rdmkeytohwy 5 лет назад +4

    I have played many guitars in my lifetime and owned a few but when i got my strat, i had finally found my home. Great idea that Leo got right the first time. We are still in awe of his design and the players who have used it over the years. As Eric Clapton said once, "The Fender Stratocaster, the one and only electric guitar." Great video and great info.

  • @skimmer521
    @skimmer521 5 лет назад +1

    Love your show... You your whole way of presenting facts and telling the story. Very nice job... Thx U

  • @steviiiii
    @steviiiii 2 года назад

    I love the depth you go to - the level... yes I may want more history and on the spot compare-and-contrast (as you go) commentary. Because I admire your wealth of knowledge. You draw on the works of others which is which is a hallmark of good research. THANK YOU

  • @no1shere710
    @no1shere710 5 лет назад +6

    CBS Musical Instruments INC. darn near ruined every company that it acquired. Besides Fender they had Steinway pianos, Rhodes pianos (under Fender) and Leslie rotary organ speakers. I had a (piano tuning) client who worked as an engineer for both Harold Rhodes and Don Leslie. (He gave me the one and only Rhodes hybrid digital prototype ever made (didn't make it to production), but that is another story). By his account CBS was always pressuring its engineers to find ways to make the instruments cheaper. Their only concern was the bottom line. Also, by his account, the powers that be behind CBS were a group of about five financial attorneys (not engineers). Great video. I learned a lot. Dig your channel, man.

    • @buckodonnghaile4309
      @buckodonnghaile4309 5 лет назад +2

      Great comment but one day you should expand on that Rhodes Hybrid story

    • @no1shere710
      @no1shere710 5 лет назад +2

      @@buckodonnghaile4309 Apparently the company was planning to come up with an instrument that would compete with the emerging digital technology of the early eighties. My client was one of the engineers in charge of developing the project but it was scuttled in the early stages of development. The prospective instrument that I received was not a complete unit and not playable. It was missing the keys and key frame. The electronics of it was composed of many wires, relay switches and contacts that looked like a plate of spaghetti. I ended up parting it out. Used the pinblock (the laminated wood that held the pickups and tines) as a border for a flowerbed. Some things were just not meant to be.

  • @jasong546
    @jasong546 5 лет назад +4

    It’s interesting, in my reading I have found that the employees there at that time, tell the history quite differently to each other. The claims about who did what, who had the idea for what, differ. And they sometimes indicate that Leo played very little part in the strat. Several guys implying that someone else was either not involved, or incompetent in some respect. I don’t know for certain who did every little thing, but I am glad they did, the Stratocaster is for me the most inspirational electric of them all. Thanks for a great video Keith!

  • @MrKite_
    @MrKite_ 5 лет назад +44

    Strats are the smartest guitars EVER!

    • @iamanovercomer3253
      @iamanovercomer3253 5 лет назад +2

      Jeff Beck shows that

    • @StevesSlideandJazz
      @StevesSlideandJazz 4 года назад +1

      I AM AN OVERCOMER I got to play Beck’s Black strat at Semore Duncan’s first shop in Santa Barbara in the 1970’s. Through a 1950’s tweed amp. I wish I knew what I was doing then. But it was nice to handle it.

    • @666dynomax
      @666dynomax 3 года назад +1

      and probably the most imitated

  • @Historybuff_769
    @Historybuff_769 9 месяцев назад +1

    Im absolutely obsessed with the stratocaster, ive probably watch this about a hundred times, hopefully i can get one soon

  • @timthaloff4363
    @timthaloff4363 4 года назад

    GREAT video. I am the original owner of a 1978 natural finish/ black pick guard/ rosewood fret board/ Strat, which I bought on W 48th St NYC on September 14th of that year.
    (I was -12 years old) It's the longest relationship I have had with a non-human. I love my guitar.

  • @normcahall4548
    @normcahall4548 4 года назад +3

    Fantastic guitar history on the Godfather of modern guitars who can deny

  • @WeirdofMouth
    @WeirdofMouth 5 лет назад +22

    Finally one on the strat! Can't wait to watch it!

  • @GJ-ol5ev
    @GJ-ol5ev 5 лет назад +15

    Awesome vid! One point though: The 'Chunky Logo' was also used by pre-CBS and can be seen on some '64 Strats. Fender made the change to the chunkier logo before the CBS purchase.

    • @shaunw9270
      @shaunw9270 4 года назад +2

      The "Transition" logo. See it appears around the L prefix serial numbers ,mid '64 ish.

  • @marcboozman
    @marcboozman 10 месяцев назад

    This was a joy to watch, the history of the most famous musical instrument during my lifetime. There is no describing that rare, love-at-fiirst-sight encounter with an instrument, an emotion the French often describe as je-ne-sais-quoi. I was fortunate to fall in love twice, first with a Steinway Grand and later, a Yamaha 62. I adore acoustic instruments. .. "Just the sax, ma'am."

  • @russseuffert803
    @russseuffert803 5 лет назад +1

    Excellent presentation! Thoroughly enjoyed it. Plus, I learned some new info.
    I just bought a new Squier Bullet Strat, in, of course, Fiesta Red. The quality of these Squiers are fantastic. A lot of guitar for the money.