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Stratocaster to Telecaster? Cure your Tele Envy with the Seymour Duncan Twang Banger bridge pickup!
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- Опубликовано: 12 июл 2024
- Wish your Strat had some more balls in the bridge position? Craving those great throaty Tele tones? Let's compare two amazing guitars: My Custom Shop '59 Custom Telecaster and my American Vintage '59 Reissue Strat. Same body woods, same frets, same neck.... how close are the tones? Let me know in the comments below!
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What do you think? What do you prefer? Let me know in the comments!!!
One of the advantages of the Strat design is you can create "Loaded Pickguards" with different Pickups and Electronics which can be easily swapped out with a single solderless "Quick Connect" in the Jack location. So with one Strat, you can have the equivalent of many guitars. 😎
I've tried finding a good demo/comparison video of the Twang Banger for a while, and I think you nailed it!
@@Asillyhobo awesome, glad it helped!
Nice for a Strat bridge, Tele still has the Tele bridge sound. Both sound very good!
I agree, the twang banger actually has the perfect David Gilmour Bridge pick up solo sound, which is interesting.
Thanks!
@@jamesiepoo23 thank you!!!!
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Great comparison! What’s the song you play at 3:20? Very nice riff, I am Italian so I beg your forgiveness if it’s a very popular tune!
That’s actually part of a song I’m writing in my band, Korey Hicks and the Dirty Tricks!
@@KoreyHicksGuitar I am sure it will be a success!!!
Looks like this would be a nice upgrade for the ceramic pickups in my Squier strat. Would these twang bangers work well for other genres too?
Absolutely, just like a good telecaster, this pick up is great for rock and blues, and can even do high gain really well!
So what guitar do you prefer? Playing thousands of gigs on both strat and tele?
@@RB1_877 Tele - first guitar I ever bought with my own money back in 1994 was a telecaster and I just feel comfortable and at home on them. Also, there’s not as much baggage attached to them. When you see somebody with a Stratocaster, you immediately think of all these artist to play them, and people tend to gravitate towards that SRV or, Hendrix thing Tele seems to be more of a clean slate players personality to shine through.
@@KoreyHicksGuitar Totally agree. My first guitar was a strat, And that design and sound is still my favorite. But people always think Stevie when they see a strat. So much that I have made an active effort not to play SRV at gigs. To much to live up too. I’m a 1 guitar guy, but maybe I’ll have to invest in a telecaster.
@@RB1_877 Yep, after college I sold a bunch of strats and bought my first custom shop tele, and NOS 51 no caster and played that thing for six years on tons of gig sessions and for lessons you learn so much bye getting familiar with instrument!
The telecaster sounds like it has more bite
@@MarlonG527 there’s a difference in the mid range that is hard to explain, I think it has to do with the pickups in a Strat being mounted on the plastic pick guard and not in the body. I think that is a huge effect. Both pickups have the copper base plate, but only the tele is mounted to the actual wood.
@@KoreyHicksGuitar exactly the Tele resonates more because it mounted directly to the body.
The big tele bridge with all that extra metal and then there not being anything cut for a tremolo is the diff I always thought. Prob many reasons. This pickup does sound great. U ever heard a lollar special in Bridge of a Strat ?? I think it’s very similar to this
@@bigtsshackfestival9563 I will say this 59 Strat has the trem blocked with a piece of maple. So the trem is completely decked and doesn’t move and that does add to the sustain. And I do think that the bridge plate has a lot to do with the tele sound, but both of these pick ups have a copper bass plate under them and that helps.