Filtres
Nos membres ont également aimé :
4.7/5(23 avis)
65 %
35 %
Donner un avis
Avis des utilisateurs
- iamqman
Juste un regard classique sur une guitare classique!
Publié le 11/08/11 à 22:511 photo(contenu en anglais)The Fender Telecaster has to be one of my absolutely favorite guitars in the world. This is a classic looking guitar and one of the most iconic guitars that you will ever see. This is a two-tone Sunburst paint job which only has a nice yellow natural wood tone with the darker outer edge paint job. The two tone is different from the three toned because it is missing the nice amber red burst within this paint job. The fretboard is a nice hard maple which gives a good balance overall to the ash body.
UTILIZATION
Neck Shape: Modern "C" Shape
Number of Frets: 22
Fret Size: Medium Jumbo
Position Inlays: Black Dot Position Inlays
Fretboard Radius: 9.5" (24.1 cm)
Fretboard: Maple
Neck Material: Maple
Neck Finish: Gloss Headstock Face with Satin Urethane Finish on Back of Neck
Nut Width: 1.685" (42.8 mm)
Scale Length: 25.5" (64.8 cm)
Neck Plate: 4-Bolt Neck Plate with Micro-Tilt
Truss Rods: Bi-Flex™ Truss Rod System
Truss Rod Nut: 1/8" American Series Nut
Electronics
Pickup Configuration: S/S
Bridge Pickup: American Tele Single-Coil Pickup
Neck Pickup: American Tele Single-Coil Pickup
Pickup Switching: 3-Position Blade: Position 1. Bridge Pickup, Position 2. Bridge and Neck Pickups, Position 3. Neck Pickup
Special Electronics: No-Load Tone Control
Controls: Master Volume, Master Delta Tone
SOUNDS
This guitar sounds exceptionally well with a sender Hot Rod Deluxe amplifier. You don't need to dial this guitar in too much because it only has the volume and tone control knobs. It also has a pickup selector switch from the bridge in that position. This thing stays pretty well in tune with the tuners that Fender provides.
This is one of the sharpest classic looking guitars that I've seen in this series. The white pick up guard is a good contrast to the light sunburst on the paint job. The maple neck helps to balance out the body any add more silky frequencies to get warm defining tone. The overall feel of this guitar is much different Stratocaster. It has a different sustain any different drive and it's voicing. You don't have to prefer one over the other but I think they're equally different to own both.
OVERALL OPINION
I highly recommend this guitar to anyone looking for this particular sound. This is a good sound for a clean guitar tone or a mild overdrive tone. Many country players grab this guitar for their touring and recording needs. This will be a good guitar that can be passed down to your kids one day. It has such a good quality workmanship in the build process involved and in the manufacturing of these guitars.
At new you can find these guitars online or in most guitar shops for right around $999. That is an exceptional price for a high quality American-built guitar. This will be a long life guitar if you treat it well.00 - King Loudness
Une Télé à la roche
Publié le 14/08/11 à 05:21 (contenu en anglais)The Fender American Standard Tele is a guitar that is really a jack of all trades. They were initially picked up by country players, blues cats have used them on occasion, even the odd jazz man has grabbed one of these ol' planks to play some Charlie Parker. However... one thing that these guitars really do and do well is rock. Some particular Teles have a certain extra kick to them that allows the sound to have a bit more raunch and filth, and this particular Crimson Red Tele is no exception. It features an ash body, maple neck and fretboard, Tele bridge and sealed Fender tuners, and a set of Fender's updated American Standard pickups. To top it off,it's made in the good ol' USA. Awesome.
UTILIZATION
The Tele is a guitar that is slightly less ergonomic in its design then say, a Strat is. This is due in part to the lack of contouring on the typical Tele, as well as the fact that they're generally heavier guitars (both in look and sound) than their Strat counterparts. To add to it, this one is ash bodied and weighs a fair bit, but the sustain is there. When you hit a note and it rings... it's all worth it. The upper fret access on Teles isn't quite as good as the Strat but it's certainly not unusable by any strech.
This particular red Tele has a very raunchy sound to it that none of the other Teles at this shop did. It might have been due to the ash/maple combination or just an extra bit of mojo inside the guitar. Whatever the theory... it sounds great, especially for rock tones.
SOUNDS
I've tried this guitar most notably through a Mesa Royal Atlantic 100 and a Marshall 1923 85th Anniversary head. It's a very bright sounding guitar, with a prominent top end that cuts through a band mix superbly. The midrange is a bit subdued in this particular guitar (probably a trait of the ash/maple combo) and the bass is not quite there nearly as much as some of the Gibson guitars. However it sits brilliantly in a band mix and my coguitarist (the proud owner of this particular 2011 Tele) is pleased as punch with the tones he's getting out of it. He's always eschewed away from humbuckers (his longtime #1 is an SG Standard with Gibson P94s) and this Tele gives more of that bright sound that suits the hard rock sound he hears. It works very well with my Les Paul in a band setting, and allows different voicings and chords to stand out very prominently.
In my own experience, trying this guitar was pleasing. The bright tone lent itself very well to country and certain snappy blues for cleans, and of course for '70s to modern classic and hard rock on the drive side of things. Compared an ash/rosewood Tele we A/Bed with it... this guitar just had more oomph and a fuller, brighter sound that better suited what he wanted in a Tele.
OVERALL OPINION
All in all I think you can't go wrong with one of the new American Standard Teles. This one was a bit more than usual ($1,149 new compared to $999 for an alder one) but it sounds killer and is well worth it. They come with a great TSA approved flight case too... perfect for flying with. And trust me when it comes to it, you won't want to be parting with your Tele when you fly away either. Try one today!00 - King Loudness
Mon arrivée Fender favorites
Publié le 14/08/11 à 05:37 (contenu en anglais)This is one of the new American Standard Teles in a new colour they are calling "Candy Cola." It's a very eye catching finish that I absolutely love both on Strats and Teles. It is no surprise to me then that the Candy Cola Fenders I've tried felt and sounded better to me than a typical black or sunburst example. The guitar is made in the USA in Corona California and features all the typical Tele specs. These include an alder body, a maple neck/fretboard with 22 frets, a modern Tele bridge and sealed tuners and a killer set of reworked Fender American Standard Tele pickups (updated around 2008 I believe).
UTILIZATION
The Tele is not the most ergonomic design ever, but that's not a big deal to me as I've come to expect that by now. The alder ones are usually of a good medium weight (this example is no exception) and they sit on the body very well despite not being overly contoured. I really like the feel of Teles (it has been a slow process to get to feel this way though) and they're just a great guitar. Sure you have to fight it a little more than a Strat or Les Paul, but to me that's part of the charm. Because it's a single cutaway the upper fret access isn't quite as good as a Strat but it's still good enough to get the high notes when you need 'em.
Getting a good tone out of this guitar is pretty simple. The alder examples are not overly bright guitars and have a good dense tone that responds well to pick attack and dynamics quite well. It does both clean and drive tones with ease, though I tend to think of an alder bodied Tele as a bit more conservative sounding than it's raunchier and brighter toned ash bodied sister.
SOUNDS
I've tried this guitar mainly through Fender and Mesa Boogie amplifiers. It has a good variety of tones within despite being a fairly simple instrument. The neck pickup gets into some awesome jazzier tones especially with the tone control rolled down just a bit. The middle position (both pickups) gives a pretty cool take on the typical country twang tone... just with a bit more midrange and a bit more of a nasally quality to the sound... excellent for choppy funk playing. The bridge pickup is pure country... plug that sucker into a Fender amp, hit it with some slapback and yeehaw, you're off to the races. Adding some overdrive to the equation basically turns the guitar into a classic rock machine. Again, while it's not quite as raunchy as the ash bodied ones, it still rocks when it wants to! The neck pickup has a good amount of sustain for leads and the bridge pickup is great for rock rhythm and certain lead styles without being overbearing on the treble (something that does happen from time to time with the ash bodied ones). I'd say it's more conservative sounding than the ash bodied one for sure.
OVERALL OPINION
All in all I don't think there is any way to go wrong with this guitar. They're aggressively priced (about $1,000 new) and with the updates they've made to the guitar recently, the new ones play better than ever. Included to sweeten the deal is an AWESOME TSA flight approved case and all kinds of great case candy... though maybe they should bring back Fender Lifesavers... hah! All jokes aside, this is a wonderful guitar, and for anyone who wants just a good versatile Tele that sounds and feels like it should, give the alder bodied USA Standard a whirl. The Candy Cola finish really pops under light (almost looking like Candy Tangerine offered by Charvel for a while, which happens to be one of my favourite colours).00 - King Loudness
Mise à jour de Tele, oh yeah!
Publié le 14/08/11 à 07:06 (contenu en anglais)The Fender American Standard Tele has been reworked and refined over the years to address what the working player wanted as far as features go. In 2008 Fender updated them to have a lot of changes that were great for the working musician, and they're reflected here (the model I'm reviewing is an off the rack 2011). Here's the spec list:
Body Shape: Telecaster®
Body Finish: Urethane Body Finish
Neck
Neck Shape: Modern "C" Shape
Number of Frets: 22
Fret Size: Medium Jumbo
Position Inlays: Black Dot Position Inlays
Fretboard Radius: 9.5" (24.1 cm)
Fretboard: Maple
Neck Material: Maple
Neck Finish: Gloss Headstock Face with Satin Urethane Finish on Back of Neck
Nut Width: 1.685" (42.8 mm)
Scale Length: 25.5" (64.8 cm)
Neck Plate: 4-Bolt Neck Plate with Micro-Tilt™
Truss Rods: Bi-Flex™ Truss Rod System
Electronics
Pickup Configuration: S/S
Bridge Pickup: American Tele® Single-Coil Pickup
Neck Pickup: American Tele® Single-Coil Pickup
Pickup Switching: 3-Position Blade: Position 1. Bridge Pickup, Position 2. Bridge and Neck Pickups, Position 3. Neck Pickup
Special Electronics: No-Load Tone Control
Controls: Master Volume, Master Delta Tone™
Hardware
Hardware: Chrome
Bridge: American Tele with New American Standard Bent Steel Saddles and Stamped Brass Plate
Tuning Machines: Deluxe Staggered Cast/Sealed Tuning Machines
String Nut: Synthetic Bone
Switch Tip: "Barrel" Style Switch Tip
I have played numerous Teles over the years and I've noticed that the newest 2010-2011 American Standard Teles are just really great guitars. They're simple, but effective guitars. The improvements made by Fender in the finish, electronics, hardware and quality in the last few years is great and I would definitely say they're on their game as far as quality control and putting out a great guitar, even for the $1,000 price point or so that these guitars are selling for. The necks in particular are something that I have been very impressed with recently. The satin finish that they use is really comfortable and pleasing to the hand. I can play for longer periods of time and not get that annoying stickiness that is commonplace with gloss finished necks. The features of the new Teles are great and it shows how much care Fender put into making a killer workhorse guitar for those who wanted it.
UTILIZATION
The Tele is fast becoming one of my favourite guitar to play all the time because you have to fight it a little bit more compared to a Les Paul or even a Strat but the end result is something that just sounds so much more pure and honest. The design itself is very much a "plank." It's a flat guitar with no contouring of note, so there can be some discomfort there if you're playing for longer periods of time. The weights of the Teles I've tried vary, but they're usually medium to heavy weight guitars (depending on if they're alder or ash), so they're definitely not the most ergonomic guitar I've ever seen. I can't imagine a problem with long gigs for me (being that my main guitar is a non-chambered Les Paul) so that wouldn't be a major issue for me. Upper fret access is reasonable. It's not the greatest in the world by any means but I haven't had any major issues with it, and the satin neck finish on the new American Standard Teles does facilitate fast playing and going up and down the neck quite well.
Getting a good tone out of the Tele is very simple or very difficult, depending on how you look at it. This guitar basically gives back what you put into it. If you play softly with lots of dynamics and a cleaner sound, it reproduces that quite well. However if you really dig into it and are using a brighter, more brash sort of sound, it works equally as well with that sort of tone. It's not for everyone but if you're really into a purer sound, you can't get much more pure than the ol' plank known as the Telecaster.
SOUNDS
I've tried these Teles through various Fender, Marshall, Dr. Z and Mesa Boogie amplifiers, all with excellent results. Teles are a lot more versatile and widespread sounding than some people give credit for. It's a very dynamic and true sounding guitar that really sings in the hands of a good player. I wouldn't say the sound of a Tele is very forgiving by any means... you certainly will hear your mistakes, so playing a guitar like this will definitely bring your chops up.
Clean tones are one of the strong point of this guitar. Using the neck pickup and rolling the tone back yields some wonderful jazz tones (surprising from a single coil, I must say). However, the best thing to do with one of these is plug into a clean, loud Fender amp, run the guitar wide open, add a dash of that dripping Fender 'verb and let loose with a barrage of licks that take you down to the highway to Nashville. That sort of tone, very bright and pure is PERFECT for country licks and tricks. Because of it's pure tonal nature, you've got to fight it a bit like I was saying, but once you tame it, it's a wonderful feeling, and possibly a bit more rewarding than playing a very easy guitar.
Dirty tones are pretty freakin' awesome as well from this (especially on the ash bodied models). The pickups in the American Standard models are hotter than the vintage models so you can apply tasteful amounts of grit for that classic blues or rock tone, or you can increase the gain up to savagely high levels to play some shred licks. I find Teles react best for riff based hard rock (if we're discussing drive based tones) because they have a nice crisp, bright edge that sits really well in a mix, and if you put that with a Les Paul or something dark, it makes for a very well seated mix. I wouldn't say this guitar is great for metal styles due to the noise and the bright nature of the guitar, but for classic/hard rock, provided you can tame the noise from the single coils, it can sound awesome with the right amount of saturation applied.
OVERALL OPINION
All in all these are just killer new American Standard Teles from Fender and definitely a great part of Fender's line of products. It's a true workhorse and sounds great for many different styles. Though it's not the easiest guitar to play at times (or "tame,") when you get it to do what you want, there isn't a more rewarding feeling in my opinion. They're about $1,000 new for the alder models and about $1,150 for the ash bodied ones... pretty great deal. It also comes with a slick TSA approved hard case too.00 - iamqman
Belle apparence naturelle!
Publié le 16/08/11 à 07:00 (contenu en anglais)The Fender telecaster has a unique body unlike the Fender Stratocaster. Is a one-of-a-kind build by the fender music company and has been one of the most iconic looking guitars since the 50s. It has a great tone that has a very clean tone and extremely usable and versatile overall voicing.
What I like about the fender telecaster is that it has a great sustain unlike a Gibson Les Paul. A Gibson Les Paul has a natural mahogany sustain where this is a nice ash maple sustain. This is a throwback to the old 50s style telecasters made in America here in the great state of California. The look of this guitar is very classic with its natural ash unpainted body but a lightly lacquered body with a nice black pick guard any fantastic looking maple fretboard.
UTILIZATION
* Alnico V pickups
* Deluxe hardware
* Ash body
* Modern C-shaped maple neck with rich, deep neck tint, glossed neck fretboard with satin back and rolled edges
* Delta-tone™ no-load circuit
* Highly finished frets
* Detailed nut work
* Bent steel Fender saddles
* American Standard Tele® Bridge Plate (steel saddles and brass plate) for improved resonance
* Thinner undercoat for improved body resonance
* Rosewood or maple fretboard
* Staggered machine heads
SOUNDS
I absolutely love the tone of Fender telecaster. There is no other guitar built today that sounds quite like a Fender telecaster. These are very versatile guitars that can jump from genre to genre of music much like a Gibson Les Paul, a Fender telecaster and the Fender Stratocaster. This is the favorite guitar of many country guitarists in Nashville. You also see this guitar heavily frequented by musicians from Europe and especially from England. A lot of the retro pop punk type bands will heavily use the fender telecaster because of its very clean tone and it's brilliant clean overdrive while still carrying the sound of the natural guitar.
OVERALL OPINION
At new these guitars come in right in about $1150 which is an excellent price for American-made Fender telecaster. This has an exciting neck and is very easy neck to play with and it's almost a shredder neck even know it's not a shredder guitar. I highly recommend this guitar to anyone who wants a guitar with a solid clean tone and a unique distortion clean.00 - mrbejim
Un m'en fallait une...
Publié le 17/07/11 à 16:31Tele US. Nouveau modèle depuis 2009. Pas de grand changement par rapport aux anciennes.
Manche palissandre (j'aime pas les mapple)super agéable (vernis satiné) et facile à jouer.
Je voulais une tele comme guitare à tout faire (surtout du rock, je ne joue que cela) qui me change de la stratocaster et de la LP. Habitué au manche de la strat et fan, je voulais un truc ressemblant sans dépenser de trop.
J'ai tout essayé pendant des mois : les bajas, les mexicaines, les rod worn, les classiques 50, 60, etc... Et voilà pourquoi j'ai pris une US :
- vernis manche satiné pour le toucher
- touche palissandre pour ajouter de la rondeur (la mapple est trop claquante)
- un chevalet avec 6 …Lire la suiteTele US. Nouveau modèle depuis 2009. Pas de grand changement par rapport aux anciennes.
Manche palissandre (j'aime pas les mapple)super agéable (vernis satiné) et facile à jouer.
Je voulais une tele comme guitare à tout faire (surtout du rock, je ne joue que cela) qui me change de la stratocaster et de la LP. Habitué au manche de la strat et fan, je voulais un truc ressemblant sans dépenser de trop.
J'ai tout essayé pendant des mois : les bajas, les mexicaines, les rod worn, les classiques 50, 60, etc... Et voilà pourquoi j'ai pris une US :
- vernis manche satiné pour le toucher
- touche palissandre pour ajouter de la rondeur (la mapple est trop claquante)
- un chevalet avec 6 pontets plutôt qu'un vintage (au moins on peut régler l'intonation si besoin)
- les micros et l'électronique classiques et typique télé.
- c'est une US (snobisme)
- un bon étui
UTILISATION
Facile à utiliser, curieux à dire mais plus passe-partout que la strato.
Les deux micros sont bons, quelque soit la position manche, chevalet, les deux à la fois. On a pas mal de sons pour blues, rock, jusqu'à hard léger. J'ai essayé direct en repet sur un bon échantillon du répertoire (stones, beatles, telephone, SRV), tout passe sans se casser la tête.
Pas de pb. de prise en main (je joue Fender depuis 40 ans et la LP ce n'est que de temps en temps), pas trop lourde. je l'ai montée en 10-46 (en standard elle est en 9-42 comme les strats) parce que tout le monde dit que ça envoie mieux. Et d'accord ça envoie bien. Pas eu de mal avec ce nouveau tirant comme quoi c'est comme pour le reste on gamberge pas mal au lieu d'essayer .
SONORITÉS
Pour les types de sons, de clair à gras on a tout ce qu'on veut. J'ai beaucoup aimé le micro manche (que je n'utilise jamais sur la LP et rarement sur la strat : hendrix et SRV seulement), position intermédiaire super (en crunch un régal), et le chevalet bien claquant en clean et avec une bonne dose de saturation restant assez bien défini.
Je joue avec un VOX tonelab et un TECH21 PE 60. Il faudra peut-être que je refasse un set de reglage pour la télé (ou que je baisse un peu les micros) car le niveau de sorti des micros est plus fort que sur la strato donc j'ai un peu plus de crunch partout. Pas trop de ronflette (moins que ma strat). Sur tous les presets que j'ai fait ça passe bien (j'ai fait prsets assez simples et le plus proche possible des simu des amplis VOX, Marshall, TWEED).
AVIS GLOBAL
Comme je l'ai dit j'ai pris le temps de regarder tous les modèles de tele. In fine on en a pour son argent, une US d'occasion c'est un bon plan (manche 22 cases, satiné, micros que l'on peut conserver, un étui, chevalet 6 pontets) . Je n'ai même pas cherché vraiment le meilleur plan, j'ai fait au plus simple, j'ai acheté d'occas. dans mon magasin habituel (qui en avait une ce jour là) car j'avais la flemme de passer dix coup de fil pour en trouver une sans les deux trois pets et pour 50 Euros de moins.
Donc mission accomplie (sauf pour le porte monnaie car j'ai mis plus que prévu).
Lire moins31 - Anonyme
la planche magique
Publié le 17/02/11 à 14:16made in usa
chevalet telecaster a 6 pontets(gravés)
22 frets
deux micro simple fender us delta tones(a verifier)
selecteur trois position,potards volume et tone
manche vissé,finition natural du plus bel effet,case rectangulaire fourni
UTILISATION
comme a mon gout toutes les telecasters c'est du easy...
le manche,bien que large,est agreable et plutot profil en u(n'etant pas specialiste du vocabulaire pro...enfin c'est pas "rond" comme chez gibson,ni plat comme chez ibaniaise),l'ergonomie comme sur une tele est assez quelqonque je trouve(pas de chanfrein de decoupe stomacale,acces aux aigue sommaire,forme peu esthetique....c'est bien une tele)pourtant qu'est ce qu'on est bien dessus…Lire la suitemade in usa
chevalet telecaster a 6 pontets(gravés)
22 frets
deux micro simple fender us delta tones(a verifier)
selecteur trois position,potards volume et tone
manche vissé,finition natural du plus bel effet,case rectangulaire fourni
UTILISATION
comme a mon gout toutes les telecasters c'est du easy...
le manche,bien que large,est agreable et plutot profil en u(n'etant pas specialiste du vocabulaire pro...enfin c'est pas "rond" comme chez gibson,ni plat comme chez ibaniaise),l'ergonomie comme sur une tele est assez quelqonque je trouve(pas de chanfrein de decoupe stomacale,acces aux aigue sommaire,forme peu esthetique....c'est bien une tele)pourtant qu'est ce qu'on est bien dessus!!!!!je ne saurai l'expliquer....
avec une config electronique aussi simple(cf dessus)obtenir un bon son est instantané!
SONORITÉS
ah la guitare brit pop!!!
elle convient a beaucoup de style de musique,dans mon cas(noisy/pop)aussi,le son est claquant avec pas mal de sustain,moins sec que sur une tele standard,en clair c'est le pied mais en disto,contrairement aux idées recues c'est aussi coool!!par contre avec des reglages high gain ca souffle,ben comme une fender aux micro simple,mais ca reste gerable
tester sur un vox ac 4,et sur un fender super champ xd avec une big muff et une proco you dirty rat(une merveille avec une telecaster)
tres bon pour la country,le rock,le picking,la pop,.....reste le cas metal,noise gate obligatoire,et ca sonne pas mal mais on sent bien c'est pas sa meilleure applicaton
AVIS GLOBAL
je l'ai eu 6/7 mois (puis revendues pour raison financiere)et c'etait ma premiere fender us possedée...'ai essayé quelque telecaster avant par le passé,pour deconner,car a la base je suis un gibsonnien,et je suis toujours surpris,ici rien d'ostentatoire,rien d'extravagant,pas de frime,c'est une guitare electrique qui sonne ..point barre,et c'est un plaisir enorme de jouer dessus car elle est fiable expressive,polyvalente...
si je pouvai la racheter je le ferai sans hesiterLire moins10 - AnonymePublié le 27/10/09 à 11:43Je met pas de photo tout de suite, j'en prendrait une moi même....
Marque : fender
Modéle : new american std
Corps : aulne
diapason: 25.5”
Manche : erable vissé
Touche : erable
Frettes : 22
Mécaniques : fender/shaller deluxe etagés
Acastillage : Chromé
Chevalet : American 2-Point Synchronized, pontets 'American Standard Bent Steel'
Micros : 2 simple bobinage fender usa
Controle : 1 volume, 1 tonalité, un selecteur trois position
Accessoires : house skb avec fermeture tsa, sangle jack chiffon offert et en plus strap lock
Origine : usa
UTILISATION
Un super manche, profilé en C, en erable et de plus avec un vernie brillant fort agreable sous les doigts.On deplort malgrés …Lire la suiteJe met pas de photo tout de suite, j'en prendrait une moi même....
Marque : fender
Modéle : new american std
Corps : aulne
diapason: 25.5”
Manche : erable vissé
Touche : erable
Frettes : 22
Mécaniques : fender/shaller deluxe etagés
Acastillage : Chromé
Chevalet : American 2-Point Synchronized, pontets 'American Standard Bent Steel'
Micros : 2 simple bobinage fender usa
Controle : 1 volume, 1 tonalité, un selecteur trois position
Accessoires : house skb avec fermeture tsa, sangle jack chiffon offert et en plus strap lock
Origine : usa
UTILISATION
Un super manche, profilé en C, en erable et de plus avec un vernie brillant fort agreable sous les doigts.On deplort malgrés ça un accés au aigus un peut limiter je doit dire, mais bon... C'est une guitare assez lourde, en même temps c'est de l'aulne... Les mecanique sont irreprochables, le cablage est trés propre, la lutherie soignée.
SONORITÉS
Cette guitare est plutôt destinée au rock/blues/pop mais dans un esprit founk ou reggae elle s'en sort magnifiquement bien.Amateurs de metal/shred/black true celtic metal passez votre chemin.....
Bon aprés c'est une telecaster donc les micro sonnent fort bien, le type de son, je suppose ne pas avoir besoin de vous le presenter hein...
JE la branche sur un Vox AC30 donc evidement ça sonne plutôt bien, malgrés que cette combinaison sucitte pas mal de reglages pour palier à un son un peut criard.
AVIS GLOBAL
J'ai rééditer un peut l'avis, maintenant que je l'ai depuis plus d'un an.
C'est en quelques sortes ma guitare principale, sinon je jous aussi sur une epiphone sg custom et une autre epiphone ej200.
Je tiens a specifier que par rapport au telecaster usa std de la serie precedente, il y a pas mal de chose nouvelles notement les pontets, je sais pas si plus efficace mais en tout cas plus esthetiques. Le vernie du manche est lui aussi different, moi je préfére mais au fond cela relate du gout et des couleurs.
Le rapport qualitée prix est assez bon, on en a vraiment pour son argent quoi, 1200€ c'est vraiment plus qu'honnete pour une guitare de cette qualitée.
Avec l'experience je pense que je referais haut les mains ce choix.Lire moins00
- 1
- 2