Use code "XMASBOGO" on any individual course over at www.samuraiguitartheory.com and get a second course free
@Ruija2711 ай бұрын
"Bogo" is a funny word
@Ruija2711 ай бұрын
@@TheLourie10Both of those would just be laptops
@Dudewheresmyguitar11 ай бұрын
The telegram comments are fake right?
@ubellubo11 ай бұрын
You have been accused of being a scam artist by a KZbinr/TikTokker named Miky Piscopo. Not just you, but anyone one who sells online guitar courses. But you are one of the creators he names in his video.
@Dudewheresmyguitar11 ай бұрын
@@ubellubo Thank you
@mfmartinez11 ай бұрын
The ultimate boomer guitar is a heavy Les Paul with PAFs and a headstock that's been repaired at least 2 times.
@plumbummusic205111 ай бұрын
Sooo... greeny?
@mariesyvian818711 ай бұрын
the toan is in the wood glue
@cynicalclockworks985711 ай бұрын
What's an ESP Eclipse?
@TheThunderwars11 ай бұрын
tOnEwOoD trust me bro
@Ottophil11 ай бұрын
Id rather have a reattached headstock than a guitar that never had one in the first place
@retread108311 ай бұрын
5:14 FUN FACTS: Although the early Stratocasters had a 3-position switch, it was possible to have 5 different pickup selections. Those switches have make-before-break contacts, so by placing the lever between the bridge and middle positions, you could get the bridge pickup in parallel with the middle pickup. Likewise, you could get the neck pickup in parallel with the middle pickup. The selector switch is mechanically unstable in those intermediate positions, so players would often use a toothpick or matchstick wedged between the lever and the pickguard to hold it in position to use these desirable selections. This practice became popular and eventually Leo had the switch manufactures produce a variant of those 3-position switches that had 2 additional detents which made those intermediate positions stable. Thus the 5-position Stratocaster switch was born. Your '63 Stratocaster IS capable of 5 different selections but it will require a modification (a toothpick) to access 2 of those selections. Although some vintage purists may disagree, I believe the age of the toothpick is irrelevant.
@hecanseeme821011 ай бұрын
I can’t believe you didn’t mention the toothpick absolutely must be hickory.
@martinkrauser402911 ай бұрын
DON'T use toothpicks that aren't vintage correct
@216trixie11 ай бұрын
@@hecanseeme8210Tone hickory
@NeuronicPlague11 ай бұрын
I firmly believe that somewhere on the internet, there has at one point been a heated debate about the merits of toothpick tonewood.
@bretthake77139 ай бұрын
Oh look a bunch of hipster dorks that can't appreciate a beautiful maple toothpick
@mtus64711 ай бұрын
I have to admit, of all the guitar players on KZbin that I follow, I didn't think you would be so open minded about new tech put on guitars considering the vintage lover that you are, but I am pleasantly surprised. Kudos to you, I really enjoyed watching this video all the way through.
@glenngardin356111 ай бұрын
Well said!
@eloyreveronrizzo480011 ай бұрын
That technology is almost 20 years old.
@jpob511 ай бұрын
I'm a metalhead but Sammy G is the channel that I've stuck with over time and thats one of the reasons why. He can see it from all angles and doesn't talk down about things he might just not understand or have an interest in. Also he doesnt chase jokes and memes all that often like a lot on here do. All the metal channels seem to get too meme-y after their first couple of interesting videos, or they go full elite mode and reject everything.
@216trixie11 ай бұрын
Actually I think Sammy is the one who is always trying new things. So
@ccelik9710 ай бұрын
About "loving vintage": What's vintage to us today was the best of its time back then. So, I don't find it strange that he digs both lol. Also a thumbs-up for him adjusting the old strat's original original price to inflation today, which clearly showcases that it wasn't a "$200 guitar" (of 2023/2024 that is).
@tusharjamwal11 ай бұрын
Note, the fishmans do NOT run passive. They always need a battery. The "passive voicing" emulates the dynamic response of PAF like pickups. It's not actually working passively.
11 ай бұрын
Yeah, the voicing of it changes, but pickup is still active.
@johnmoyle419511 ай бұрын
I have a 1954 Stratocaster that has been in my family for 3 generations. It’s all original except I upgraded the 3 way switch to a DiMarzio 5 way. It sounds great and is super comfortable to play. The downside: it’s my grandfather’s guitar. I spend a lot of time tuning it. The pickups buzz, the frets buzz, the tremolo puts it out of tune and makes lots of noise. The tuners are stiff and the output jack and saddles are full of rust. I can’t travel with it and I don’t show it to visitors because I’m worried about being robbed. It’s a great rhythm guitar, but I never record solos with it. Never. I swap to an Ibanez for that.
@clapdrix722 ай бұрын
From a financial standpoint, you definitely shouldn't have done that
@mathiashellere890711 ай бұрын
My Strandberg Original NX 8 is the best guitar purchase I've ever done. It's just so nice to play in every way, that I've barely used any of my 6 strings now, for a year.
@aylbdrmadison105111 ай бұрын
How does it feel using vibrato over the spots the frets change drastically? It looks as if the the B string would catch on certain spots where the fret has such a steep angle change it almost creates a sharp corner. Other than that, I'd love to have one. As I've been saying since I was child in the 70's that guitars are literally impossible to tune. You can imagine the arguments I had, especially with adults.😠 One of the few who agreed with me was Ralph Novak: the inventor of fanned-fret guitars and basses.
@Anticure9511 ай бұрын
Vibrato is very easy on all the frets. The angles aren't that drastic, especially with the Strandberg signature neck shape. @@aylbdrmadison1051
@usuallyclueless447711 ай бұрын
@@aylbdrmadison1051 Marty Friedman and Steve Vai themselves said it feels fine to bend and vibrato on true temperament frets.
@flynnedwards11 ай бұрын
@@aylbdrmadison1051The original nx8 does not have true temperament, so that's not a problem, unless it's a plus. However, the string would not catch because there is no change in height, it only changes horizontally, so there would be no difference.
@216trixie11 ай бұрын
I would have to give up on the idea that a guitar is beautiful.
@nafspark11 ай бұрын
I love how Sammy G's ideas of cool things to do with the low B string consist entirely of just occasionally hitting it to let the open B drone out.
@Vivi_911 ай бұрын
What else would you do? Fret the bugger? Not a chance, it's the lowest string!
@havokmusicinc11 ай бұрын
That's not a bad thing or even atypical thing, though. Bass notes like the low B or F# on a 7 or 8 string guitar, or on a more ancient instrument such as the theorbo, the lowest strings have always been used primarily as pedals and drones.
@spicysalad30137 ай бұрын
@@Vivi_9 the kinds of maniacs who play ten string classicals would beg to disagree
@IndieMerchantSam11 ай бұрын
I have only ever played one Strandberg, but it was fantastic, I definitely want one at some point. The weird neck made playing upper extended voicings super satisfying, especially 9th chords
@216trixie11 ай бұрын
I like eighth chords on that instrument
@steffomca76210 ай бұрын
It's because of the neck design itself, it has some kind of V shape that makes the hand grip much more comfortable
@LonkinPork11 ай бұрын
That chord comparison at 8:45 is truly surreal. You can hear a difference in the "wobble" underneath the sound, similar to when you're tuning an instrument to a reference pitch. Not the sort of thing that's easy to pick up on without hearing them back to back like that.
@gagealbright10 ай бұрын
honestly, i dont buy that part. there is no chord on a strat that sounds that out of tune if you have it tuned well and intonated well and have filed the fret slots well and you dont press down too hard on the strings when playing (all the common causes of going out of tune)
@LoraxChannel10 ай бұрын
Meh. The guys doesn't seem to understand that the fender has a bridge that you can adjust for intonation. Sure, play a poorly set up guitar, and it's going to sound bad.
@LonkinPork10 ай бұрын
@@gagealbright I don't know what you mean by you "don't buy that part." There's no feasible reason for it to be trickery. Every straight-fretted guitar sounds that out of tune, if properly intonated and yadda yadda that you listed off. It's fundamental to the 12TET tuning system; it's a compromise that the western musical Public has broadly agreed to for about a century and a half. It's just such a subtle and slight dissonance that you wouldn't notice it without looking for it the way SammyG does in this video.
@LonkinPork10 ай бұрын
@@LoraxChannel Proper intonation only concerns the open string and the 12th fret, the octave. If those are both in tune simultaneously, for each string, the guitar is properly intonated. It's intrinsically impossible to get every fret on every string perfectly in tune at once, even with the wiggly-fret guitar. The wiggly frets can only mitigate the discrepancies between notes a little bit, compared to normal straight frets. But straight frets are much easier to manufacture, which is why string instruments have been built with them for longer than the guitar as we know it as existed. Rather than painstakingly try to get every note in tune at once, we all just accept that every note is slightly out of tune in a way that's nearly imperceptible.
@gagealbright10 ай бұрын
@@LonkinPork what i mean is that i dont think that any chord will sound as out of tune as the one in the video, if you have done a good job of doing all the things i listed. i get that with a guitar with straight frets that there will always be some notes that are a tiny bit out of tune (its especially noticeable when you change keys). i'm just saying i think there are some other factors in the video too, not just the "normal" out of tune you get with straight frets.
@michaeltravis356210 ай бұрын
As a gen X'er (born in 73), I find myself split between these two offerings. I currently own a vintage tele and a Strandberg. While the tele gives me loads of inspiration and allows me to dial in the tones of my guitar heros, the Strandberg forces me to play as my own artist and has helped me refine my technique/ I prefer the Strandberg (overall) if forced to choose only one.
@TheLarsonite11 ай бұрын
This is Gen X erasure. But we already know the ultimate Gen X guitar is a Fender Jazzmaster.
@mugrex9 ай бұрын
I'd argue that's also the ultimate Millennial guitar.
@Andrea-qg5yk7 ай бұрын
what's the gen Z's guitar tho🤔
@tamask77496 ай бұрын
@@Andrea-qg5yktimhenson signature lmao
@mugrex6 ай бұрын
@@Andrea-qg5yk probably a multi-scale, wobbly fretted, headless monstrosity with 20 strings more than anyone should need (i got a bit of a millennial/boomer attitude, i know. Just messin with errrbody)
@werewolflover86365 ай бұрын
Why? If you’re going the Fender route as I prefer the Jaguar.
@rosekennedy974411 ай бұрын
I play a Strandberg Original NX8, which is similar to the one you showed in this video. Not only is it the best playing guitar I've ever played and the most comfortable I've ever played, it has an incredible versatility tone wise. I can use it to play jazz, rock, funk, metal, and anything else I want. It's shocking how well it fuses with other instruments, given how outlandish it looks and how strange it can feel to play for someone new to that guitar world. It was my dream guitar, and I play it almost exclusively.
@TheStrykerProject11 ай бұрын
I so appreciate Sammy G's videos. Informational, but not infomercials; entertaining, funny, and upbeat; and the in-video breaks are about his own products instead of Raid Shadow Legends or Better Health. Bravo, Sammy! 👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻
@216trixie11 ай бұрын
Sammy is the one who goes just ahead of us on the Internet and find things to show us.
@CodyGudmundsen11 ай бұрын
I love the simplicity of older instruments. Wouldn't trade my Gibson SG for the world. I love the tech and playability behind the new generation as well. They're both valid.
@aylbdrmadison105111 ай бұрын
That's a good take.
@Ottophil11 ай бұрын
My gibson SG is tattoo’d on my leg, and will be going in the casket with me when its time. Sorry vintage market, one less Gothic SG for you
@Neightlive11 ай бұрын
No one of them looks dumb
@EvanVaskeWx11 ай бұрын
Strandbergs are actually awesome. I have two of them. Definitely my favorite guitars I own
@Lensman86411 ай бұрын
Likewise. An 8 (purple) and 6 (brown/orange) original True-Temperament pair.
@aylbdrmadison105111 ай бұрын
I have a variety of guitars (including a Strat), but would love to have a Strandberg as well. There is no perfect guitar. Nor even such a thing in reality as "perfection," witch is clearly a matter of opinion. That's why I see just having one type as a nothing more than an intentional limitation. Witch is fine if ones own aesthetic is limited that same way. As long as they don't force such artistic limitations on others, that's totally fine too.😊
@msolano0011 ай бұрын
Same, I have a Boden Standard 6 and a Boden Plini NT. I can't be happier! I would love to try an Aristides too
@mj658211 ай бұрын
Man I so want a strandberg. It's the ultimate ergonomic guitar. The cutaway so you can play on your lap and classical. No headstock that bangs on walls or furnitures, The neck that's shaped so it guides your hand, no hefty shoulders that blocks your palm I mean that's genius. I'm sure it feels weird at first but it is the ultimate comfy guitar that does it all. I have an Ibanez AZ prestige right now which I fing is a good mix of modern and classical, but I keep thinking it's not versatile enough and too big for my small apartment Of course if a build a collection one day it'll have one strat and one gibson because they look so good and are history.
@stickmanbrains17 күн бұрын
Strandbergs don't feel weird at all. Try one. Also don't buy guitars just to say you have them...
@martel86269 ай бұрын
Modern guitarist view: I’ll buy a guitar released last year, based on a novel design from the last 20 years. I’ll use that guitar, along with whatever modern forms of sound generation I can get my hands on to have the broadest musical palette. Traditional guitarist view: I'll buy a replica of a 60s Strat, based in turn on a design released in 1954, because (for example) David Gilmour had a ‘69 Strat. I’ll pair that with a valve/tube amp and keep my signal chain simple by modern standards. That’ll make me like Gilmour! David Gilmour in 1970, when he got his Black Strat: I’ll buy a guitar released last year, based on a novel design from the last 20 years. I’ll use that guitar, along with whatever modern forms of sound generation I can get my hands on to have the broadest musical palette. Traditionalists tend to preserve everything about the greatness of the heyday of guitar-focused music, except the stuff that actually matters.
@ShallieDragon11 ай бұрын
I've been considering a Strandberg for an 8-string. I've played a couple 8-strings in recent memory, and the Strandberg is by far the most comfortable one. I have very small hands, and the Strandberg is the only one that didn't feel like I was trying to fret a surfboard. The narrower neck profile around the edges is just so much easier to fit my hands around. Plus, it weighs a LOT less than other 8-strings (which are already massive, because of the added fretboard size). So I think it'll probably be my next guitar. I won't be GETTING one anytime soon (I recently got a new guitar already, and I am going to have a hard time justifying the $2k+ price tag), but I can dream.
@isuckatguitar625211 ай бұрын
I've been hankering after a 7 string Strandberg for a while. I've got an 7 & an 8 in another brand but would love a strandy 7 for traveling and couch noodling.
@chrisragan930911 ай бұрын
I have a Strandberg 8 and 6, as well as a PRS. The PRS collects dust - needs to go in a case or get sold at this point, tbh. Strandies are just such a great combo of modern tech, great looks (subjective obvs), and ergonomics.
@oldgoat38111 ай бұрын
So I'm gonna say this as a piano tuner that knows how to tune equal temperament by ear as well as many other historical temperaments and wants to try to help set the record straight on what true tempered frets actually do. "True temperament" frets are still in equal temperament, they are compensating for an issue that is inherent in strings called inharmonicity rather than an issue with the tuning system. Inharmonicity is a phenomenon where strings do not vibrate for the entire speaking length (scale length) of the string, the very ends of the speaking length are rigid (on open strings, this is at the nut and the bridge saddle), which causes the actual pitch of the note produced to be higher than what it should be. Oddly enough this is undetectable by most tuning machines but not by human ears. What the true tempered frets help do is account for the rigidity of the strings. Also for clarity, I support manufacturers putting these kinds of things in, it gives us an additional way as musicians to express music, I just find that the people who market it leave that part out, and I'm a gigantic nerd who thinks it's really interesting
11 ай бұрын
Not sure what you mean with “undetectable by tuning machines”? Plenty of modern tuners should have enough accuracy for that. (At least strobe tuners?) Isn’t it more due to the fact you usually tune the open strings, hence fretted notes will then be somewhat off. (And opposite, tune after a fretted note and other frets/open will be off)
@oldgoat38111 ай бұрын
@ it's not so much that the tuners are inaccurate, it's that this phenomenon is only detectable to the human ear (which is how we process anything musical). When a piano is tuned by ear we tune an octave of notes around middle C, then we match the notes above and below that by octaves. If we look at A 440Hz to A880Hz you'll often find that if you tune A 880 by ear using the octaves a tuning machine will find it's noticeably sharp, potentially up around 890Hz. Specialised piano tuning machines have adjustments for this built in to them to varying degrees, because the size of the piano/length of strings determine how much inharmonicity is present.
@t3hgir9 ай бұрын
@ I would trust a piano tuner on tuning matters, have you ever looked inside a piano?
9 ай бұрын
@@oldgoat381 I understand. You are referring to the stretch tuning compensating for the inharmonicity in the strings. That is cool, and definitely matters. (And I’m sure you know this as a piano tuner, but for others: that is why grand pianos tune slightly better, the nonvibrating part of the string is a smaller percentage of the whole string, due to longer strings.) Though what you are saying is implying that it IS detectable by tuners though. Not the opposite. If it wasn’t detectable by tuner, the tuner would read the same in both cases. So since the tuner reads sharp, it obviously did detect the change… As for exactly what frequency that would be is more complicated (calculate from overtone series, use a strobe tuner with that as a reference etc) so I agree that is probably just quicker to do by ear for an experienced piano tuner. 😁
@oldgoat3819 ай бұрын
@ more that it's observable with a tuner, the actual inharmonicity basically can't be detected because the interference can't be determined by a machine yet
@Johnkiernanmusic11 ай бұрын
I love how even measured your review here is. Both guitars are great, but I feel you reflected them as best as possible. Great review!
@GeorgeGeorgeOnly11 ай бұрын
The old Strat has only 21 frets.
@mivani8411 ай бұрын
I have a strandberg boden standard. I love it. The first time i saw it i was laughing at it. But it got my intrest. Its a real nice guitar and ideal to breng with you and sit behind the computer and practice songs.
@poser_disposer11 ай бұрын
I always appreciate that sammy only does ads for his own courses. It's refreshing seeing a different ad on videos, and really shows that he believes in himself and what he has to offer. I've considered buying one of the courses many times, some day i certainly will when i have enough time to utilize it.
@TheDemonsReflection11 ай бұрын
You should do a shoot out between this strat and your vintage Tele. See how they stack up.
@jackbootshamangaming45418 ай бұрын
I am waiting for my Strandberg Boden NX7 Standard to arrive, I can't wait.
@zloboslav_11 ай бұрын
I like being in the middle of these generational extremes with an Ibanez RG550 :)
@James.9911 ай бұрын
That's a gen X guitar
@pastorofmuppets19685 ай бұрын
Love me some Ibani.
@ChainsawChristmas10 ай бұрын
Buying a Strandberg was the best guitar purchase I've ever made. It's very difficult to pick up any other guitar. It's so light, ergonomic, and easy to travel with.
@elliotrichards694811 ай бұрын
I recently purchased an 8 string nx strandberg as my first guitar. It is a decision I absolutely do not regret. It plays better than any other guitar I've tried in my opinion. The jumbo frets and carbon compound fretboard give it a glassy almost semi scalloped feel and the shape makes the instrument sit in a perfect playing position without you having to work at a weird angle. Ola really was ahead of his time with these things
@tima604411 ай бұрын
No offense, but you don't have a frame of reference since you've never owned and played a guitar for a long period of time. 8 strings aren't recommended for beginners since the extra 2 strings complicate how a guitar is normally held and now you position your hands. They are not good first guitar choices and I do not recommend them to anyone, with one exception. If the music you love and are inspired to play uses 7 and 8 string guitars then it might be more acceptable.
@isuckatguitar625211 ай бұрын
@@tima6044 If u treat an 8 string guitar as it's own instrument then there's no reason to not start with it. I mean it's the same as starting on any instrument. I started on a 6 string & purchased my 8 string after 8 months just because I discovered that style and fell in love. Guitar friends ask me how I can play it & how its so weird but I see it as It's own thing, I went into it completely ignorant and never had any probs. I even found myself a teacher who plays 7 & 8 string too. I absolutely love it!
@martinkrauser402911 ай бұрын
@@tima6044the two extra strings and additional girth aren't going to confuse someone who isn't used to six. They'll find fewer teachers and resources, and that's about it
@Wills.musicpage11 ай бұрын
Dude..... That bit you were playing on the strat during the intro had Cory Wong's influence all over it.... Love it!
@diegoleiva724210 ай бұрын
I once setup a Strandberg for someone else and the only way I can describe it is it felt like playing air guitar, except it made sounds not coming out of my mouth. Extremely effortless and truly exceptional stuff even though I'm not a "modern" player in the least.
@quazimodo61911 ай бұрын
I honestly really lile when things are ever so slightly out of tune so when u hit an octave, theres this really nice warble effect that adds alot of character
@stickmanbrains17 күн бұрын
Tune your dang guitar
@quazimodo61917 күн бұрын
@stickmanbrains no
@rideu2b9 ай бұрын
I bought a Strandberg Boden Original NX 6 about 2 months ago. I was going to send it back the same day after playing it for 30 minutes. I was not able to send it back (basically my fault). To make a long story short, I decided before listing it on Reverb, I'll force myself to play it some more and try to get used to it (maybe/hopefully lol). Fast forward 2 month later to today, it became my favorite guitar. I play it all the time, and my Gibsons, PRSs, Fenders and Jacksons are just hanging on the wall (I have 26 other guitars). I can't recommend the Strandberg highly enough. Give it a chance, be open minded, play it, and you'll love it. I can almost guarantee it.
@nicholasaragon412611 ай бұрын
As a millennial, I like boomer looks with modern features, modern playability, and modern electronics. But I'm not too picky I'll play anything and everything. Great video.
@georgebluestorm243911 ай бұрын
Then youve gotta get yourself a Charvel
@pinkhairedwitch11 ай бұрын
Anything from the Fender Vintera runs would be great for you.
@alicewilson191311 ай бұрын
You misunderstood what those frets do, and I think you may also be misunderstanding what equal temperament actually is or at least how it's different from 'Just Intonation'. True temperament frets just get you closer to equal temperament (it explains this very clearly on their website). A normal piano in equal temperament can actually be more or less exactly in equal temperament because it's strings vibrate along a fixed length. On a normal guitar, this can only be approximated because fretting a note puts the string at an angle meaning it has to be very slightly longer to still be playing the correct note (it becomes like the hypotenuse of a very shallow right triangle). When you adjust an intonation saddle you are compensating for this, the higher the bottom of the string is from it's fret the more its length will need to change. The ideal is to have the the length when fretted be in tune with the open note across the whole fretboard, but because the action and angle to the bridge change slightly as you go up and down the guitar neck we can never make it perfectly correct for every note, so we can only approximate equal temperament on guitars and similar fretted instruments. The True Temperament system takes it an extra step and adjusts the frets individually in order to compensate for *that*. It is still an approximation, but it is much closer to equal temperament than a normal guitar is.
@Doty6String9 ай бұрын
I recently thought that the intonation is something that makes the “vintage” sound.
@kievitz11 ай бұрын
Only the player knows what kind of instrument they need. It only matters in a subjective sense, because the listeners do not fkn care at all, about your instrument or your tone. If it stays in tune and plays well, its a good instrument.
@guitariffic11 ай бұрын
The most boomer guitar is the les paul. Strat is a classic design but a lot of modern guitarists use strat esp. neo soul, funk, players.
@franklulatowskijr.697410 ай бұрын
Bass player here. I have two Dingwalls, a Canadian ABZ and a Chinese NG3. But I also have two Fender based builds, one of which is built on a refinished 1964 P neck. The ABZ is absolutely perfect and the NG3 is a funk machine, but there’s something about those Fender builds that makes me love them. Both have modern Fender parts with pickups with Nordstrands and/or Fralins. The fretless is based on a 1960 J and I probably play that almost as much as the ABZ. I guess what I’m saying is that modern tech is great, but older tech is just as great. It just won’t be perfect, which I fine by me. I like that imperfection.
@DavidPerry-ui2qz11 ай бұрын
Love em both. The Strandberg is something I’m looking at due to shoulder issues. 🤘🎸🤘
@martinkrauser402911 ай бұрын
Don't be afraid to modify guitars you already own and use to reduce weight, either. Health comes far far ahead of aesthetics, but done right you shouldn't see it
@nickk610911 ай бұрын
Hehe my guitars 1989 strat 25.5" scale, sunburst, thin neck, single coils. 2023 scratch build 7string 28.625" scale completely custom build - laminate through neck ergonomic body (close to the stranberg built for sitting and standing), equal temperament, hum buckers, fixed bridge.
@LucasChoate11 ай бұрын
For what it's worth, my 11y/I wants a red strat for Christmas.
@kitko3311 ай бұрын
This reminds me of gearheads/petrolheads salivating over 4-wheel steering these days. Which were common on Japanese cars in the late 1980s and early 1990s. Guitar players tend to be numb and backward and this duel confirms it. As for Stranberg... NONE of the tech is new or groundbreaking. Headless is old, true temperament is old as the guitar itself as people were trying to overcome the natural tuning limits of a guitar - compensated nut, adding more frets, and yes... having a unique fret wire position as on this Stranberg. Fishman pickups are still a magnet wrapped by wires. Necks have been shaped and 'tempered' for decades. As for the Fender, I'm approaching my 50th birthday and Fenders never appealed to me.
@RepaidGold5810 ай бұрын
Never pay more than 2k for a guitar, and that’s a lot in it if itself. Often times, guitar companies will try to market crappy guitars as ‘high quality’ by adding a high price tag to give the impression that you’re getting better bang for your buck. Any Ibanez signature model is of the exact quality of their standard models, which I learned the hard way with a (very expensive) Steve Vai signature PIA which I would compare to the quality of a medium tier squire.
@worstghosthunting346611 ай бұрын
It’s really weird but cool to see a blues fiend like Samurai Guitarist enjoy something like a strandberg. This is an enjoyable video
@Spider60211 ай бұрын
I dont if im alone on this, but the slight off-tune you get from equal temprement is something i really like and i feel its a huge part of the guitars unique sound and is part of what makes a guitar what it is
@twojointsjay733011 ай бұрын
No, you're not alone on this, literally 99.99% of the music listening world agrees with you.
@geroffmilan332811 ай бұрын
You're not alone - but with only 4 likes & 1 response in agreement, versus other comments with 400+ likes, you're apparently in a minority. Nothing wrong with that, mind.
@geroffmilan332811 ай бұрын
@@twojointsjay7330 😂 so you've canvassed opinion from "most of the music-listening world", have you? And asked them to distinguish between whether they liked the dissonance, as opposed to tolerating it? And accounted for the fact that a large chunk can't distinguish between 2 different notes, much less this dissonance? Or - much more likely - have you just assumed everyone agrees with you cos you must be right? 🤔
@twojointsjay733011 ай бұрын
@@geroffmilan3328 "And accounted for the fact that a large chunk can't distinguish between 2 different notes," congenital amusia only affects less than 4% of the global population so claiming it's a "large chunk" only highlights you have no idea what you're talking about. Great job acting like a pedant in the face of obvious hyperbole, hope it made you feel really smart. The fact is true temperament frets were only invented in 2006 and haven't really been used on any major music recording since. The idea that enjoying the sound of a guitar without true temperament frets is a niche position rather than the default one is ridiculous.
@epsilon651611 ай бұрын
If you add enough overdrive you can't tell.
@ThorneyedWT10 ай бұрын
I'd say those are wrong contenders. If you don't really need it, all those pickup options and battery become nuisance, extra string makes it harder to mute properly and headless design makes it less convenient to restring and tune. Oh and true temperament really works for one specific tuning, if I get it right. But good old Strat had some real improvements in form of Ibanez Jem and late Leo Fender's designs under Music Man and GnL brands.
@WoodwindMusicWeb11 ай бұрын
You can get a TT neck for Strat/ Tele. Made in Sweden, about $ 650
@angryroostercreations519410 ай бұрын
Despite the number of "strat" copies out there, most modernize the guitar in some way which almost always involves ditching the single coil pickups. That pickup layout is what makes a Strat, and monkeying with it fundamentally changes the sound of the guitar. There are many different pickups/configurations out there that can emulate the strat tone, but the traditional single coil layout has a very distinct sonic character. For me i'm less about the body shape, and headless vs. standard construction, but if i want a "strat tone" The guitar will have traditional single coils in it.... and the wiggle stick.... i like my wiggle stick.
@jimmygillard11 ай бұрын
I'm gen x, and I know it makes no sense, but telecasters still look like the most "futuristic" guitar to me. Leo nailed it on his first try.
@aldorthegreat526712 күн бұрын
The tele is truly timeless without changing a damn thing the same guitar looks retro, modern and futuristic
@gimmenames903911 ай бұрын
Cool video! So much resonating with my experiences. Got a Sälen Classic and it's my favourite guitar by far. It's the guitar I miss when I go traveling and the first one I grab when coming back. It just makes you make music. The only thing missing is an 8 string version of the Sälen. I'd jump on it in no time.
@SuperLocrian11 ай бұрын
I don't know about the guitars, but that little groove you were playing at the top IS FIRE!!! 🔥🔥🔥 You should develop that into a full fledged toon!
@jimjam155611 ай бұрын
Does no one actually do research on True Temperament before talking about it? It has nothing to do with making equal temperament guitars more in tune; it's its own temperament system unto itself. The idea is that it prioritizes guitar centric keys like C G D etc. by having their intervals be closer to Just Intonation (the intonation system based on simple mathematical rations, and what people tend to call "the most in tune") at the cost of other keys like Bb, Gb etc. being less accurate to Just Intonation; but not by so much that those keys are unusable. That's why the frets are squiggly, because unlike equal temperament not all intervals are equidistant. It blows my mind how so many people that argue about true temperament frets even know what they are.
@SONOMA_VALLEY_TOM11 ай бұрын
Professional quality video. Intelligent commentary. Guitars, my take: I had my first guitar lesson July 1960. I've bought and sold 1,000's of guitars. Owned a musical instrument store 1998 - 2007. Modern guitars are better instruments for construction quality and musically. A cheap mass produced electric guitar 60 years ago, even made in the USA, was usually difficult to play and sounded pretty bad especially through. a cheap amp. Today there are so many Asian made guitars at low prices that are really credible and reliable instruments that are used by working musicians. Corollary is amps, too. I own two vintage 1960's Fender amps in pristine condition. I also own a Boss Katana 100 watt. I enjoy the various tones and dynamic sound of the Katana over the Fenders for rock. Though for archtop jazz playing the Fender Deluxe is still king of the hill.
@tacoconch76789 ай бұрын
The intonation may have been set correctly and the guitar was tuned, but that chord sounded awful on that Strat. A good luthier could cut a proper nut for that thing and set it up correctly and those chords would be practically perfect.
@shlebmo11 ай бұрын
It’s a cool video with a guitar I know nothing about (the Strandburg) A Strat is the ultimate chime machine. That bell like tone is killer. That strandburg looks nice and I bet it sounds amazing. I can’t say which classic guitar I have is my favorite. Probably the strat over my Les Paul standard. It’s just silky smooth but if I may there’s this semi gritty tone from a barely distorted Les Paul that inspires rhythm like crazy and an equally biting lead tone on the bridge too. I’ve owned so many others, PRS, SG, Telecaster and for me it would be Strat, Les Paul, Telecaster, then the Jag/SG/Firebird. PRS does all the tricks but masters none of them at least the custom 24 I owned. A 335 is close to the Les Paul. I love it too
@curiousuranus81010 ай бұрын
Brilliant post! I'm a custom shop Strat Les Paul player, but I'm definitely going to check out a Strandberg after this post! Thanks.
@DOBbysMusic11 ай бұрын
Mad respect for putting the amazing Sarah Longfield in the supercut of headless guitarists.
@thebluesrockers10 ай бұрын
The original "Les Paul" signature guitar was actually hated by Les Paul. He had a fit about his name being connected to that guitar shape. Later Gibson changed the body shape of that guitar and re-named the first Les Paul, guitar the "SG" (stands for signature) And because of that we have now have two great looking Gibson guitars. The Fender "Broadcaster" name was changed to the "Telecaster" and like he said in this video, "Fender" later created the Stratocaster, and then we had the four most popular guitars in music history. So are you a Gibson, or Fender lover? I personally love all four of these guitars. I've owned a 1953 Les Paul custom. A 1974 SG custom. and I've owned a 1983 Buddy Holly re-make. I've never owned a Telecaster, but I had a friend years ago, that let me play his 1990, and I absolutely loved it. Out of all the guitars that I've ever owned I miss my 1953 Les Paul custom. My second most missed guitar was my 1974 SG. I now own a Standard, Fat, Fender Stratocaster. It's lighter and easier to play than some of the Les Paul's that I've owned, and much easier to play high on the neck. I still think the Les Paul's look better but I'm really in love with my Stratocaster.
@MrAntifed11 ай бұрын
Call me crazy but i kinda like the dissonance that the wonky chord produces on straight frets. Especially with distortion. Just my opinion
@RandomEye113111 ай бұрын
As much as I hate the look of the headless, it sounds immaculate.
@anuvette11 ай бұрын
since when did stratocaster become a boomer guitar
@IronValorantClips3 ай бұрын
A 63' start
@sunnohh2 ай бұрын
No later than ‘70?
@swatchcovers540111 ай бұрын
I think it’s easy to write off modern guitars for being to clean and not having that “mojo” when they haven’t really gotten that chance to age. I have my 13 year old Jaguar that I’ve been playing forever and has age to it, but after having my strandberg for a while. It’s hard to go back sometimes because of how great it plays and feels. It’s so nice and easy to play.
@DroctorKloebner11 ай бұрын
I think the value comparison isn't quite fair given that the strat is expensive because it's a collectors item. 3500 bucks will definitely get you one hell of a stratocaster. So I'd say their value is pretty equal.
@TwelveSticks11 ай бұрын
Really nicely balanced review / comparison.
@kennybassett224911 ай бұрын
Would you consider doing a blues course on your platform? You could go over the basics of different subgenres of blues from one guitar and a singer, Robert Johnson and SRV- type stuff to Chuck Berry- type stuff. I would love to get into more blues, but don’t really know where to start and you’re amazing at everything blues. Honestly, I wouldn’t have anyone else teach me except for people like Eric Clapton or Muddy Waters. Please consider this because it would be really helpful. (PS: I also DM’ed this to you on Instagram)
@DanstevGraker11 ай бұрын
"The only guitar you'll ever own." How many takes did you need to say that with a straight face? Very interesting guitar, I'm glad you were able to compare the two for us. Thank you!
@samuraiguitarist11 ай бұрын
Lol it could be the only guitar you ever own! But let's be honest it won't
@TaxEvader42011 ай бұрын
Gold top les paul is the ultimate boomer guitar but I'll allow it
@Lensman86411 ай бұрын
Errrr ... a 59 Burst is it but you're close.
@TaxEvader42011 ай бұрын
@@Lensman864 Yeah you're right, I thought Jimmy Page had a gold top for some reason. Not a rock guy at all lol
@t3hgir11 ай бұрын
@@TaxEvader420 Jeff Beck and David Gilmour played Goldtop LPs I believe, I know Gilmour's had P90s and wraparound bridge...
@NicklausSIR211 ай бұрын
Small addition from a metal player: chords will still sound nice on a 7-strings, but 8 and more and this gets too low to get proper definition (same as why bass players don't play power chords, or pianists play their left hand a lot more open than the right hand, has to do with the exponential naure of the pitch vs frequency curve and how the low end is more "cramped together"). Typically 8 strings riff will be single note in the low range or maybe octaves (if you want to avoid muddiness).
@GodsUnrulyFriends11 ай бұрын
I almost bought a Strandberg. I may still buy one.
@figeon7 ай бұрын
I think the modern innovations in guitars like fanned frets, true temperament, and extra strings are major improvements that should be standard nowadays.
@aaronsmithey404411 ай бұрын
You can get replacement necks from True Temperament for your Strat.
@ArchetypalCat11 ай бұрын
Very good review of very different instruments. Thanks!
@ulfdanielsen600911 ай бұрын
If you already have a lot of Strats there are no reasons valid enough to justify not buying yet another one.
@JayKughan11 ай бұрын
"2 great electric guitars from 2 very different generations" summarised in 1 great video. Cheers bub! You rock!!! 🤘
@paulhopkins190511 ай бұрын
The Strat sounds so much more alive, modern guitars are so sterile sounding
@Double_J_4862911 ай бұрын
the question that IMMEDIATELY popped in my mind, the answer to which was _never even hinted at_ , is what does this Strandberg sound like with heavy bending? my guess is that it could range somewhere between "interesting" and "wtf"
@benjamineer304511 ай бұрын
I have both and enjoy them equally. Tuning down a strat Dropped B is fun though
@GitShiddy11 ай бұрын
Boomer Guitars- Strat, Tele, Les Paul, ES-335 Gen X- V's, Explorers, Charvel, Jackson Millennials- PRS, Ibanez, ESP Gen Z- Ibanez, PRS, Fender Jaguar (somehow) Gen Alphas- Strandberg, Abasi, TBD others
@latheofheaven101711 ай бұрын
You can, of course, buy a TT neck and fit it on your Strat. I did, and I love it. I get the same feeling about the improved intonation of the TT system as SG mentions in the video. Just makes me smile!
@kanazak211 ай бұрын
For me the ideal guitar would probably be closer to the strandberg, but with the addition of a middle pickup, a tremolo+piezo system, and aesthetically I really still want there to be a head on it. A headless guitar just... doesn't look as good to me. But I'm currently slowly working through modded strats as a project right now, as the strat is close enough on almost all metrics feel-wise and aesthetically, and very easy to mod the electronics in. Currently working on one that has a mid boost AND a 10-way pickup selector. Some day I intend to combine that with the Seymour Duncan P-Rail pickups and the Fishman Powerbridge.
@sacundim11 ай бұрын
I wasn't convinced that this explanation of True Temperament guitars is right. Looking at other materials I understand it is not something that contrasts with equal temperament as presented here (and in some other sources I saw!), but rather is dealing with the problem that straight frets cannot in actual practice intone equal temperament accurately throughout the fretboard because the strings don't all have the exact same thickness.
@MnasonMarlatt11 ай бұрын
I have a 1981 headless Steinberger bass guitar. Amazing instrument but it requires special double-ball end strings that are not easy to get in a regular shop.
@simonpark84311 ай бұрын
This is one of the most informative videos I've seen you make - I'm not in the market for a new guitar, but this video did make me think so thank you.
@thseed711 ай бұрын
We're going to be fine. Wish we were getting more done while we have so many awesome players reaching the tail end of their time in K.C. Need to keep working to get it tightened up.
@PeterCleff9 ай бұрын
Bloody hell! I sometimes forget how great a player you are. As a proggy super Strat boy, The strandburg is a bit of a dream guitar for me. Great video!
@GraniteSoundtrack10 ай бұрын
It’s funny I went the other way. For much of my serious guitar playing I wanted modern. This was before the current modern types. I owned an Ibanez. I remembering being so excited at saving my money for the first edition of a EBMM JP when they first came out. But at some point I picked up an old strat and it all changed. Now I’m in love with a ’62 tele reissue (no can’t afford a real vintage) All of us guitarists can be surprised by the other side. play what works for you.
@LS-jj4sy11 ай бұрын
Man I just want... any .strandberg boden non-6-string. The true temperament honestly seems like a bit much for me haha. Next time I'm in the position to drop 2k on something I'll probably get one (unless I can track down an OP-1)
@EssensOrAccidens2 ай бұрын
That intro tune was charming. Nice work.
@ZappaSheik11 ай бұрын
Being a guy that has 2 63' strats I prefer them over modern. I love the modern guitar and I'm missing a Strandberg even though I'm swedish and a collector. My Strats will not lose me money a Strandberg will.
@TheTobesOfHades11 ай бұрын
Thanks, appreciate the detailed breakdown and comparisons.
@BaronVonQuiply11 ай бұрын
Over-simplification of the history of the electric guitar: 1952 Les Paul and Gibson create the Les Paul. 1954 Leo Fender creates the Stratocaster. _"K, guys! Wrap it up! We're done here!"_
@t3hgir5 ай бұрын
do you reckon the Fender Bassman amp (basis of Marshall circuit) and P-bass (first electric bass) are as important as well?
@off5125Ай бұрын
4:55 Piezo pickups take vibrations, most common passive electric guitar pickups work by taking electric signal caused by strings intervention in magnetic field of magnet/-s
@Nasha-Official10 ай бұрын
The ultimate millennial guitar could do with a sustainiac, graphtech ghost + acoustiphonic preamp, two outputs and perhaps an evertune bridge. Development is ongoing luckily and I can't wait to see what the future holds. For me, I could not get used to the Strandberg's neck and went Mayones Hydra.
@xMElpx11 ай бұрын
One problem with curvy frets is, that, ironically, you sound out of tune while playing with other bass- and guitar players, unless they all use this kind of guitar. If you play solo however, it should be fine.
@grapefruitsimmons11 ай бұрын
Idk if youre using different tones for each or same settings but every time the Boden came on its sound stole the show. Probably just because I prefer HH over SS
@jakemixd8 ай бұрын
Your videos are so addictive 😊. Not to mention your playing and doing writing are awesome too.
@ivan_osorio11 ай бұрын
Interesting. When you demonstrated the chord played on both guitars, I was actively expecting to prefer the Strandberg... But then I did not. I found the inherent lack of intonation of the Strat to be... familiar? And I welcomed to small dissonance the imperfection brought to the chord. In the end, the Strat sounded a lot more like what I both expected and wanted to hear out of a guitar. Having said that, the neck profile on the Strandberg is genius.
@petertrast11 ай бұрын
That opening side by side tells you all you need to know. Tone wise, there is no comparison. The Strandberg sounds dull, muffled lifeless next to the Strat. I thought my EQ was off on the pro quality recording studio speakers in my professional recording studio, but it was just that new fangled contraption asking to be put into hospice. How is there even a question? Music is FIRST about sound, the rest is secondary.
@cederickforsberg584011 ай бұрын
A Stratocaster with TT frets and Evertune bridge is just amazing with classic look but modern fantastic functional features I value Evertune bridge higher than TT frets since staying in tune and doing crazy bends is more important to me personally than having increased intonation from TT frets