I don't think there is any real substitute for the sound of a Tele bridge pickup, so there's that. And I love the "cluck" of a Strat. But one of the things that disappoints me about 3 pickup guitars with 5-way switches is that there is no neck+bridge combination available. A mod I like to do - which is most appropriate on "Nashville" Teles, but also on Strats, is to simply flip the leads for the middle and bridge pickups at the selector switch. Instead of N / N+M / M / M+B / B, you get N / N+B / B / B+M / M. So you forfeit one of the "cluck" positions but regain the Tele-like N+B setting. Of course, some folks like one cluck position more than the other. So, for them, you flip the middle and neck pickup leads at the selector switch. That gets you M / M+N / N / N+B / B. It takes a little getting used to, but not all that much. I don't think I could ever be without a neck+bridge tone!
@AskZac4 жыл бұрын
One of my favorite places, John Leventhal, does that mod. I was watching him play a 3-pickup Tele, and was confused as I watched his selector switch. Afterwards, he told me the wiring mod that he did, just like you explained. I am tempted to flip those connections right now. Another pinned comment, Mark!
@fossilmatic4 жыл бұрын
Yep. My Strat has this mod, but simply because I swapped the middle and bridge pickups around in the pick guard!
@AZFunk4 жыл бұрын
Emerson has a great wiring harness for Strats that turns the bottom tone into a blender circuit, allowing you to blend the bridge in when on the neck, and vice versa, and in the 2 and 4 position, blend in to have all 3 pickups active.
@thethesaxman234 жыл бұрын
Mark Hammer something I did as a mod on a friend’s strat was wiring the neck and middle pickups to a toggle switch. The mod allows home to toggle between the standard 5 way and the M/NM/N/NB/B configuration. It actually works really well and it’s become one of his favorite guitars!
@markhammer6434 жыл бұрын
@@thethesaxman23 There's certainly no end to the creative mods one can do with a Strat or other 3-pickup guitar. I generally recommend the lead-swap as an offering to the more timid, who may be justifiably reluctant to start popping holes into their guitar, or reluctant to embark on push-pull switches. Simply flipping two leads around at the switch get you a new guitar without having to add anything, buy new pickups, drill holes or follow arcane wiring diagrams. Old course, no wiring mod on a Strat, no matter how simple, gets you past the frustration and nuisance that could have been avoided if Fender had used the same two-piece pickguard and control plate found on the Tele, the Jaguar, and Jazz Bass. Yet one more reason to love Teles!
@ianfelchlin32154 жыл бұрын
One of my favorite things about Fender guitars is that they can have SUCH different voices in different players' hands. Especially Strats. Sure, this is true for all guitars, but I really feel like Strats and Teles are the epitome of the sentiment.
@notbraindead72983 жыл бұрын
Very astute observation.
@PageandPlant4Life2 жыл бұрын
Compare Claptons strat tone to Richie Blackmore... drastically different sounds. Astute observation
@sichuancowboy2 жыл бұрын
@@PageandPlant4Life that's because amps matter way more than guitars in the signal chain. they used different amps.
@marc-antoinejean64284 жыл бұрын
My first pick, a strat, as always My second pick, another colour of strat. My third pick, maybe a tele... or a strat
@jupitermoongauge40554 жыл бұрын
I like your first 2 picks, the 3rd not so much.
@garymurfee42902 жыл бұрын
Great point about not just playing a “different” guitar not for a different tone or to do different things in a song-but also so that you play it differently.
@frankadams45864 жыл бұрын
I was a Tele guy until it was stolen. My other guitar was a Strat and by the time I found another Tele that I liked, the Strat had seduced me. The Strat is my voice but when I need to crank up a guitar with some attitude, the Tele can't be beaten. The more refined nature of the Strat drew me in and I felt like it was much easier to play. Playing the Tele is a little more like work to me, but my Tele buddies, of course, disagree. All my Strats (except for the EJ) have 6100 frets (12" radius), Fralin pickups, and upgraded hardware - especially the Trem block. Anybody looking to toughen up the tone of a Strat should consider looking at upgrading the trem block and adding a Fralin steele pole 43 to the bridge position. Great video Zac. Thanks.
@joepalooka21454 жыл бұрын
I'm a Tele player because it gives me the sounds I want and love. But I love Strats too, for the amazing history of the great players who have shown us how incredibly versatile they can be. From Buddy Holly to Hank Marvin to the greatest Strat player of them all----- Jimi Hendrix---- it's another example of the amazing genius mind of Leo Fender. There aren't enough words to truly describe how brilliant and inventive Leo was.
@dirkdiggler62302 жыл бұрын
im pretty sure it was an accident
@powbobs Жыл бұрын
David Gilmour.
@thethesaxman234 жыл бұрын
Personally I really dig the sound of positions 2 and 4, but I think that’s what’s great about Strats. There’s so many tonal options for any style or any player. That’s probably why it’s regarded as “the” electric guitar!
@braddietzmusic24294 жыл бұрын
Love the touch and sensibility of the clean tone playing with country, r&b, americana sensibilities. My kind of thing. This channel has become one of my favorites on YT.
@christopher198944 жыл бұрын
I never liked the quack sound on a strat. The tremolo system also psyches me out too much; I'm paranoid about slipping out of tune during a perfect take. It's more versatile than a tele, because it has more knobs and pickups, but I find that the pickups don't have enough contrast between them to get interesting tones as readily as a tele. My favorite part about a tele is the contrast between the neck and bridge pickups. They're really different on their own, but then they blend so well together in the middle position, creating a humbucking option with a cool glassy character.
@Dreyno2 жыл бұрын
My Strat came with the bridge locked down and I left it there. I have an old Yamaha superstrat with a trem if I absolutely need to use one (which is never). In fairness, it holds tune perfectly as long as you don’t dive bomb it so maybe it’s nothing to be scared of.
@bluwng2 жыл бұрын
Interesting, luckily most people don’t agree with you
@uncoiledfish25612 жыл бұрын
Someone’s got a Tele bias….
@g.k.dickenson92592 жыл бұрын
If your Strat goes out of tune, it's because of a lack of knowledge on how to setup & balance spring tension, nut height, Trem. Block,etc. My stock tremolo stays in tune.
@aobyungcp43302 жыл бұрын
I play Tele’s and Strats and i have no tuning issues Like buddy guy once said” I was doing 100 mph with two woman and Strat with no case and the strat flew out of the car he went back picked it up and not only was it not broken but it was still in tune” ive had the same situations as him good setup proper nut and strings it will stay in tune just fine….unless u do dive bombs 🤷♂️
@asdf98904 жыл бұрын
I'm really hoping this channel grows, you have so much information to share and I love the laid back/calm feeling and delivery. Keep it up and I'll keep watching!
@AskZac4 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much!
@dorielementary4 жыл бұрын
There's a device called the tremol-no that allows you to easily disable and re-enable the tremelo. It replaces one of the springs in the back.
@dorielementary4 жыл бұрын
www.tremol-no.com/
@chuckfinley31522 ай бұрын
No need, just "deck" the term and ad two springs
@ColinStuart4 жыл бұрын
Zac, of my 55 years worth of playing, I've never owned a Strat! Always Telecasters! I met Phil Kubicki when he was making a Tele for Don Mclean.
@snörre232 жыл бұрын
Noticed the Waterloo in the background. I love mine. Feels so perfect. Living in Europe i never had the chance to find vintage Gibsons so getting this thing now feels like the first "real" acoustic in my life (after 30 years of trying all kinds of stuff i could get my hands on here).
@riverrhodes73942 жыл бұрын
No guitar has ever been more fun to play for me than my Strat. So versatile and melodic It's my only guitar (besides my SG that is also a great axe) I take my Strat to almost every Gig and it's pure heaven! That neck pickup is so creamy and smooth and paired with my tone king imperial it's my dream come true setup 😍
@irvinkelso8189 Жыл бұрын
I really like Your show. I'm 87 years old playing guitars and harmonica for 70 years. I still play with an old buddy who has a 1956 Strat with flat wound strings. With 1956 twin speaker amp, I think 90 amp?
@TVguy99994 жыл бұрын
I played this at 1.25 speed...good channel!
@AskZac4 жыл бұрын
I read your comments at 1.25 speed
@kevinseversonandhisvizslas82874 жыл бұрын
Ask Zac witty retort, sir. Keep keepin on.
@AskZac4 жыл бұрын
@@kevinseversonandhisvizslas8287 You too!
@Pdbottleneck3 жыл бұрын
Great tip and great comeback as well. Props all around
@haldumille55944 жыл бұрын
I have 2 Tele's. One black, one white. One hot rodded, one traditional. Love 'em both. I have 2 Strats, one black, one white. One hot rodded, one traditional. Love 'em both. It's a yin and yang thang!
@copperaudio96642 жыл бұрын
Nice one Zac. You make a Strat sound 'Nashville' like nobody else I've heard. 👍
@matthewmp1114 жыл бұрын
I just found this channel from Five Watt World, and I'm liking it very much! I like channels like this that are more conversational and aren't hammering us constantly with the 'sell, sell, sell...shill, shill, shill' mentality that is so common with many guitar channels on KZbin. Thanks for doing what you do for the guitar community. I'll be back!
@AskZac4 жыл бұрын
Glad you enjoy it! And thanks to Keith!
@absea79184 жыл бұрын
Great clip! In the mind of Leo Fender, the Stratocaster was intended to address all the feedback that players provided Leo from playing his Tele. They wanted something that was more comfortable (comfort carved), a vibrato (to compete with the Bigsby product that people liked), more pickups and sounds. Fender was assuming the Tele would be retired, but demand remained strong with introduction of the Strat. Once Buddy Holly and Dick Dale started using Strats, their popularity exploded. Tele's remained a favorite with the Country players.
@AskZac4 жыл бұрын
The Strat almost went away before Hendrix. The Tele stayed strong because of Country and Soul players
@thelion279 ай бұрын
And funk, and blues.... and rnb and rock....
@rjb75694 жыл бұрын
Everyone should color coordinate their shirts with their guitars, don't ya think?
@kevdean99674 жыл бұрын
Or like Guitar Slim used to do and dye your hair the color of your guitar!
@gunkanjima34083 жыл бұрын
I can’t believe you mentioned raw vintage springs. They are absolutely a great “mod” and no one ever talks about this
@paulhicks3595 Жыл бұрын
Yesterday I was rigging lights at a venue. I was working at the back of the stage a band came in for sound check. I couldn’t see the band properly but I was struck by the guitarists skill and tone. It sounded like the best Tele tone I’ve ever heard - except there was a trem being used. When I checked I was amazed to see he was playing a Strat! Turns out it was a well worn 89 Strat with Lace pickups! He was playing thru twin amps with slight stereo , Deluxe Reverb and Trace Elliott. Anyhow, he played almost exclusively on the bridge pickup and, as I said , he had it sounding like the best Tele you ever heard!
@orryfishburne53264 жыл бұрын
I want those pickups. I love a bright tone on the wound strings but the unwound strings are usually too bright. Love the idea of blending the magnets to balance the tone out
@JeffreyTheTaylor4 жыл бұрын
Ha! I learned the "Eric Johnson mod" as the "Jimmy Vaughan mod." In any event, I HIGHLY recommend players check it out, especially if you play with a hotter PUP or even humbucker in the bridge. Gives you a way to tame it a little if need be. The second aspect to the mod is to have a middle pup that is well balanced and plays nicely in the 2 and 4 positions awhile also delivering the that classic Strat quack in the middle position, running wide open. Good stuff.
@grahamt334 жыл бұрын
I love the talk sections but love even more when you play - so laid back melodic and full of natural tone Thanks Zac and keep on keeping on !
@Mistertbones3 жыл бұрын
I always associated the Strat as more of a rock guitar than a country guitar. Some of the all time greats have played strats. Hendrix, Clapton, Rory Gallagher, Ry Cooder, Lowell George of Little Feat, just to name a few.
@kaiserthegreat Жыл бұрын
Eddy Shaver. Unshaven album. There’s your Strat country.
@Mistertbones Жыл бұрын
@@kaiserthegreat Eddy was amazing. RIP Eddy.
@jimmy5634 Жыл бұрын
One of the best country tones I ever heard was a guy playing a Strat in a Nashville bar years ago. Blindfolded, you would have never known he was playing a Strat.
@janiterinadrum16272 жыл бұрын
I myself am glad there are many different types of guitars. Even the shredders like Jackson and Charvel have their place
@ocduff4 жыл бұрын
I clicked like before even watching. I find most videos a rehash of obvious content, but I always learn something new and in-depth in these videos and consider Zac THE expert. No wonder he’s gathered such a following in a short time.
@randalclarke54874 жыл бұрын
Strats were made to get the Richard Thompson- tone😊🎶🎸😉
@scotthutchens15565 ай бұрын
@randalclarke5487 I love Thompson’s Strat tone and playing on Bonnie Raitt’s “Luck Of The Draw”. That’s the only song I’ve ever heard his Strat on.
@OpenEyeComa4 жыл бұрын
Hardtail strats all day long, I have two of them..my neighbor calls them wimpy telecasters...but, I can play me some sweet slow blues on a strat, through a super...
@kevdean99674 жыл бұрын
Show your neighbor the video of Lloyd Jones playing "Treat me like the dog I am" the version of him with a white suit on. If that's whimpy grits ain't groceries!!!
@danielstoddart3 жыл бұрын
I also prefer the hardtail Strat because I don't like the Strat vibrato and how you have to choose between decking and floating, neither of which are that appealing to me. Sadly, Fender currently does not offer an American-made hardtail Strat. The closest you can get off the rack and not CS is the Robert Cray Strat, which is MIM but still a great guitar. I wish Fender would make a similar American Strat with almost the exact same specs as the Robert Cray (vintage pickups, but with 6105 frets instead of medium jumbos).
@markmcdonald5711 Жыл бұрын
@@danielstoddart G&L makes hardtail strats, they call it the Saddle Lock Bridge.
@chokkan73 жыл бұрын
I played a friend's Jazzmaster years ago, and couldn't come to grips with anything about the guitar other than how comfortable it felt against my body. I'd veered back and forth between Teles and Strats, never quite being satified with either, until I had a custom body made: a Jazzcaster with a Tele neck, top mounting Tele bridge, a P-Bass control plate, and three noiseless pickups, strung 0.013-0.058. It has a four way Tele pickup with a phase switch for the neck PU(P/P pot) and a series/off/parallel for the middle PU. It wouldn't be everybody's cup of tea, but this one makes me happy.
@63stratoman4 жыл бұрын
I don’t use the trem but don’t like the way hardtail Strats sound. The trem definitely an essential part of the classic bluesy Strat tone.
@soysaucehairdye78694 жыл бұрын
Yeah, I always float my bridge like Carl Verheyen even if I don't always have the trem in, I still occassionally hit the bridge with my hand for a little vibrato. Hardtail strats are alright if it is like a Billy Corgan setup; however, I do see them as rather pointless for a single coil guitar setup.
@kimmolingonheimo4 жыл бұрын
i have my three Yamaha Pacifica 112Vs floated with two screws, no trem anymore bridges edge to body can be raised with a pick two springs one strong one light tuned to E but a n octave low, no string trees ( they bend the strings and rattle and affect the tension anyway), what else? yeah the strings: Daddario 009-0115-015-024-032-042........(( i dond dig Dads low tension 042, but the 044 is ahair too much especially with my low tuning..., maybe aye 022 d-string would be good if they make one...), seeya, K : )
@ptrgreeny4 жыл бұрын
I might be one of a handful of players who find the Tele more comfortable than a Strat. The contours and rounded edges cause a Strat to slip if I'm playing sitting down. But Strats are my second favorite after Teles. Add a treble bleed and mini switch for the bridge/neck combo and I do love a good Strat....especially hardtails.
@iagobroxado4 жыл бұрын
I also find the Tele more comfortable. With the slipping thing, however, I found that I have to hold the Strat differently if I'm playing while sitting down. It's more of a "hug" thing that I do, where my right forearm is more in contact with the body of the guitar. Helps to keep it stable on your lap.
@fivewattworld4 жыл бұрын
Love this video. I remember a few years ago thinking, "I'm not really a strat guy, but then why do I own three strat style guitars?" Because they do what only they can do (as I reach for my Strandberg Salen Tele style guitar.) Sorry about the Blue Chip Zac. It's like that old joke, "the first one's free, ;)"
@AskZac4 жыл бұрын
Thanks, Keith. I love the Blue Chip Picks too much
@RAID5_Aesthetic4 жыл бұрын
I mean the back looks like a mistake, like Leo left an old toaster open on his desk and someone thought it was supposed to go in the Strat...
@rydoggsc23 жыл бұрын
Great vid Zac. Your playing style definitely suites the Tele much more than the Strat so I can see why it is your weapon of choice. Strat man myself but love a Tele as my alternate.
@John-vk4gs4 жыл бұрын
Great video Zac. It bought back memories of when I was a teen and I saved all my money because one day I would finally buy my dream guitar, a US Stratocaster. That day finally came and before I purchased the Strat, the dealer asked me if I would try out a Tele.........well the rest is history ! 3 decades later that Tele has never left me and I play Teles 99% of the time !
@jakemitchell16714 жыл бұрын
Another great video, Zac, thank you! Ive been a died-in-the-wool tele player since 1992 when I put my Les Pauls away. I've owned many strats, and today I still own one - an MIJ Fernandes strat, tobacco sunburst with maple board. Best strat I've ever played. I think of teles as an extension of me and my creativity - MY voice. I think of my strat as utilitarian - a tool needed to accomplish certain sounds and style just not available to me on my teles. After 25 years, though, I still struggle badly with my right hand constantly hitting the strat's volume knob and turning it down! For whatever reason I CANNOT rid myself of that tendency!
@gercarey32614 күн бұрын
My first good guitar was an Ovation Legend, deep bowl. I bought it in Mannys Music, East 52nd St New York, in October 1987. I still have it and still love it .... 🙂
@vox19624 жыл бұрын
I looooove Telecasters but Strats are just so damn comfortable, especially if I’m playing while sitting on my couch
@jeremythornton4334 жыл бұрын
My favorite "couch" guitar is my strat. Or my Ibanez RG. Both because of the contours. Funny thing is, they're also my go to guitars in my home studio and I own 11 including some acoustics. For me, comfort is a huge deal. Sound is important too, of course. But if you're not comfortable, it shows in your playing.
@ioodyssey37404 жыл бұрын
I put off getting a tele for years because of that idea and always thought if I did get a tele it better have the comfort contours...well.... A few months ago I got a standard shaped tele and it is the most comfortable to play guitar I've ever owned and just yesterday I played it for hours while in my comfy chair --- That never happens with my Strat, PRS, Gretch, or others. Go figure. Took me only 40 years to find out I'm a Tele guy! Edit -- just realized how this coincides with my relationships...LOL
@ro3078052 ай бұрын
I think what a Strat does is soften the single coil sound to prevent the ice picky tone possible with telecasters. Love your playing and tone, I think you’d make anything sound good
@paulcowart31744 жыл бұрын
A little trick some techs use is to screw the outside bridge screws all the way in and leave the inside four up a bit Good sounding strat Second time watching 4-22 Love the RE pups
@CraigRMerriman4 жыл бұрын
I was the opposite, Strats first but I always wanted a Tele, which I eventually got. I deck my trem though. Probably from having Floyds on guitars before, just got tired of it. 🤷♂️ I ought to try floating it on one of mine. Enjoyed it, thanks Zac!
@lastofthe4horsemen2794 жыл бұрын
I tried blocking my floating bridge and was sad.
@scottluck25163 жыл бұрын
Great video! I worked for years as a hired gun lead guitarist in mostly the southern Ohio area. Im primarily a tele guy, but always had what I called my trinity with me. That consisted of a tele, strat and Les Paul. I felt like I could pretty much cover all my bases with those. I worked with Whey Jennings for a while. People sure loved when I'd bring out my leather covered clone of Waylon's telecaster.
@purimuadmuang22594 жыл бұрын
I always do those things you do to every strat I have too, move second tone control to bridge pickup, raw vintage springs always a must together with their saddles plus a cold steel block and also floating the trem.. I don't think it's best for everyone but after 3 strats and many other options/mods that I've tried, this has become my recipe. Another thing that I've found very useful is the baseplate for bridge pickup in a vintage style set to give it some body/mass. I was aware of this mod for a while but just too lazy to try and didn't think it would help much - I was wrong, it balances it out with the rest of the set nicely. Highly recommend this mod (for a vintage style bridge pickup).
@NewHopeAudio4 жыл бұрын
Excellent playing. This video just proves why I love strats so much. I haven’t bonded with Teles but it’s cool to see you explain what you like about them. I have to agree with you for the most part. Ironically, the in between sounds are what I think make Strats wonderful. Exhibit A: slow dancing in a burning room. My favorite thing you said: you don’t want it to sound like a Tele, and I appreciate this. It’s not a direct comparison, let them be what they are and enjoy them for their own innate qualities! Thanks for all of your work on these videos.
@cass27714 жыл бұрын
Kyle Smith I took your challenge and watched/listened to John Mayer playing Exhibit A. Beautiful playing, beautiful sound. Thank you!
@AskZac4 жыл бұрын
Great track. Sold lots of Strats!
@willgo78982 жыл бұрын
finally figured out what was so different about your playing ... super light touch
@CustomTele52RI2 ай бұрын
Those Danocasters are some of the best vintage relic guitars around. Love my '63 Dano' double cut more than anything I've owned or played out of the Fender Custom Shop, including my butterscotch '52 Thin Skin Tele.
@johnperry90823 жыл бұрын
So enjoyable are your videos Zac. It's like you are just talking to me and a couple of mates. Picked up a few good tips too.
@caleshtcincredibles4 жыл бұрын
I have both . Country pickers have played Strats as well as Teles , Steve Wariner , Vince Gill for example . Strats do make me play different too and I do like that . My Strat is a hardtail though. Nice video Zac and nice playing.
@bartboop Жыл бұрын
I really like the “popcorn “ reference. You and I see things differently at times, but I get your take. You help me to evolve!
@crucifixgym8 ай бұрын
This channel has begun my understanding of the Tele, now I’ve got my eye on the new MIM Nocaster. Would love to see you put one of those through the paces and see if you approve of what Fender has come up with for this specific era Tele.
@davidmurphy48444 жыл бұрын
Great video Zac. I agree about the tremolo block. I bought a Highway 1 Upgrade Strat about ten years ago in my home town of Liverpool and didn't like the particular tremolo bar so ordered a new American one and when I installed it the threads crossed so I had to replace the whole assembly as the Highway Ones had metric parts apparently and not imperial sizes. I installed a Callaham cast iron block and set it all up again and it sounds and plays great! I like the action a little higher than some people might like as I like the strings to have some room to "bounce" when playing a run. Keep up the good work mate.
@nickbenjamin65274 жыл бұрын
My theory on why they had no tone control wired to the bridge pickup originally is that the three identical pickups give a naturally quieter bridge pickup so if you have no tone control it has 250k across it instead of 125k (two parallel pots) which pushes up the resonant frequency of the bridge pickup making it seem louder: compensating for it's position but it makes it pretty bright of course...having an overwound bridge pickup solves the problem much more effectively of course! Thanks for the videos!!
@AskZac4 жыл бұрын
I think you are right
@valcoman55934 жыл бұрын
Forgot to say I finished a Tele build about a month ago with a Strat neck pickup and a Bigsby. Problem solved.
@trevorgwelch74124 жыл бұрын
Nick Benjamin What ?
@b.rodclark73494 жыл бұрын
I have a black 1995 Fender Stratocaster Special I bought brand new in '96. The HSS configuration was a challenge soundwise because I could never get that clean bright quack with a split bridge humbucker paired with a middle single coil on 2 so I decided to swap the single coil positions putting the middle pickup in the neck position and I got a different sound that really moved me. Over 20 years I've been sounding like a Tele but never knew it until one day I walked into a Guitar Center and played a Telecaster for the second time ever in life and it was a Fender Classic 50s Telecaster with both pickups in parallel, realizing my Strat sounded similar to this Tele; at that point I really fell in love with the Telecaster more because of my reconfigured Strat. A pickguard swap took out the RWRP pickup when the pickup cover came off so I decided to convert it into a traditional SSS configuration with a new loaded pickguard I rewired with CTS 250K pots and a CRL 5-way switch w/pushcloth wiring but that Tele bridge/neck sound was missing so i swapped the bridge & middle pickups as a true Tele homage to 1st reconfiguration and all positions are bright especially the 2nd position quack that defines a Strat as much as the twang of the Telecaster bridge pickup and I've acquired two Teles (a Tradition CAB10 & a used DIY kit i Esquired!) and two Strats (Squier Affinity & Bullet) since then.
@russellesimonetta38354 жыл бұрын
I,m an old man now but all the guitar players used to say,,, to play pro you need a strat, a tele and something with humbuckers then you can cover everything.
@tgsiii21793 жыл бұрын
To Mark Hammer......when I "Nashvilled" a Korean-made Fender Squier Tele, I didn't want to give up that Telecaster bridge/neck combination. My solution was to keep the standard three-way switch for bridge and neck p/ups, and added a mini-toggle between the volume and tone knobs for the middle p/up. That way I could get any combination of pickups EXCEPT the middle by itself.....but I never used the middle alone when I played Strats. This way, I could get that Strat-cluck sound with bridge OR neck. As it turned out, I found the middle p/up got in the way of my pick, so that Telecaster is back to a "normal" Tele two p/up configuration. BTW Zac.....I tend to prefer natural or 'burst finished guitars, but I LOVE the color of that Danocaster.
@FlamesAt1000ft4 жыл бұрын
Hi !’m new to this channel and I’m definitely a Tele Man (Elderly and own several types)..but do enjoy the only the only Strat I own (..’93~’94 Fender original custom body w/synchronized Tremolo)✨🎶🎸👍🏾👌🏾 Let’s face it,..most of all the timely hits of yesteryears were blessed in recordings with either of these two;..Telecasters or Stratocasters! ...and yeah,..the others,..Gibson SG & Les Pauls were in the mix too..but I think the Fenders were more dominant and prevalent. I’m into AOR,..R&B,..Funk & Jazz Fusion (some Rock as well!) so,..I knew I had to be good at playing & using both properly and satisfactory on gigs & recordings. My Telecasters never let me down ever!,..even on “Rock ‘n Roll” gigs!!..and the Stratocaster naturally held it’s own!! I like mine in their traditional form and just play them differently as stated here in this video but no mods done to mine,..just proper set ups to my taste. These of course aren’t for everyone but for ones whom have played them know what up and decide accordingly witch or both to own or play. I didn’t at first think I’d need a Strat but to get certain accuracy on hit tunes and live/recording requests/requirements,..just needed both for the convenience...happy with that decision BTW!!🤘🏾🤣 Anyway,..to each his/her own!!...play many types of Guitars to find just what clicks for ya!!...and keep on wailing away!!...✨🎶🎸‼️More Music to ya all!!..(..to deal with 2020 Covid -19 BS❗️)🦠💉💊☠️😷👎🏾
@FlamesAt1000ft4 жыл бұрын
Hey Zak!!..a shout-out from an🇺🇸residing in 🇯🇵Japan!!..just subscribed to your channel so keep ‘em coming fellow Tele player!!...✨🎶🎸👍🏾..and all the best to you & family to get thru this so far disastrous year!✌🏾😷🤜🏾💥🦠💥🔫
@popogejo83112 жыл бұрын
Damn it's good to have someone who can actually play to listen to. Also Zac's content is the best. One thing I done different is, I ALWAYS put roller saddles on the bridge. That just seems to help keep it in tune better, and I put brass or bone nuts on everything. May or may not help sustain, but it's my little mojo.
@valcoman55934 жыл бұрын
Another great video. I've played Teles since right after I started in the early 70s but have always had a Strat or two around since the early 80s. I never used the bridge pickup for years until I wired it to the tone pot. I deck the trem and use five springs so I can do that 50s Ike Turner/ Johnny Guitar Watson thing. I usually only play a Strat on a couple of songs and the rest on a Tele but awhile back I got called to do a festival with some old friends. The other guitar player always plays a Les Paul, planned on playing a Tele until I saw the set list, they were all Strat songs. So my beloved 52 AVRI sat in the stand as a backup. Sometimes a mans got to do what a mans got to do. Thanks Zac, looking forward to the next one.
@hoagyguitarmichael4 жыл бұрын
Great video. One thing- I played country for years on a Strat with a floating bridge. It could raise G string up a step, and the B and E strings up a half step giving me Sus chord when I pulled up and more recently a cool pedal steel lick when I play a sixth on the G and E and pull them up and let them down. It can throw certain licks out of tune, but over years of playing I learned to bend the E and B strings up as I was bending the G or B to put it in tune. Probably not good enough for a recording, but good enough to give me the best of both worlds live -and no one complained ;-)
@AskZac4 жыл бұрын
Are you Michael Ross, or Steuart Smith?
@hoagyguitarmichael4 жыл бұрын
@@AskZac I wish the latter but confess to the former
@waitin4winter2 жыл бұрын
Decking the strat vibrato improves tuning stability compared to floating, and doesn’t make it useless or like a tele as you say - you can still bend downwards, and you can still apply gentle vibrato effects
@wrayven4 жыл бұрын
I use them both. I like the scooped mids & overall airy sound of a Strat. If a band has two guitars, I prefer that one is a Telecaster & the other is a Strat. I own 5 Tele type guitars(72 Telecaster/73 & 78 Tele Customs/75 Tele Deluxe/76 Tele Thinline) with 4 Strats(74 & 76 Hardtail Strats/86 AVRI 62/88 American Standard). I probably play the two Customs most, but will use any of them depending on my mood. Probably a perfect combination is a Telecaster with a Strat neck pickup & a 4 way switch. Strats generally mate up better with effect pedals than Telecasters. The hardtail Strat is a great option for Tele players. It's why I have two of them.
@TeleCaster664 жыл бұрын
After 40 years of playing Gibsons and Fenders, Strats and Teles are the only guitars I play now and I go back and forth which one is my favorite. They are both such great guitar designs.
@TommySG13 жыл бұрын
I love them both, Fenders & Gibsons. As my playing matures though I do find myself reaching for that Tele more often.
@truckercowboyed26383 жыл бұрын
I primarily love the neck position of a Strat, its so warm depending on the type of pickup...I prefer 50s pickups for a classic chime...
@MrLastSpin4 жыл бұрын
I went to school at Texas A&M-Kingsville for a little bit years ago. Had a ton of fun down there. Thanks for a great channel!
@laddlll3 жыл бұрын
you killed it on Tennessee waltz, soulful
@professorhamamoto2 жыл бұрын
14.36--"Tennessee Waltz." Nice. Now I'll have to get me some raw springs for my MIJ Stratocaster, which sounds a bit inert. I'll leave my others alone because I've set them up nicely.
@luciusmalou49063 жыл бұрын
It's funny that the Stratocaster was designed for country players using input from several of them, as Leo was a big fan of c&w. Yet they all used Teles, lol. Any I liked them initially due to Hendrix but it was Clapton's "Brownie" on the Derek & the Dominos album and then Ritchie Blackmore on Machine Head that made me really want one. Real country players, all three. Glen Campbell wielded a mean Strat in any case. Speaking of Vaughans, how about that Kenny? Now there's a Tele man.
@scotthutchens15565 ай бұрын
As a teenager in the mid to late 60’s I wanted a Strat the most of any other guitar because of Jimi Hendrix then Ritchie Blackmore. I did want a Gibson SG at the same time (and started to want a Les Paul around 1971-‘72 upon hearing Page and Mick Box from Uriah Heep). In ‘73 I bought a ‘67 Tele that I sold to help save for a 1973 Olympic White Strat. I love my two Tele’s tones and consider Tele’s to be unique but like Strats more in general.
@nickf2170 Жыл бұрын
Strats are great, they are just not as great as a Tele. They look great, have very cool sounds and the one true advantage is the strat does provide some additional access to the heel area of the fret board. Their "pretty shape" however is not a comfortable in the lap as a Tele. Once you have played your self out, the guitar you will pick up and play unplugged when sitting quietly alone is your Tele. And that is how your Tele becomes your best friend.
@s.h.guitarworks33094 жыл бұрын
Keith Williams brought me here. I truly enjoy both of your demeanor's. Thank you for the content!
@AskZac4 жыл бұрын
Thanks to you and Keith!!!
@rickpenn98302 жыл бұрын
I also spent a few years in Kingsville. Thanks for all the guitar info videos , keep them coming.
@markcatron89964 жыл бұрын
I love guitars, all of them, Strats, Super Strats, Tele's, LP's, 335's....If it has strings and I see it, I want to play it.
@periloustemple82904 жыл бұрын
Being a strat guy, I loved this so much! I have 3 strats and a tele, so I get it. I should note that one strat is actually a "Hello Kitty" strat. Make your own jokes here, it plays well and the humbucker sounds great when I need that (hardly ever). Here's why I hit you up on this old vid: if you want to maintain a floating strat trem, use your palm to gently hold things in place while you do bends & steel player stunts. I can't remember if I got this from Tim Pierce or Littly Tommy from Cleveland, but it works. Also, one of my strats has that hip shot thing in the center. I have gone through periods w/ and w/o it. It does really help. It feels different, but is not really impacting tone or anything else. Hope that helps you!
@aitken19652 жыл бұрын
I jumper the neck tone so that it also controls the bridge pickup. This way, you have independent tonal control over every pickup configuration. That being said, the real breakthrough for me was to sell off ALL my Strats and buy a Squier CV ‘50s Tele and a Gretsch Country Gentleman!😀
@nazmoking31712 жыл бұрын
Interesting idea on the tone control!
@sjperry544 жыл бұрын
I knew once you started on the Blue Chips you wouldn’t stop. HaHa! I got my first one 11 years ago and now I have 3. One for Mandolin, one for the Martin, and one for my electrics.
@jeshely2 жыл бұрын
For those double bends I learned to use my ears and my right hand meaty section of the palm to counter the m movement of the vibrato when doing those bends. I also do use raw vintage springs.
@BakerVS2 жыл бұрын
For strat trems, I found that a trem stabiliser was the right balance between floating and decked. I can bend strings without everything going out of tune, but the trem arm can still go both up and down. I used a Göldo Backbox, it works great.
@AskZac2 жыл бұрын
Great tip!
@noscrubbubblez65154 жыл бұрын
I still have a cassette recording of the 80's when I lived in an apartment next to Warner Boat sales. In the daytime Warner would run those boat engines and since I sold TV/STEREOS for a living I had a high wattage system -best money could buy. I could run the radio and play my strat along to the music. One time after drinking beer all day a Stevie Nicks came on and I knew it was time to test my 75 watt black faced fender amp. Strats don't normally feed back but when cranked the Fender equipment completely buried the nicks song with a wailing power chord progression, that had squeaks of feedback between strums. Otherworldly demonic power was unleashed. The apartment manger came. thats what its for.
@sholland422 жыл бұрын
To me, the biggest difference is the size of the fretboard and the string spacing. You can make a tele sound very close to a strat, but not the other way around. Also, strats are more comfortable to hold, no 90 degree edges to dig into your body. If I could only have one, it would still be a tele.
@marc-antoinejean64284 жыл бұрын
In fact, being a strat guy, I feel exactly the same when I play a tele... But this neck pickup is magic...
@jimmymurphy77893 жыл бұрын
1. What won me over to Strats instead of my trusty Telies was the Strat's ultimate Versatility. That & upon hearing John McFee (then with Southern Pacific) at the Fair. While listening from the outside upon entering the grandstands I swear I heard all these distinct "Tele Sounds" as he was Chickin'-Pickin' away. Once inside, I surprisingly discovered he was playing a Strat up there all the time ! After the show I asked a Guard to have John come over to answer a musical question I had for him. After asking him how he got all those great Tele sounds from a Strat, he said : "Oh, that's all just Picking Technique, etc." (He is One Guy who can make Any guitar sound like a Tele & has proven that a number of times). After that I've been never the same. You were doing it very nicely, too on your Strat BTW. 2....."And just based on your fantastic Tennessee Waltz solo - You're HIRED !"
@AskZac3 жыл бұрын
McFee is stellar!
@Adipsia14 жыл бұрын
Interesting video. A couple of months back I installed a Vega-Trem tremolo on my Japanese Strat, what a great move that was. The Vega's require no routing and screw holes match up perfectly. I also have a Cunetto Custom Shop-Strat with a vintage floating trem which is wonderful, but I'm seriously considering getting another Vega for this as it involves no invasive surgery.
@jadonx4 жыл бұрын
Might try the same on my old hohner strat then, it needs replacing too.
@Mister_Greg Жыл бұрын
It’s an old video but I thought I’d share a couple of things I do. I wire the middle tone control as a master tone (all 5 positions) using a 22nF cap. The back tone control is connected to the bridge pickup using a 1.5nF cap. I prefer a no-load here in order to allow position 2 (bridge and middle) the ability to be dialed a bit brighter. My string gauges: 10, 13, 16.5, 26, 34 and 44.
@MarkMcPeak58954 жыл бұрын
I think them damn tellies are pretty versatile. You can play metal with them, rock, jazz, blues and of course....country. Love them strats too. Love that twangy, wangy country/blusey sound. I think a reved up strat through an orange tube amp sounds pretty awesome.
@telecaster-freechannel94053 жыл бұрын
You can play metal even with a broom. Thing is, both Tele and Strat single coil pups are noisy as hell. Get some noiseless single coils or plug a humbucker onto them if you are gonna use them for metal.
@GTX11232 жыл бұрын
Fender did a run of American HSS strats w mahogany bodies back in 2007 that are the ULTIMATE in versatility. NO OTHER STRAT gets closer to mimicking Gibson tones than that guitar. But back the volume down a bit and mix in the single coils by switching to positions 1,2,3 or 4 and you get pretty good strat tones. These guitars have an LSR roller nut, locking tuners, a thicker trem bar and a Fender DH-1 HB (Alnico 2) in the bridge. WELL WORTH the $
@Cadoogan2 жыл бұрын
I‘m a strat guy and love its tone and feel but not the vibrato/tremolo bridge. I have just no use for it. So I decked the bridge, put 5 springs in the back and screwed them in almost all the way. You still get the tonal character of the strat but it’s like on steroids.
@aarondurham75 Жыл бұрын
Floating is the way to go! I like mine so the back is lifted around 3/32” off the guitar’s body.
@Tonetwisters4 жыл бұрын
Have you ever tried the Stringjoys? I wire my bottom tone pot to the back PUP, as well, and leave the middle PUP bright. I use Callaham springs made from cold rolled steel.Agreed on the floating "trem" as you can get so much more expression out of it. Love your "Tennessee Waltz." I play that, as well. Pretty Strat and great sounding! You really have to bring back the PUPs to full treble when you go to the notch positions. Or, put a straight Fender '56 Klein PUP in the middle, for more treble. Each guitar brings its own party, what? And keep counting on Jesus!
@leftymadrid4 жыл бұрын
Interesting video! Love how honest you are about everything... I first started out with a L.P. Custom, it's actually on my thumbnail photo right now. I sold my car to purchase it!!! Being a lefty I had to wait a long time before receiving it. a band member hit the stand, fell over and broke at the top of the neck, broke my heart!!!!! To make up for the disaster at hand my friend lent me a Stratocaster, this was some time ago and oddly enough I have been playing that Stratocaster guitar ever since, it is so exciting and good sounding, and versatile! It did not even come close to my L.P. sound, but I actually liked that, because I came across another complete world of sounds... Though telecaster guitars are incredible, especially when played by someone who's been playing a telecaster all their life. I bonded better with a Stratocaster. There's something special about a great Stratocaster that just blows my mind, I can play for hours on end. The Stratocaster was made to fit my mind, my body, and my fingers, it's just perfect, and the volume knob is in the perfect place lol :-) :-) :-) :-) I have played many types of guitars in the past but there's just something mystical about a good ol' Stratocaster :-) :-) :-) :-) :-) That's why as a guitarist you have to try difference guitars until you find your better half :-)
@treyrobinson19702 жыл бұрын
First time watching your channel and Kingsville came up. I’m in Austin now, but I grew up in Corpus and got my first real guitar, an 81 Strat at Sound Vibrations. I’m sure you remember that shop. Anyway, I’m a tele guy as well. I’ve two American standards and a USA special with a b-bender installed. Otherwise I mostly play Les Pauls…Keep up the good work
@LoadPast2 жыл бұрын
I just love the strat's ergonomics. Looks like a spaceship and is so comfortable i often fall asleep with it on
@c.robertmiller61504 жыл бұрын
I feel all guitars have their place , I feel that the strat is the most comfortable to stap on , the contour body is perfect for me , and they have that sound like no otherI like it . My favorite position is the neck position and between bridge and middle . The Tele, as Roy Buchanan would say is the metallic truth . Lespaul , 335 and so on are great too .Thanks for your post Zac
@stevekirby73334 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the heads up on the raw vintage springs. Just ordered a set. I got a couple Blue Chip picks last year and they are still holding up. So smooth. Good thing they last considering the price. ;-) I can't get the chirp or pick scrape out of them that I get from a square edged Clayton so I go back and forth. But the Blue Chips are definitely the most effortless pick I've ever tried. I have a pull pot on my bridge tone so I can get a sort of middle Tele sound. I also have it wired with the "Scott Henderson" configuration where the 2 "quack" positions bypass the tone pots. That lets you roll back the tones and still get that sharper thin sound when you want it. It also boosts the level a bit to make the guitar balance better. I tend to use position 4 or my fake Tele thing for funk.
@stevekirby73334 жыл бұрын
Just got the Raw Vintage springs. With the 10.5-50 set I use it took all 5 and I can still slightly float the bridge for a smooth wobble. Great tweak!
@That52TeleGuy4 жыл бұрын
Thinking here about the in-between pickup settings 2 & 4; the modern RWRP middle pickups seem to put more out of phase sound in play than the vintage single coils do. You do get the advantage of noiseless with RWRP in 2 & 4. I recently learned that it is hard to get a 2&4 position hold with a modern 3-way switch where the old ones held and gave that more vintage in-between sound. I found this out when I added a middle pickup to a modern Tele. My tech warned me but I had to give it a try and went back for a 5-way install. Being more a Tele guy when I play a Strat I am still stuck on the sound of the neck pickup but I do get the vibrato advantage. Tony Joe White! Ever done a video on Tele neck pickups options?
@44dognut3 жыл бұрын
As a tele player, I suggest blocking off the trem of a strat if you're not getting along with it. Really brings the bite and feel to be be more like a tele, and if you want a trem once in a while just take the block back out.
@davidfeuerhelm58174 жыл бұрын
Hello Zac, greetings from Southern California. A few years ago I traveled to Nashville to listen to all the great musicians. Thinking I would see a lot of Gibsons being played, I was wrong. Huge percentage of guitars used were telecasters. I was impressed with Tom Buller. Anyhow, like the shirt so I bought one.
@AskZac4 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the T-shirt support!!!!
@adamdarmstaedter12563 жыл бұрын
Right now, I have 2 Fender Teles (a 1999 Am Std Aquamarine with r/w board & 2010 Am Special Sunburst with maple board) and 2 Fender Strats.(a 1991 Am Std White/cream with maple board & a custom Mod Shop in Bordeaux metallic with r/w board). The Mod Shop Strat is a hardtail with the 60s chunky neck and Pure Vintage '59 pickups. I really like the milled stainless block saddles on the '91 Strat and '99 Tele. I also have a Korean Celtic Esquire that looks like a tele, but is really more like a Les Paul Jr.
@danielhahn73294 жыл бұрын
The proof is in the playing. And it seems like it really works for you. You sound great, felt playing. Keep 'em comin'.