Gibson Fanboy Tries a YJM Fender Strat
ฝัง
- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 22 ก.ค. 2024
- Hello everybody, welcome back to Squealing Pig Guitars the home of luxury guitars in Nottingham, England.
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Guitar playing and edited by : Ben Keightley
ben_keightl...
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Visit our website: www.squealingpigguitars.co.uk
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Thank you for watching
Introduction 0:00-1:40
History of YJM 1:40-2:56
Spec Talk 2:56-5:21
Tone Talk 5:21-11:28
Final Thoughts 11:28-12:59 - เพลง
This is one of those guitars that everyone wants to play (at least once)
@@The..Butterfly..Effect yes mate! I’ve been wanting play one since I was a kid 🤟
Not everyone, to me, any guitar with a tremolo seems like useless garbage. and in the case of the Stratocaster, although it has a hardtail bridge, they have a 25.5 inch scale which I don't like either, I prefer 24" or 24.75" at most.
A friend of mine have one. I hate it; the sound, the feel…not for me.
@@YonkyKADAVER so admitting you are clueless, got it...
@@flogginga_dead_horse4022 If from my words you deduce that I have no idea, the one who has no idea is you, but not about music or instruments, but rather that you have no idea about interpreting what someone expresses using language, you still get mental disability pay. if you take the necessary steps. What I said in my message is more than clear. I said that not everyone wants to play a Fender Stratocaster, because without going any further, I don't like them, I hate them for having a tremolo, for having a 25.5 scale, the single coil pickups are not to my liking either, and the aesthetics of the I find the Strats ugly, outdated and cheesy.
If my opinion makes you think that I have no idea, the fact that you love Fender Stratocasters makes me think of you as a idiot who listens to and plays music for weak people, lacking brutality and gutturals, and even going so far as to use the guitar's clean channel. And most important of all: I absolutely don't care what opinion you have of me, and I'm sure it's much better than the opinion I have of you. Just like I don't care about any attempt you make to offend me because it is something that is not within your reach.
Got it?
Since the ‘90s my main guitars have all been scalloped. Starting with a Japanese Blackmore Strat over two modded Malmsteen Strats and these days I roll with two scalloped Warmoth Strats. Once you get used to the feel, they’re just extremely comfortable. Don’t get me wrong, I still love my normal guitars, but given the choice I reach for my guitars with scalloped necks 9 times out of 10.
That’s awesome dude! Thanks for watching
Great playing in the intro, dude. That was extremely impressive.
Thanks man!
yes, love it, what was that? name plz?
I am always in awe with anyone who can play YJM tunes with that particular tone! I am a Gibson fan boy too and I have never really clicked with the strats unless they have a bridge humbucker!
Thanks for watching mate!
These are actually humbuckers.
This was my main guitar in my teens and 20s.
The pickups were (and are still based on) DiMarzio HS3s... which are stacked Humbucker.
Same here man. I don't like stock strats because of how the sound. I actually don't mind the feel of them. They are nice, comfortable guitars to play. It is the sound that turns me off. They almost sound like toys to me. But when you put a hot humbucker in the bridge, they definitely sound a lot better. I can't stand single coils. A few years ago, I paid a lot of money to have a custom, lefthanded mosrite made...and waited almost 2 years for it (lockdown restrictions slowed it down).... After getting the guitar, I played it for about 2 hour and then got my soldering iron out and put a JB in it. I ordered it with a 2nd pickguard, because I had a feeling that the single coil I ordered for the bridge wouldnt' agree with me. heehe.
Great job
Amazing sound! And great playing! 🎉
@@ludvanlazarz kemper profiler into Marshall cabs 🤟 thanks mate
i love those guitar. really grateful some old chap let me play those guitar once. it was an old version of YJM.
Nice one mate! Thanks for watching
I actually prefer the Dimarzios so much more than the Seymour Duncans now used in the current models. My first YJM Strat from around 2008 had them and it was instantly HIS tone no matter what you played. And yes, when you've played standard fretboards your whole life and used to hitting bottom with your fingering, it does take a very light approach with scallops. Once you get it, you're in it! And it doesn't take a long adjustment period. Very fine playing, sir!
This was literally my guitar (only with maple board) in my teens and 20s.
It could do anything.
We used to play Dream Theater covers... and I'd get compliments on the tone.
Even the comment "It guitar sounds better that the Dream Theater version"
The scalloped neck on a Strat, being a longer scales, I think are a vast improvement, especially for bends, vibrato, and I'd argue sweeping.
You can really keep hold on the notes, and I think the scalloped should be stock on Strats.
The DiMarzios are actually humbuckers (stacked humbuckers)
The neck pickups had a tone to die for!
I really miss my early years playing on this guitar.
It's a big part of my life and memories.
Thanks for commenting man!
the tone rocks bro !!!!!!
@@77channel90 thanks bro! Just neck pickup and volume 🤟
I own a made in Japan 1994 YJM strat. I almost don’t play anything else now. The scalloped fretboard helped me develop a light touch that totally transformed my playing. I’m no longer a heavy handed mess. The guitar forces you to play lightly, cleanly and accurately.
That's the same thing that happened to me. Now I scallop all my guitars.
I scalloped a Hamer back in the late 80's from the 12th to 22nd frets but didn't get to play a "real" Malmsteen model until about a month ago. I also have a Blackmore model which is close but not so deeply scalloped. It was actually not as big a change as I thought it would be. One issue these still seem to have though is the high E string sliding off the fretboard. You have to be careful on that.
Yeah, if you have a heavy "press" when playing that guitar, it can for sure cause notes to go sharp when chording, or even lead playing...I have a friend who got one, and he told me when he first got it, he either said he didn't like it, or that he hated it at first, because he was a Gibson Les Paul player before he got it, but because of the nature of that guitar, it forced him to change his approach in his pressing down when playing it...and after he adjusted his technique when playing it, he quickly grew to loving it. I don't have one, but absolutely appreciate it from a distance. Thanks for the video, and hope you and yours are doing well!
I agree man. I’ve always played Gibson so i definitely have a heavier touch, this guitar definitely made me play a certain way. Definitely adjusts your technique to be lighter otherwise you’ll go out of tune 😂 thanks for watching
As strats go that is pretty awesome :) never played a scalloped fretboard but they do look fun, also being the ham fisted moroon that i am reckon id be making the notes sharp all the while.
Seriously your playing is always on point! You got that strat sounding incredible :)
@@AnimalJohn85 thanks mate! Yes it’s a killer guitar I’m not usually a fan of strats but this guitar was insane! I kept sliding the e string off the fretboard 😂 cheers for watching.
One of my all time fave guitars 🔥🔥
@@danielryan2825 you need one 😂🤟
Dam pickups sound hot.
Playing YJM stuff in a band after 2 year, wow.
I'm in the process of building a custom strat from a kit. Mahogany body, maple neck. I'm painting it feista red and going with the 70s headstock shape. For pickups I'm going with dimarzio hs3 in the bridge and neck but I think I'll just put a tonerider in the middle to save on cost a little. Great video!!!
That’s so cool! Good luck with your build and thanks for watching 🤟
Did you find that the action had to be setup higher than you would be used to on a Gibby? I have one as well. Hard to get the action to 4/64s without buzzing. Thanks. Nice video and great playing!
@@nikkot3559 thanks for your kind words man! I didn’t notice much difference, the action was a little higher than usual and I didn’t get any buzzing. It was set up really well from the previous owner and it had 9s. I’d usually run my action on my Gibsons a little lower for sure
👍👍👍
Finally someone play it not the yngwie style, So we can hear the difference the fender normal Strat. 7:38
Yngwie is a great American! 🤘
That is a fun guitar to play, but the HS3 pickups are very much not higher output pickups. They are just noise canceling.
Subbed...My 90's blackmore strat has the same scalloped neck.
Thanks mate!
it's actually not the same but same idea
Great review! but what I like best is the tone...early Malmsteen! How did you get it, if I may ask
@@AntonelloGiliberto hi man! Thanks for your kind words 🙏🏻 in that demo I used a kemper into the Marshall cabinet. Used a profile of a plexi but with tonnes of volume in the room. I don’t think YJMs tone is very gainy, it’s all down to volume and sustain. Similar to EVHs tone in a way, not tonnes of gain just lots of volume and mid range. I used a hall reverb and a la style compressor in the front
@@squealingpigguitars2438 Thanks for the reply friend. I really agree with you. Personally I really appreciate this type of sound, and I think I achieved it with my Helix. In fact I also used a Plexi with "drive" at around 2 and a half out of 10, boosted with a Range Master, reverb and delay at 375 ms. Greetings from Sicily!
I played a different guitar with a scalloped fretboard 20+ years ago & knew ASAP it wasn't for me. I think it was on a Washburn, but I could be wrong. I know it wasn't on a Super Stratocaster or a regular Stratocaster.
Cool man! Thanks for watching
I've bought around 20 different strats and sold them all soon afterwards. Same with LP knockoffs. They all feel....cheap. I discovered Jackson Soloists, and now I won't part with mine. I even found an Epiphone LP that I enjoy. I guess it boils down to each persons' preferences.
Its the player who rules, not the guitar! 😜
🤟
No problems to play chords on a scalloped board what so ever :)
Depends what you’re used to. Playing 10s in standard tuning with a regular fretboard then going to 9s in Eb with scallops is a colossal difference.
@@squealingpigguitars2438 Yeah ofcourse, but once you are used to it it’s no issue at all 😊
nope.
strats are harder to play you have to work for it but the payoff is there
@@geezberry8889 same could be said for Les Paul’s
@@squealingpigguitars2438 they play themselves, heavy but very easy to play and get a huge sound from
God, it's so not rock and roll. At least Randy used this idea sporadically to add flavour and dynamic to rock progressions, as did Blackmore in the earlier days. This all sounds like someone practicing, to me.
it's you
Not enough gain.....