My fist and only electric guitar is a $300 Fender Stratocaster and it’s pretty good but I know there are better guitars out there like any of your collection @MusicIsWin
My kid has a Squier strat he's been playing for 3 years and I asked him if he wanted a nicer guitar for Christmas and he asked me why 😆. I handed him my American strat and he was like...oh this is nice!! But not 10x the price nice dad...gotta love kids man, they are wiser than some 40-50 year olds.
Wow ! I'm 16 (playing for 3 years) and I also have a Squier strat And it's amazing ! I put Gotoh locking tuners on it and some String Saver saddles and I love playing it everyday🙏🌎🍀
There's nothing in the world wrong with a Fender Squier or any guitar for that matter as long as it makes you happy and gets you to pick it up and practice.
Get a Dean Vendetta, you'll change your mind lol that guitar blows hard. I had 3 of them (because i dont learn) and all 3 have the same story: spent 4 times its worth on repairs in the first year.
Some Squires are also absolutely trash, you'll see that with any "budget" guitar though. Good Squires are awesome but then the bullet series sucks and the affinity are hit or miss.
@@zakkmylde1712 I bought a bullet years ago it played great but sounded like crap I had some knock off pickups I installed labeled Texas blues they sounded great I don’t even know what company made them I still to this day regret trading it for a computer
My first guitar was a 1996 Squier. It's the first year squier was made in China. it was $79 on sale. Basic strat, 3 single coils, whammy bar, rosewood fingerboard. Here we are 26 years later and I still play it. It survived high school, college, and a young child in the house. All original equipment, totally stock and it's still a great, fun guitar to play. The only issues with it are a few battle scars from over two decades of gigging.
@@nick-fl3xd Oh for sure. I'll eventually upgrade components as the they go bad, but I'll never get rid of it. Not just because of what it is, but mostly because it's where my guitar journey first began. It's funny cause it's not much to look at anymore, but it's hanging on my wall dead center, mounted higher than all the others. Seems silly a Squier presented more prominently than my PRS and Gibsons, but it makes sense to me. LOL
I own three squiers: My first ever own Strat is a squier i got for christmas as a teenager. It was part of one of those beginner kits coming as a package with amp, cable etc. While all the stuff that was part of the bundle slowly fell apart over the years the guitar still holds strong and sounds absolutely amazing. Someone must have picked the perfect piece of wood for the body bc i never played or heard a strat that sounded as good as this one! My second squier is a tele i bought at an auction for a minimal amount of money. while not the best tele ive played it still holds strong and i surely played worst. The usual price wouldve been ~150€ and i doubt that ull find a better tele for that money. My third squier is another strat in mark-knopfler-red and this guitar has an amazing neck. Its so easy and awesome to play, its unbeliveable. I would recommend a squier for every beginner or player with a limited budget. Take your time picking the right one and ull have an awesome guitar for very little money!
i have the strat beginner set to, the cable is broke, the amp is kinda losing its sound when i play it loud, but the guitar itself is still good. def durable
I have the same one got the amp, cord tuner, stand. I just started playing again after having it sit in the closet 10 years. Got it restrung, new cord, and starting playing 2 weeks ago
Mike Rutherford from Genesis got stuck in South Africa during the pandemic and couldn't get any of his usual fairly high-end gear over to record demos and generally keep in practice with so he looked around, but all he could find was Squier Bullet Strats and liked them so much he's actually using them as touring guitars for Genesis' final tour
This is true, but I also read that his guitar tech did some modifications like changing tuning machines and the nut. Regardless these are still great guitars and would be just fine in their stock configuration for just about anyone that isn't doing a world tour with it.
That’s just as valid as strapping on a Fender Mustang or a Danelectro guitar back in the day… low budget or ‘student model’ tools used for their particular sound. Some people wrote hits on simple LP Juniors and Melody Makers.
@@rossdonnelly3951 I was just reading about this too in an interview with Mike's guitar tech. He swapped the tuners to Gotohs (for obvious reasons) but Mike actually said to him he wanted to keep the original pick-ups as he likes them so much. However, they had to be swapped for some Fender Noiseless purely as they interfered with Genesis's 80ft video screen! But other than that its a stock Squier Bullet. In his rehearsal for the tour he played just a Bullet through a tiny Blackstar Fly 3 amp. Go figure!
Hey! Guitars aren't about the price, they're about what you do with it! My first bass I'll ever have bought (I'll be buying it soon) comes from a 180 USD kit and I'm not upset about it. I hope you enjoy your guitars my man!
@@sedij2358 I do enjoy my guitars and you're absolutely right! It's all just a matter of what you're willing to spend. Don't get me wrong, there are so many high end guitars out there that are also worth the money. But I love my guitars and I just recently just added a 7th one to my collection. Putting some good mods on it soon 😁
Yeah, I think everything above 200 bucks, cannot be considered cheap. It's already a price point where you can have some expectations,given that it's obvious you can make a guitar for less than 100 bucks, meaning there is a lot of room for comprimises in quality of wood, work, finish and hardware, as well as wirering. I think the sweet spot for a good guitar is between 500 to 1000 bucks, everything above has diminished returns, and everything below has compromises.
Squiers have improved a lot in the last 30 years. I had one back in the 90s and it sounded fine but felt and played like a cheap guitar. I just bought a Squier Affinity and it is amazing for the price. Great fretboard and neck, great pickups and tone. The FMT top is stunning. I wouldn't trade it for guitars costing 2x as much.
All of my guitars are either Squiers or Epiphones, and I’m plenty happy with all of them. I’m just a bedroom musician, but the quality is solid throughout. Glad to see you play some of these Squiers! Get your hands on the Squier J Mascis Jazzmaster, and be prepared to be impressed!
Oh yeah, the epiphones especially. If you're careful with your choices, they're every bit as good (and sometimes better) than their full-on Gibson counterparts for less
In the late 80's, the Squire brand was the only way we could afford a "Fender" Strat...So we bought a Squire, lowered the action then saved up $ and put on a Floyd Rose, saved some more $$ and changed pick-ups, saved up some more $$$ and changed the tuning pegs, saved more $$$$ and got a Boss DS-1 distortion pedal (or DOD FX55) and we were rock-n-roll legends in our own minds. (BTW - most of us had Gorilla amps in those days).
Picked me up a 60' Classic Vibe Squier Strat in 2011... Tobacco Sunburst , tortoise shell pickguard, cream knobs. It's still my favorite, and my guitar nerd friends can never believe it's a Squier. "What did you do it?" Is the usual question... Just stock as purchased. Real happy with it.
I really like the ability to mod guitars, effectively making partscasters out of Squier strats and teles. And they also take a lot more chances than Fender with colors and different models overall. Dollar for dollar Squier provides a great value to beginners as well as people like me who have been playing for years and love tweaking things to their liking. Right now my shell pink bullet strat is one of my favorites, even compared to my stock '94 Fender strat.
Couldnt agree more. As a Bassist, Squires are such modifiable platforms. I turned my £219 Affinity Jazz bass in Metallic Charcoal Grey into a Beast of a Bass that could rival custom shops from Fender. I swapped the Pickups for Seymour Duncan SJB-2 Hot Pickups. Both neck and Bridge Fully lined the control Cavity with Copper EMI tape, Bought a custom made Pickguard off of Etsy, Not super original but man it does alot for the Bass. Black and White Paisley pattern. A Blasphemy Control plate that provides a Master Volume and Tone knob and a 3 way selector switch. 1 Fender High Mass Bass Bridge 1 Brand new Jazz Bass neck made of Maple with a Rosewood Fretboard. with a custom Decal on the headstock from Rothko and Frost Schaller BMF Nickel tuners. and 1 Hipshot detuner machine. She is my Baby and apart from the application of the Headstock Decal, I have poured by Blood, sweat and Tears into my Bass. Not lying. Copper Tape can be REALLY Sharp if you catch it at the wrong angle
I’d say the new “squire” is harley benton, they make some good stuff for really cheap, and since squire is moving up in the world of quality I honestly regard them as more of a fender without the expensive price tag.
Speaking of cheap guitars, I've had this First Act les paul looking axe that I picked up from a garage sale a few years back and I swear this thing is so fun to play. Sounds great too. Weirdest part is the whole thing has Volkswagen insignias on the knobs and and neck, and after looking it up I found out this guitar came bundled in certain VW cars back in the day. The little booklet it comes with is hilarious too. It talks about the hazard lights being a perfect 120 bpm metronome and the car horn being a perfect A to tune your guitar to.
Thats actually really cool. If it were me i would take it to a luthier to maybe switch out some of the insides and go for a pick up swap. I think that's how to get the best out of a normal guitar.
That's not a Chinese made first act, thats a mid priced mid range first act made in Korea. They are pretty good and if you didn't know first act had an American custom shop.
Those Squier classic vibe strats seem to be pretty good. Doesn’t Chris Buck play one? If it’s good enough for him, you bet it’s good enough for just about anyone.
I have a classic vibe Squier, in the store it sounded way better than the slightly more expensive low end Fender strats. But the quality of materials isn't as good. My frets have dents and my bridge has eroded slightly.
I've had my classic vibe strat for 2 years now. It has honestly been my most consistent guitar I own. I haven't done anything to it except for hardtailing it and sanding down the sticky neck
I've heard Mike Rutherford has been playing a Squier Strat he purchased while in quarantine, on his most recent tour. Not sure if it was with Genesis or Mike And The Mechanics.
I got a Squier Stratocaster a year ago, and I can say that it is a great guitar. It’s got a humbucker bridge pickup for starters, and it just plays smooth and is set up quite nicely. It was around 400ish bucks but I got a deal for it, it honestly gave me the opposite impression of what people normally associate squires with, guess it’s just better than your average 150 dollar squier.
That’s cool. Also, Phillip says what people have to look out for is maybe one in 20 or 50 examples of a cheap import Guitar will really be exceptional… That’s down to luck more than consistency. You have to check the brand new stock and grab the nice one first…
I’ve had a Squier Telecaster since 2018, and it’s done an incredible job. At a fundraiser dinner for my highschool rifle team last weekend, a guy was donating a 2007 Gibson Les Paul and a Marshall combo amp. My dad passed away in September, and my friend’s parents decided to get it for me. I love the new guitar and amp. It’s a true upgrade. But my point is that Squiers can be amazing if you take care of them. I moved across the country with it and played countless Sunday evenings and nights at my church with it. I will still continue to use once when I do some modifications to make it a little better and to fix some issues it has developed after hundreds and hundreds of hours playing it. My point is, don’t sleep on Squiers. They can sound really great if you have some average or nice gear to go with it.
I absolutely love squire for making guitars that are easily purchased for an epic price. Honestly if fender wants to lend its name to something your guaranteed a certain level of quality
Thanks again for swinging by the shop! Hope you enjoyed your time here in Utah where the views do not suck. I'd just like to chime in and say that I (Kameron) bought a Squier Antigua Baritone Jazzmaster a few years ago that i adore.. it also helps that it's worth like $1100 now. \m/
Squier has definitely improved since I started playing. I had a Bullet Strat HSS from 2011. That wasn't the best but it was something. The past year I've bought the Classic Vibe Jazzmaster, P-Bass, and Bass VI. I was thoroughly impressed. Even though they need some adjustments, they are worth it for those looking for a affordable and effective guitar/bass.
Squire guitars had a reputation for being a bit janky and low quality when they first came out which stuck with them from their first release in the 80's through the 90's at least but it seems like they have been slowly but consistently upping their manufacturing quality while increasing their range since the turn of the century. These days they produce quite a few guitars that even a professional musician wouldn't be displeased with. The pickups and sometimes the tuners (on the cheapest models) are usually the only real low points - both of which can be easily upgraded.
Not so accurate. The first Squier guitars were Japan, and astoundingly good JVs and similar can resell for well over a thousand today. I have an 85 and a 92 that are nice. But these early to mid 80s weren’t very profitable to Fender at a low price point. It’s when Fender cheaped them out in Korea and other places that the spec & quality fell apart. Planet Blotch explains this very well…
Hahaha. The MIJ squiers of the 80s were not janky or low quality. I put my MIJ vista series guitars on the same level or higher than most of my MIA fenders and the QC was certainly higher than the random trash Gibson sells at a premium.
The squier J Mascis Signature Jazzmaster is the best squier I’ve ever played there’s just something about it, it’s a amazing guitar. It sounds crazy but I’m proud of own a squier
It’s the greatest guitar I’ve ever played. It just hits every mark. Every aspect of it is great design. Neck, bridge, saddles, pickguard pickups.....everything just works well together. I love it
it's usually a bit of a coin-toss with Squiers. At their worst, they're "OK", at their best, they're at least as good as their Mexican-made big brothers. If you go for the more expensive brands/models the baseline is probably a bit higher and you're less dependent on luck to get a great instrument. So with low-priced instruments, play them before you buy them. I got myself a Squier Deluxe Jazzmaster some years back and I absolutely love it. It did have a couple of issues (e.g. a shoddy bridge) but nothing major. Oh, and I think you'd like it, Tyler, it weighs in at just about a metric ton. Then back in January '21, I bought one of those Paranormal Offset Telecasters online (couldn't resist a tele with my favorite body) and I gotta admit I was a fair bit disappointed. The frets were literally cutting my fingers, and it was so poorly adjusted that fretting anything from the 9th fret and up didn't actually give me a tone; only fret buzz. When I finally got it set up properly and filed the fret ends down a bit, I realized exactly how poor the pickups are. They sound incredibly dull and they hum ... a LOT. The other aspects of the instrument are fine-it plays well, the neck is straight, it holds tuning, etc., so I guess I'll just have to invest in some better pickups now...
@@davefx7949 Largely the difference is that American made guitars are generally a lot more consistent in terms of quality. You can get a quality Mexican made guitar, but it's a lot of chance as to whether you actually will. If you order online, best make sure they have a good refund policy in case you get one with spicy fret ends, buzz, shoddy electronics, etc. It's honestly best to just find a physical store that has the guitar you want so you can try before buying, you'll have a better chance of finding something you actually like, because most of the time online music retailers have absolutely shit refund/exchange policies.
The quality of Squire guitars has gotten really high. The “feels light” deal, must be common to the Paranomal Series. I have a 60s Vibe Strat (gorgeous Lake Placid blue with white/black/white pickguard) that cost $429 new, with free shipping. It feels and plays just like an American Strat. Really amazing.
Good on ya as someone who normally demos higher end gear for giving Squier a video. The Bullet series is inexpensive, but even there the Mustang one has a good rep. The Classic Vibe series is just plain good, and I bet pros could use them straight up or as a platform for upgrades
I have to say, my daughter's Squier Bullet Mustang plays better than my MIJ Fender Mustang. It has a better finish on it as well. Such a great axe. She plays it through a Blackstar Fly3 and it sounds incredible.
You know, reading some of the comments shows very clearly how good it is to have guitars that play well, that are cheap enough for us to all learn on and then lean on once we've learnt a thing or two. I had no idea there was as much variety in Squires which is also great. More sweet content, thank you.
Squiers are pretty hit or miss, but I have a Squier strat that I got from a thrift store that was apparently "broken" but just needed a wire to get sauterized onto the input jack, and let me tell you, the few times I've gotten to play an actual Fender made me realize that I hit a jackpot with that strat! Sounds as good if not better than any Fender I've played and the fretboard feels great on my hands! I can't tell if the person who had it before me modified it in any way, but gosh I love that guitar!
I have four Squiers, one of them being a Jazz Bass. I think that of course having the more expensive gear is nice, but with the level of quality Squier are putting out now, as well as them being a good price point to modify, I don't think that you NEED anything more expensive than the top level Squier stuff any more.
That has been a reality some years and continuing. I have never spent more than $480 on a guitar (new or used). I have been tempted to do the low 48 months monthly payments for Gibson's but at the end of the day, all guitars get scratched, dented and need mechanical and electronic maintenance.
I never thought I would buy a Squier until I saw the Sweetwater-exclusive 5-string Jazz bass in matte black with a maple fretboard. It's like $550 so it's definitely not a low end Squier, and it's beautiful and sounds great.
I got a Squier for my first guitar cause I wanted something affordable but named brand, and Squier delivered that for me. I love music and already had played the drums, but I wanted to learn something new during covid, so I decided to buy me a guitar to get me through the boredom and all that free-time I had. It was one of the best decisions of my life! I've been playing for a year and a half now and it's crazy how much I've gotten better. From 0-3-5, to some of the best Metallica songs. I appreciate you Tyler. Not only your an amazing guitarists, but you inspire me and other young guitar player's to "keep going". Plus you make me laugh and I enjoy watching you play the craziest guitars I can't afford. HaHa
Just bought a bullet Stratocaster last week. I'm honestly blown away by how it sounds and feels for just 130 euro's. What surprised me most is how easy it is to play. I learned how to play on a rip off strat for a pretty similar price, and this is just a million times better. Closer to the real deal than to the knock off.
I picked up a Squier Affinity Tele last year, as I don’t want to take my American built Tele to gigs in case it walks away. The affinity isn’t as nice, but it’s still a very good guitar and great value at about 1/4 what I paid for my ‘52 reissue. I haven’t modded the Squier at all, and probably won’t.
Mike Rutherford, of Genesis fame, stated in a fairly recent interview, that he discovered how versatile the Squier he picked up in South Africa became when he needed a guitar and found himself to be without a guitar to play. Granted, he did admit that his tech did mod the Squier, a little, but Mister Rutherford stated in the interview that he actually tours with his Squier, and said it's fun to play with it, on stage.
Tyler: Parallel Universe? 03:15 Anthony Kiedis: Giverrrrr away Giverrrrr away Giverrrrr away now By The Way: you should have demo a Squeir classic vibe series, they are top of the line
i love the classic vibe, paranormal, and contemporary series, and i believe with a bit of work any guitar can feel good, and i think with the right player, any guitar can sound great!
My main guitar for pop is a Squier Classic Vibe 60's strat since 2018. I have tried many fenders in my days but I feel very little difference between a Squier or a fender. It does not matter if it costs 1,000 or 3,000. The tone is in the fingers =)
I recent bought a Squier Classic Vibe 70s HSS strat, and I have been having the absolute time of my life with it. It’s my first new electric guitar in 17 years and I’m loving every second of playing it.
I have a Squier 60s Classic Vibe Mustang and I love it, plays nice and sounds great. Pickups in particular are lovely. I also have a Squier Affinity Strat that I picked up more or less for nothing (part of a deal) about a decade ago. It has always been poor. Over the years I've adjusted just about anything that can be adjusted, upgraded the pickups, the tone cap, the pots and added an out of phase switch and I still don't like it. Currently I'm in the process of making it a proper hardtail, filling in the spaces and fitting a top mount, rear string bridge; fingers crossed. In short, I would strongly recommend the 60sCV Mustang but wouold tell folk to stay clear of the Affinity Strat.
Look at rounding off the edges of your fingerboard on the affinity and giving it a thorough fret level including a very attentive polish afterwards. It'll make a big difference to reduce the 'cheap' feel, a LOT of that comes from the neck profile and the transition to the board. $20 worth of sandpaper, fine wire wool and ebay files will do the trick if you're willing to give it a go yourself.
Fender Principal Custom Shop builder, John Thorn, stated that one of his favorite guitars ever is a Japanese Silver Series Squire - and he's the guy that could probably have any Fender Custom shop guitar he wanted. I own, and have owned, many a Gibson, Fender and ESP guitars but one guitar that I will never sell is an early 90's Squire strat. I worked Saturdays at the local guitar store and someone bought it in for a trade. 5 minutes later I bought it. It sustains for days and after a lengthy setup it played like a monster. That was 28 years ago and the only way you'll take possession of it, is prying it from my cold dead hands. I stopped caring about weight decades ago. The only two things I worry about when I try a guitar for the first time are: 1. Does it resonate and is it loud acoustically and 2. Is everything straight and most likely accepting of a good setup.
My J Mascis squier jazzmaster is the perfect pick up and play guitar I own. Honestly once it's set up properly it's hard to fault it, incredible value for money
I love my Squire Strat. I bought mime for 299, had it for four month, and its my first guitar. There is a girl I know at church. She askes me what I name my guitar all the time. She would kill me though if I actually told her the name I gave my guitar. She was the one that inspired me to play in the first place
Jack Pearson hands down one of the best guitarists ever loves playing Squiers that cost under 90$. It's not about the instrument, it's about your ability to make it sing.
I have this on my wish list for Christmas this year. I have wanted this Jazzmaster over any Fender JM for a long time. Beautiful and plays so nice (I played one at CME a couple months ago and fell in love with it. I have so many guitars that I can't justify buying another one at this time, or this would be my choice).
I was able to grab it off GC and with a 20% off coupon it was only 400$! It is my first and only guitar with single coil pickups and the pickups are definitely on a level above most Squiers because Jay picked them out
Squier Classic Vibes are probably the best bang for the buck across the board. I've owned a number of Tele and Strat CV's and they've all been solid. They also mod very easily with Fender parts, unlike the lower lines of Squier where parts almost fit.
Had my CV 70’s for about 3 or 4 years now…. It is rock solid. It actually is better from a playability standpoint than a 1000 dollar guitar I have. 🤷♂️ And it surprisingly holds tune with very aggressive play.
Classic vibe has got to be the best value guitar around. Wish I would’ve gotten the 60s instead of the 50s but I still love my black 50s classic vibe strat. It’s a little bright for my taste but sounds great and plays PHENOMENALLY (probably has more to do with the amp but I’m still learning about gear, even though I’ve been playing about 5 years now)
The only good one is the one that made in china, wich is discontinued, the recent made in indonesia classic vibe is garbage, i mean really i'd rather spent $150-$250 more on secondhand mim fender to get much better tone, much better neck feel, playability, durable parts etc.
@@PK7796 Well I have played genuine Fender stuff but to be honest I’ve never owned any. Never saw fit to buy one of that high quality while I’m still just learning. Here we are going on six years later and I’ve still got it and don’t really care to upgrade. I don’t really know how to describe it, other than that I’m happy with it. Maybe others think it’s not great but hey I’m the one playing it 😂
@@trentmckenzie343 with the squier line, even on the highest grade wich is the classic vibe, you cannot get the exact same quality within their product, yes even on other brand like fender alike, QC is still an issue, but with squier it is more noticable really, maybe i'm just having a bad luck to get one of the worst batch of classic vibe
I actually started learning 3 weeks ago on my dad's Squire. It's a few years old now (it's not his only guitar, he for instance still has his Hondo DX 100 I grew up watching him play) and I've quite liked it so far honestly.
Good way to show that you no longer need an expensive guitar to get very decent, even professional level tone. You can always measure your size and compare all you want, but that doesn’t have anything to do with creating music.
My 2007 Custom Telecaster with chrome humbuckers is my favorite guitar. Even afer playing fender tele's and strats. Hell I own a fender strat and It just doesnt compare IMO. The Tele is just LOUD without an Amp, it is so resonate. I attribute it to no belly cut and its minimal routing. Such a great guitar, thinking about finding another one but the 2007 models still go for 300 to 400 bucks.
It seems from my experience that the Squire Classic Vibe guitars and basses are a higher quality, value, fit and finish that the Fender Player series. You’ll need to get into the Vintera and Player Plus series to match that, which is literally double the price and up. Change the pots for long term reliability and you’re good to go! I am a very happy owner of a brand new Squire Classic Vibe 50’s P-Bass. I made my own black “Bakelite” pickguard so my custom shop Broadcaster has a friend. Other than that, it’s perfect.
Recently Squire has really upped their game.I bought a Squire 70s Classic Vibe Jaguar in surf green and the quality and build is amazingly good .Squires certainly are not junk guitars anymore.
I've never believed that the brand or model of guitar mattered, any guitar can sound and play amazing if you want it too. I never bought a guitar and kept it original, I've always picked and choose the pickups and fretboard I think compliment each other no matter the guitar. Don't settle for a mediocre sound because you don't want to replace original parts, that being said you wouldn't turn Lucille into a Frankenstein guitar. But a $200 squire is nothing special, unless you take the time to make it special and it's an amazing feeling when you turn a cheap guitar into an amazing and beautiful sounding work of art.
I mostly agree and it always comes down to the player but there are undoubtedly guitars out there that are garbage. I’ve had hundreds of guitar students many of them young beginners so I’ve definitely seen some that belonged in a dumpster. The guitars that is. Not the kids. ;)
Well said. I had this absolutely no info les Paul model that was pretty cheaply made. But i took it to a luthier. And he swapped out the guts, installed my chosen pick ups, and made little detail changes to the knobs and strap hinge that it became my best guitar ever.
Nope. Not at all. Some of the recent guitars that Squier have brought out are insanely good. The Classic Vibe range in particular is ridiculously good. Also a mention to the Affinity Series. I recently bought a Skyburst Blue Contemporary Strat with a roasted maple fretboard and it's beautiful! I guess it just depends which Squier you buy... There are still some very cheap and affordable ones around for beginners.
My first electric guitar was a red squier strat and I still love it very much. My grandpa gave it to me on my 13th birthday almost 20 years ago. Compared to my Mexican Standard Strat it is much lighter and not as refined but it's a great guitar for noodling around or band practice sessions. I changed the pickguard to a black one and blocked the poorly made tremolo with a piece of wood and since then it stays in tune perfectly. I used it for gigging for about 7 years and it worked fine for me.
Update: I just hooked it up with a fender prewired pickguard with texmex singlecoils, put 5 springs in the trem and shielded it with shielding paint. Now it kicks some serious ball and stays in tune.
I think you can hear where they've cut costs- electronics (especially the single coils), setup, fretwork buzzing... that said, some of them sounded really great and I know from experience that many feel great, too (somehow the Affinity Jazzmaster in my local store sounds as great as the one you played).
I’m seriously considering the Contemporary Strat with the Floyd Rose as my next guitar purchase. I play an Epiphone Les Paul and would like to own a guitar with a tremolo system.
No ive been playing for bout 5 years now and have passed the time you would usually upgrade to a better guitar. Ive just grown so used to 90s squire strats im sticking with them. Dont know about the new ones tho still too much money for me hahaha
a Squire with a great setup and maybe some pickup changes can sound beast. I'm a Gibson guy, but that Squier J Mascis Jazzmaster was the best playing guitar out of the box I've ever played! I kid you not. Crazy tbh. its like 499 and played better than my Gibby did (out of the box of course). After a setup is a different story but still! For a fraction of the cost they can play great.
The first brand new guitar that I bought is a MIJ mid 80s Squire Fender Telecaster. I replaced the stock pickups with Seymour Duncan Quarter Pounds. It's fantastic and it's as good as my two other American Telecasters.
I played a squier for 3 years ($100 used) and it wasn’t until this year that I purchased my first high quality guitar for $1,800 that I realize the difference. There is a *huge* difference to me between my squier and my American professional strat. The squier is fantastic for beginners and even now I could still play it with no issue. But once you get a high quality guitar in your hands, you’ll never want to go back to the squier. The difference is incredible.
My 1st guitar was a squire 2004 bullit strat hardtail, it's my #1. After complete American fender hardware swap and fender custom shop pickups I'd put it up against any American standard. 🤘🏻
You can't go wrong with a Squier. The first guitar I ever brought was a lovely looking Squier Stratocaster with a shiny metallic blue paintjob. That thing has taken a beating over the years and is covered in dents, dinks and chips now, but it's still my favourite guitar. She's my ol' trusty axe. It would be the first thing grabbed in the event of a house fire lol
Stoked you came to my hometown SLC! Not only do I visit Guitar Czar, but my first guitar was a Squier I picked up at Guitar Czar. I got a harsh criticism that Squiers are more of a knockoff. But it’s been a great guitar, can’t wait until I get my seven-string. Super fun video and definitely resonates with me as this is totally my experience!
I needed this video! I've just started looking at Squiers as I'm a relative beginner. Awesome reviews. The Jazzmaster looks right up my street and budget! I wish I could triple like your vid' lol.
Hi there fellow person! Got one a couple months ago and only have nice things to say about it as a first electric: the neck is super nice, feels better than anything I've ever picked up that was under $500, is quite straightforward to set up, and the pickups fit all of my needs as a clean/delay player!
@@EPmager Quick question! Does it cover a few bases sound wise? For instance I love playing blues more than anything but I like to crank some rock out too.
I got one today and I have to say this guitar made me play better and sounds better than my last guitar and that's all that matters I hope everyone who got a bullet squire or any other type enjoys it and has a great christmas.
I've had my affinity squier strat for over 10 years. I've never needed another one it's honestly a beast and the playability, for me personally, is smooth and seemless. I can play for hours uninterrupted. I'm only now upgrading and I'm getting a squier jazzmaster. Will be loyal to the brand till given reason not too be
Once you see Max Ostro set his Squire Stratocaster on fire you can never blame your abilities, or lack thereof, on the Squire again. They are obviously making great guitars these days. I loved that p90 equipped baritone Tele! Cheers P[>
I have a squire bullet strat hss, supposed to be the lowest end of the lowest end, I use it in my churches student band and it does the job, it could definitely use some modifications to help it stay in tune longer but it does the job. Really in the end it's all in the amp lol
I just got a contemporary tele and it's mind blowing how fucking good that guitar is. I love teles but wanted something with a rail in the bridge and it was the first thing I found so I got it on a whim and it's replaced all my other guitars (some 4x the price of it). Never thought I'd be a squier guy, but here we are.
I just got my first electric guitar last week. It’s a Squier Affinity Stratocaster. Maybe it’s because I have no frame of reference but I’d say it’s a really solid guitar
Love the squire telecaster classic vibe and the new affinity. Things they need to work on is the quality control. Other than that, Squire is gradually getting better
Got the one you're talking about in Placid Blue as my first electric 2 months ago, couldn't ask for anything more!) Although over here it's just over $400 because VAT + shipping expenses Yup the one at 4:34 !
After 4 months of playing an extremely cheap acoustic of about 40 bucks, I’m goona upgrade to a squier bullet strat, most probably…hopefully it’s good🤞🏻
Their classic vibe thinline telecaster (including the carbonita tele you played) is seriously one of my favorite guitars, I’m blown away every time I pick one up at a guitar store. They always sound and feel outstanding. I haven’t pulled the trigger on one yet, but maybe…..
5:10 I've bought this exact Squier Jazzmaster a couple of days ago and I gotta say it's amazing. Sounds great, looks amazing and feels incredible to play! While trying it out in the store I also tried the Squier classic vibe 60's jazzmaster which is about 150 Euros (or 170 dollars) more than the affinity series, but I didn't feel it sounded or felt any better to play than the model for 150 euros less (it only lacks the rhythm and lead circuit but that's not important to me)
No point of buying a Fender when you can buy a Squier and replace the pickups with pickups made from the same material that Fender makes theirs from or just buy used pickups and you can save a fortune.
I bought a $99 Epiphone Les Paul Special in TV Yellow 7 years ago for a joke gift. The pickups were ... unimpressive but the neck. I have never felt a neck on an Epiphone, let along a Les Paul, like this before. Butter smooth, the action was dang near perfect. I put hand wound Porter Pickups (probably then about $500) in it because I loved the neck SO much. Played that thing for a number of years as my main guitar. Needless to say, I ended up keeping the guitar and got my buddy a poo brown squire instead. Same price. He ended up using that guitar to cut 3 albums.
Love the baritone Squier, I think its one of the best baritone guitars under €400. There's also Squier Baritone Custom, quite more expensive, yet it's the Cabronita that sounds better in my book. Weird thing with Squier guitars is that you might get either a decent batch or one with nastier fretwork, or some other minor, but annoying details. For Bullet and others, there are better Harley Bentons, although it's also a lottery, depending on the model, some pickups are close to the Squier, some require a replacement.
I used to own a Squire and enjoyed it. That being said, at the current price point of a lot of these guitars, I'd pony up the extra $100 or so to get a G&L Tribute.
Nah, squier classic vibes are practically as good as the majority of fenders now. It's just elitist bloos dads who want to justify spending twice the money for a brand name who say they suck
@@falcongunner33 It's a weird thing to say, most of the time when I hear a guitar in a modern song its country or doing some retro 70's thing. I feel like most if what sets "modern" guitar tones apart are the huge range of pedals.
Still playing my 50th Anniversary Squier Strat I got back in '96. Upgraded one of the pickups to a hot rail, upgraded the tuning machines and recently rewired it with new pots. Brilliant wee guitar still.
What do you think of Squiers after this video? Also, don't forget to watch the #GuitarStoreTour video from your state: musiciswin.com/guitarstoretour
First
@@cobrakaineverdies9544 We do not care
@@dragos8984 calm down Jamal it just feels cool with my fav TH-camr
My fist and only electric guitar is a $300 Fender Stratocaster and it’s pretty good but I know there are better guitars out there like any of your collection @MusicIsWin
i have two. And they are both great guitars for the price.
My kid has a Squier strat he's been playing for 3 years and I asked him if he wanted a nicer guitar for Christmas and he asked me why 😆. I handed him my American strat and he was like...oh this is nice!! But not 10x the price nice dad...gotta love kids man, they are wiser than some 40-50 year olds.
wow, smart kid and awesome dad
you should get him a sweet acoustic then if he doesn't have one!
Wow ! I'm 16 (playing for 3 years) and I also have a Squier strat And it's amazing ! I put Gotoh locking tuners on it and some String Saver saddles and I love playing it everyday🙏🌎🍀
Sounds like he's got good parents
you could get a player series
There's nothing in the world wrong with a Fender Squier or any guitar for that matter as long as it makes you happy and gets you to pick it up and practice.
Get a Dean Vendetta, you'll change your mind lol that guitar blows hard. I had 3 of them (because i dont learn) and all 3 have the same story: spent 4 times its worth on repairs in the first year.
@Lone_ Scout unrelated, but can I ask how you came to work on so many guitars? I feel like you've got some stories
@Lone_ Scout Squires are not Deans, sir.
I’ve owned some guitars that would make EVH want to quit and pick up drums again. There are some terrible guitars out there
"Wise words of the year" goes for you brother.
I respect squier . They provide high quality instruments at a good affordable price . Some squiers play alot better than some fenders out there
Some Squires are also absolutely trash, you'll see that with any "budget" guitar though. Good Squires are awesome but then the bullet series sucks and the affinity are hit or miss.
The J Mascis Jazzmaster is a great example. That thing has possibly the best neck of any Jazzmaster Fender makes. Fantastic instrument
@@TheCompyshop Yup. I have both the JM Jazzmaster and a Classic Vibe 60’s strat and they are both great
@@zakkmylde1712 facts
@@zakkmylde1712 I bought a bullet years ago it played great but sounded like crap I had some knock off pickups I installed labeled Texas blues they sounded great I don’t even know what company made them I still to this day regret trading it for a computer
My first guitar was a 1996 Squier. It's the first year squier was made in China. it was $79 on sale. Basic strat, 3 single coils, whammy bar, rosewood fingerboard.
Here we are 26 years later and I still play it. It survived high school, college, and a young child in the house. All original equipment, totally stock and it's still a great, fun guitar to play. The only issues with it are a few battle scars from over two decades of gigging.
dont ever get rid of that gem
@@nick-fl3xd Oh for sure. I'll eventually upgrade components as the they go bad, but I'll never get rid of it. Not just because of what it is, but mostly because it's where my guitar journey first began.
It's funny cause it's not much to look at anymore, but it's hanging on my wall dead center, mounted higher than all the others. Seems silly a Squier presented more prominently than my PRS and Gibsons, but it makes sense to me. LOL
even tye strings?
@@riichan2895 LOL. Yup. Back in the 90's they made strings that lasted decades. Didn't you know that? Hahahahahaha.
Battle scars? Nah that’s a custom relic job
I own three squiers:
My first ever own Strat is a squier i got for christmas as a teenager. It was part of one of those beginner kits coming as a package with amp, cable etc. While all the stuff that was part of the bundle slowly fell apart over the years the guitar still holds strong and sounds absolutely amazing. Someone must have picked the perfect piece of wood for the body bc i never played or heard a strat that sounded as good as this one!
My second squier is a tele i bought at an auction for a minimal amount of money. while not the best tele ive played it still holds strong and i surely played worst. The usual price wouldve been ~150€ and i doubt that ull find a better tele for that money.
My third squier is another strat in mark-knopfler-red and this guitar has an amazing neck. Its so easy and awesome to play, its unbeliveable.
I would recommend a squier for every beginner or player with a limited budget. Take your time picking the right one and ull have an awesome guitar for very little money!
i have the strat beginner set to, the cable is broke, the amp is kinda losing its sound when i play it loud, but the guitar itself is still good. def durable
But what should I buy if I want a les Paul model guitar
Epiphones are still expensive
I have the same one got the amp, cord tuner, stand. I just started playing again after having it sit in the closet 10 years. Got it restrung, new cord, and starting playing 2 weeks ago
I have a Squier strat, fender tele, and today I just picked up a Squier Starcaster and I love it
@@mikeyeechen1764 a telecaster.....when in doubt always choose a tele!
My 2020 Squier Bullet Hard tail is my best guitar. I dunno why and don't care.
No shit I have one too it’s a red sparkle hard tail squire
I heard good things about the Bullet Hard Tail
I like mine, too
I got one in Placid Blue for $125 on sale at Guitar Center. I swapped out the pups and it's a keeper.
Well said
Mike Rutherford from Genesis got stuck in South Africa during the pandemic and couldn't get any of his usual fairly high-end gear over to record demos and generally keep in practice with so he looked around, but all he could find was Squier Bullet Strats and liked them so much he's actually using them as touring guitars for Genesis' final tour
This is true, but I also read that his guitar tech did some modifications like changing tuning machines and the nut.
Regardless these are still great guitars and would be just fine in their stock configuration for just about anyone that isn't doing a world tour with it.
I think he did mod it slightly but these things cost peanuts so even if you mod it up you are still saving $$$
Kevin Parker has been using a J Mascis Squire Jazzmaster on stage for a while now.
That’s just as valid as strapping on a Fender Mustang or a Danelectro guitar back in the day… low budget or ‘student model’ tools used for their particular sound. Some people wrote hits on simple LP Juniors and Melody Makers.
@@rossdonnelly3951 I was just reading about this too in an interview with Mike's guitar tech. He swapped the tuners to Gotohs (for obvious reasons) but Mike actually said to him he wanted to keep the original pick-ups as he likes them so much. However, they had to be swapped for some Fender Noiseless purely as they interfered with Genesis's 80ft video screen! But other than that its a stock Squier Bullet.
In his rehearsal for the tour he played just a Bullet through a tiny Blackstar Fly 3 amp. Go figure!
Tyler: calling a $430 guitar cheap
my most expensive guitar: $400
Hey! Guitars aren't about the price, they're about what you do with it! My first bass I'll ever have bought (I'll be buying it soon) comes from a 180 USD kit and I'm not upset about it. I hope you enjoy your guitars my man!
Same. Squier CV 50s tele that I got for 400 basically.
@@sedij2358 I do enjoy my guitars and you're absolutely right! It's all just a matter of what you're willing to spend. Don't get me wrong, there are so many high end guitars out there that are also worth the money. But I love my guitars and I just recently just added a 7th one to my collection. Putting some good mods on it soon 😁
Below 500$ is cheap for guitars. But something I have learned, price does not always have a good reflection on the quality of a guitar.
Yeah, I think everything above 200 bucks, cannot be considered cheap. It's already a price point where you can have some expectations,given that it's obvious you can make a guitar for less than 100 bucks, meaning there is a lot of room for comprimises in quality of wood, work, finish and hardware, as well as wirering. I think the sweet spot for a good guitar is between 500 to 1000 bucks, everything above has diminished returns, and everything below has compromises.
Squiers have improved a lot in the last 30 years. I had one back in the 90s and it sounded fine but felt and played like a cheap guitar. I just bought a Squier Affinity and it is amazing for the price. Great fretboard and neck, great pickups and tone. The FMT top is stunning. I wouldn't trade it for guitars costing 2x as much.
The paranormal Squires sounded spooky but all had a very rich tonal qualities. The second one seemed very versatile and sounded good in all settings.
All of my guitars are either Squiers or Epiphones, and I’m plenty happy with all of them. I’m just a bedroom musician, but the quality is solid throughout. Glad to see you play some of these Squiers! Get your hands on the Squier J Mascis Jazzmaster, and be prepared to be impressed!
Oh yeah, the epiphones especially. If you're careful with your choices, they're every bit as good (and sometimes better) than their full-on Gibson counterparts for less
@@dwatts64 i bought a epiphone sg standard and it sounds amazing, so i can vouche for that
Dinosaur Jr. 🤘
@@marvinzimmerman1878 you obviously never played a Greco.
I’m looking for a leave on the stand, ‘beater’ jazzmaster. Thanks for the tip!
In the late 80's, the Squire brand was the only way we could afford a "Fender" Strat...So we bought a Squire, lowered the action then saved up $ and put on a Floyd Rose, saved some more $$ and changed pick-ups, saved up some more $$$ and changed the tuning pegs, saved more $$$$ and got a Boss DS-1 distortion pedal (or DOD FX55) and we were rock-n-roll legends in our own minds. (BTW - most of us had Gorilla amps in those days).
OMG, I had a Gorilla amp for two years, almost turned me off from playing, lol
Holy shit. Gorilla Amp, great for making noise.
A Squier vid ain't a Squier vid without the Classic Vibe series.
Yes sir. I skip through the whole video looking for classic vibe series
🤟
I have three classic vibes, all fantastic.
Picked me up a 60' Classic Vibe Squier Strat in 2011...
Tobacco Sunburst , tortoise shell pickguard, cream knobs.
It's still my favorite, and my guitar nerd friends can never believe it's a Squier.
"What did you do it?" Is the usual question... Just stock as purchased.
Real happy with it.
I have a Classic Vibe Tele and it is a dream - less expensive than the Paranormal ones too
I really like the ability to mod guitars, effectively making partscasters out of Squier strats and teles. And they also take a lot more chances than Fender with colors and different models overall. Dollar for dollar Squier provides a great value to beginners as well as people like me who have been playing for years and love tweaking things to their liking. Right now my shell pink bullet strat is one of my favorites, even compared to my stock '94 Fender strat.
Couldnt agree more. As a Bassist, Squires are such modifiable platforms. I turned my £219 Affinity Jazz bass in Metallic Charcoal Grey into a Beast of a Bass that could rival custom shops from Fender.
I swapped the Pickups for Seymour Duncan SJB-2 Hot Pickups. Both neck and Bridge
Fully lined the control Cavity with Copper EMI tape,
Bought a custom made Pickguard off of Etsy, Not super original but man it does alot for the Bass. Black and White Paisley pattern.
A Blasphemy Control plate that provides a Master Volume and Tone knob and a 3 way selector switch.
1 Fender High Mass Bass Bridge
1 Brand new Jazz Bass neck made of Maple with a Rosewood Fretboard. with a custom Decal on the headstock from Rothko and Frost
Schaller BMF Nickel tuners.
and 1 Hipshot detuner machine.
She is my Baby and apart from the application of the Headstock Decal, I have poured by Blood, sweat and Tears into my Bass. Not lying. Copper Tape can be REALLY Sharp if you catch it at the wrong angle
Honestly the best guitars for this are Harley bentons
I’d say the new “squire” is harley benton, they make some good stuff for really cheap, and since squire is moving up in the world of quality I honestly regard them as more of a fender without the expensive price tag.
"Squier". Says so on the headstock.
Speaking of cheap guitars, I've had this First Act les paul looking axe that I picked up from a garage sale a few years back and I swear this thing is so fun to play. Sounds great too. Weirdest part is the whole thing has Volkswagen insignias on the knobs and and neck, and after looking it up I found out this guitar came bundled in certain VW cars back in the day. The little booklet it comes with is hilarious too. It talks about the hazard lights being a perfect 120 bpm metronome and the car horn being a perfect A to tune your guitar to.
Thats actually really cool.
If it were me i would take it to a luthier to maybe switch out some of the insides and go for a pick up swap.
I think that's how to get the best out of a normal guitar.
I think Slash and John Mayer did commercials for those…
I have that same guitar! It came with my mom's 2007 golf GTI.
I have a first act.... it's solid 80's rock and roll all day long with HH pickups.
That's not a Chinese made first act, thats a mid priced mid range first act made in Korea. They are pretty good and if you didn't know first act had an American custom shop.
Those Squier classic vibe strats seem to be pretty good. Doesn’t Chris Buck play one? If it’s good enough for him, you bet it’s good enough for just about anyone.
I have a classic vibe Squier, in the store it sounded way better than the slightly more expensive low end Fender strats. But the quality of materials isn't as good. My frets have dents and my bridge has eroded slightly.
I've had my classic vibe strat for 2 years now. It has honestly been my most consistent guitar I own. I haven't done anything to it except for hardtailing it and sanding down the sticky neck
He plays a Highway One but that’s American made
I've heard Mike Rutherford has been playing a Squier Strat he purchased while in quarantine, on his most recent tour. Not sure if it was with Genesis or Mike And The Mechanics.
@@kevinw8346 I bought the CMExAndertons Purple strat and immediately put locking tuners on it and a fender bridge/trem
I got a Squier Stratocaster a year ago, and I can say that it is a great guitar. It’s got a humbucker bridge pickup for starters, and it just plays smooth and is set up quite nicely. It was around 400ish bucks but I got a deal for it, it honestly gave me the opposite impression of what people normally associate squires with, guess it’s just better than your average 150 dollar squier.
The classic vibes?
I got myself the Squier Mini strat as well
That’s cool. Also, Phillip says what people have to look out for is maybe one in 20 or 50 examples of a cheap import Guitar will really be exceptional… That’s down to luck more than consistency. You have to check the brand new stock and grab the nice one first…
*You'll Never Walk Alone*
I’ve had a Squier Telecaster since 2018, and it’s done an incredible job. At a fundraiser dinner for my highschool rifle team last weekend, a guy was donating a 2007 Gibson Les Paul and a Marshall combo amp. My dad passed away in September, and my friend’s parents decided to get it for me. I love the new guitar and amp. It’s a true upgrade. But my point is that Squiers can be amazing if you take care of them. I moved across the country with it and played countless Sunday evenings and nights at my church with it. I will still continue to use once when I do some modifications to make it a little better and to fix some issues it has developed after hundreds and hundreds of hours playing it. My point is, don’t sleep on Squiers. They can sound really great if you have some average or nice gear to go with it.
I absolutely love squire for making guitars that are easily purchased for an epic price.
Honestly if fender wants to lend its name to something your guaranteed a certain level of quality
Thanks again for swinging by the shop! Hope you enjoyed your time here in Utah where the views do not suck.
I'd just like to chime in and say that I (Kameron) bought a Squier Antigua Baritone Jazzmaster a few years ago that i adore.. it also helps that it's worth like $1100 now. \m/
I love you guys! New location is tight!
Squier has definitely improved since I started playing. I had a Bullet Strat HSS from 2011. That wasn't the best but it was something. The past year I've bought the Classic Vibe Jazzmaster, P-Bass, and Bass VI. I was thoroughly impressed. Even though they need some adjustments, they are worth it for those looking for a affordable and effective guitar/bass.
I played a classic vibe 50s at guitar center and fell in love with it. Currently saving up lol
Squire guitars had a reputation for being a bit janky and low quality when they first came out which stuck with them from their first release in the 80's through the 90's at least but it seems like they have been slowly but consistently upping their manufacturing quality while increasing their range since the turn of the century. These days they produce quite a few guitars that even a professional musician wouldn't be displeased with. The pickups and sometimes the tuners (on the cheapest models) are usually the only real low points - both of which can be easily upgraded.
Not so accurate. The first Squier guitars were Japan, and astoundingly good JVs and similar can resell for well over a thousand today. I have an 85 and a 92 that are nice.
But these early to mid 80s weren’t very profitable to Fender at a low price point. It’s when Fender cheaped them out in Korea and other places that the spec & quality fell apart. Planet Blotch explains this very well…
Squier been making guitars way longer than 1980s
@@TryptamineRitual not under Fender they haven't.
I have a 1984 Squier strat bought from new. Still my main guitar, one refret, new bridge as the old one rusted up. Good guitar.
Hahaha. The MIJ squiers of the 80s were not janky or low quality. I put my MIJ vista series guitars on the same level or higher than most of my MIA fenders and the QC was certainly higher than the random trash Gibson sells at a premium.
The squier J Mascis Signature Jazzmaster is the best squier I’ve ever played there’s just something about it, it’s a amazing guitar. It sounds crazy but I’m proud of own a squier
can confirm its awesome
It’s the greatest guitar I’ve ever played. It just hits every mark. Every aspect of it is great design. Neck, bridge, saddles, pickguard pickups.....everything just works well together. I love it
I love the J M but have you tried the new run of
SuperSonics?
it's usually a bit of a coin-toss with Squiers. At their worst, they're "OK", at their best, they're at least as good as their Mexican-made big brothers. If you go for the more expensive brands/models the baseline is probably a bit higher and you're less dependent on luck to get a great instrument. So with low-priced instruments, play them before you buy them.
I got myself a Squier Deluxe Jazzmaster some years back and I absolutely love it. It did have a couple of issues (e.g. a shoddy bridge) but nothing major. Oh, and I think you'd like it, Tyler, it weighs in at just about a metric ton. Then back in January '21, I bought one of those Paranormal Offset Telecasters online (couldn't resist a tele with my favorite body) and I gotta admit I was a fair bit disappointed. The frets were literally cutting my fingers, and it was so poorly adjusted that fretting anything from the 9th fret and up didn't actually give me a tone; only fret buzz. When I finally got it set up properly and filed the fret ends down a bit, I realized exactly how poor the pickups are. They sound incredibly dull and they hum ... a LOT. The other aspects of the instrument are fine-it plays well, the neck is straight, it holds tuning, etc., so I guess I'll just have to invest in some better pickups now...
Is there a difference between the Mexican made big brother and the American made big brother?
@@davefx7949 Largely the difference is that American made guitars are generally a lot more consistent in terms of quality. You can get a quality Mexican made guitar, but it's a lot of chance as to whether you actually will.
If you order online, best make sure they have a good refund policy in case you get one with spicy fret ends, buzz, shoddy electronics, etc. It's honestly best to just find a physical store that has the guitar you want so you can try before buying, you'll have a better chance of finding something you actually like, because most of the time online music retailers have absolutely shit refund/exchange policies.
The quality of Squire guitars has gotten really high. The “feels light” deal, must be common to the Paranomal Series. I have a 60s Vibe Strat (gorgeous Lake Placid blue with white/black/white pickguard) that cost $429 new, with free shipping. It feels and plays just like an American Strat. Really amazing.
I have one ... it feels light because it’s semi hollow
Good on ya as someone who normally demos higher end gear for giving Squier a video. The Bullet series is inexpensive, but even there the Mustang one has a good rep. The Classic Vibe series is just plain good, and I bet pros could use them straight up or as a platform for upgrades
We've got a Bullet Mustang in our shop at the moment, it's a great lil guitar for the price
I've played a fender squire bullet mustang through a boss katana 50,the best combination there was at the guitar store I was at.
I bought the boss katana mk 2 head. It is so solid 👌
@@AspiringTalentless yes, all boss amps are the shiz
@@ALLMETAL1970 they sell a katana mini for 100$ that runs on AA batteries and that is the best travel amp it has such good distortion
@@AspiringTalentless it does
I have to say, my daughter's Squier Bullet Mustang plays better than my MIJ Fender Mustang. It has a better finish on it as well. Such a great axe. She plays it through a Blackstar Fly3 and it sounds incredible.
You know, reading some of the comments shows very clearly how good it is to have guitars that play well, that are cheap enough for us to all learn on and then lean on once we've learnt a thing or two. I had no idea there was as much variety in Squires which is also great. More sweet content, thank you.
Squiers are pretty hit or miss, but I have a Squier strat that I got from a thrift store that was apparently "broken" but just needed a wire to get sauterized onto the input jack, and let me tell you, the few times I've gotten to play an actual Fender made me realize that I hit a jackpot with that strat! Sounds as good if not better than any Fender I've played and the fretboard feels great on my hands! I can't tell if the person who had it before me modified it in any way, but gosh I love that guitar!
If they’re set up right, they can be surprisingly good.
I like Squier guitar’s, affordable, light weight and good for beginners and more.
Favorite ones are the Classic Vibe, telecaster’s in particular. 🔥
A Squier Bullet Mustang was my first electric guitar. Never would have wanted anything else for a beginner guitar.
It played through a boss katana 50 is an excellent combination
@@ALLMETAL1970 agreed
@@RC32Smiths01 is that the amp you use
@@ALLMETAL1970 It is, actually.
My first guitar also. Still have it.
I have four Squiers, one of them being a Jazz Bass. I think that of course having the more expensive gear is nice, but with the level of quality Squier are putting out now, as well as them being a good price point to modify, I don't think that you NEED anything more expensive than the top level Squier stuff any more.
That has been a reality some years and continuing. I have never spent more than $480 on a guitar (new or used). I have been tempted to do the low 48 months monthly payments for Gibson's but at the end of the day, all guitars get scratched, dented and need mechanical and electronic maintenance.
Maybe for larger neck profiles! Overseas guitars tend to lean toward small or average sized neck grip. Not a fan of it.
I had an early Japanese Squire. It was as good as any Strat I've owned. Had the same headstock finish and logo.
I never thought I would buy a Squier until I saw the Sweetwater-exclusive 5-string Jazz bass in matte black with a maple fretboard. It's like $550 so it's definitely not a low end Squier, and it's beautiful and sounds great.
I am a proud owner of a squire telecaster and I love it with all my heart
Me too mate, but its Squier, not Squire 😵
Same!
@@alenpuhalj3229 Thanks for the correction 😀
@@voqz6667 squire should be removed from the phones. Who even uses that word!?
@@voqz6667 exactly! It’s old English! It should be the exception not the rule!
I got a Squier for my first guitar cause I wanted something affordable but named brand, and Squier delivered that for me. I love music and already had played the drums, but I wanted to learn something new during covid, so I decided to buy me a guitar to get me through the boredom and all that free-time I had. It was one of the best decisions of my life! I've been playing for a year and a half now and it's crazy how much I've gotten better. From 0-3-5, to some of the best Metallica songs. I appreciate you Tyler. Not only your an amazing guitarists, but you inspire me and other young guitar player's to "keep going". Plus you make me laugh and I enjoy watching you play the craziest guitars I can't afford. HaHa
Just bought a bullet Stratocaster last week. I'm honestly blown away by how it sounds and feels for just 130 euro's. What surprised me most is how easy it is to play. I learned how to play on a rip off strat for a pretty similar price, and this is just a million times better. Closer to the real deal than to the knock off.
I picked up a Squier Affinity Tele last year, as I don’t want to take my American built Tele to gigs in case it walks away. The affinity isn’t as nice, but it’s still a very good guitar and great value at about 1/4 what I paid for my ‘52 reissue. I haven’t modded the Squier at all, and probably won’t.
Mike Rutherford, of Genesis fame, stated in a fairly recent interview, that he discovered how versatile the Squier he picked up in South Africa became when he needed a guitar and found himself to be without a guitar to play.
Granted, he did admit that his tech did mod the Squier, a little, but Mister Rutherford stated in the interview that he actually tours with his Squier, and said it's fun to play with it, on stage.
Tyler: Parallel Universe? 03:15
Anthony Kiedis: Giverrrrr away Giverrrrr away Giverrrrr away now
By The Way: you should have demo a Squeir classic vibe series, they are top of the line
i love the classic vibe, paranormal, and contemporary series, and i believe with a bit of work any guitar can feel good, and i think with the right player, any guitar can sound great!
My main guitar for pop is a Squier Classic Vibe 60's strat since 2018. I have tried many fenders in my days but I feel very little difference between a Squier or a fender. It does not matter if it costs 1,000 or 3,000. The tone is in the fingers =)
I recent bought a Squier Classic Vibe 70s HSS strat, and I have been having the absolute time of my life with it. It’s my first new electric guitar in 17 years and I’m loving every second of playing it.
just bought my first guitar, a bullet HSS strat. i’ve never felt something quite like owning a guitar. love.
I have a Squier 60s Classic Vibe Mustang and I love it, plays nice and sounds great. Pickups in particular are lovely.
I also have a Squier Affinity Strat that I picked up more or less for nothing (part of a deal) about a decade ago. It has always been poor. Over the years I've adjusted just about anything that can be adjusted, upgraded the pickups, the tone cap, the pots and added an out of phase switch and I still don't like it. Currently I'm in the process of making it a proper hardtail, filling in the spaces and fitting a top mount, rear string bridge; fingers crossed.
In short, I would strongly recommend the 60sCV Mustang but wouold tell folk to stay clear of the Affinity Strat.
Look at rounding off the edges of your fingerboard on the affinity and giving it a thorough fret level including a very attentive polish afterwards. It'll make a big difference to reduce the 'cheap' feel, a LOT of that comes from the neck profile and the transition to the board.
$20 worth of sandpaper, fine wire wool and ebay files will do the trick if you're willing to give it a go yourself.
Fender Principal Custom Shop builder, John Thorn, stated that one of his favorite guitars ever is a Japanese Silver Series Squire - and he's the guy that could probably have any Fender Custom shop guitar he wanted.
I own, and have owned, many a Gibson, Fender and ESP guitars but one guitar that I will never sell is an early 90's Squire strat. I worked Saturdays at the local guitar store and someone bought it in for a trade. 5 minutes later I bought it. It sustains for days and after a lengthy setup it played like a monster. That was 28 years ago and the only way you'll take possession of it, is prying it from my cold dead hands.
I stopped caring about weight decades ago. The only two things I worry about when I try a guitar for the first time are: 1. Does it resonate and is it loud acoustically and 2. Is everything straight and most likely accepting of a good setup.
No doubt. My 1994 'Fender Stratocaster Squier Series' MIM guitar is maybe the best 100 bucks I ever spent.
My J Mascis squier jazzmaster is the perfect pick up and play guitar I own.
Honestly once it's set up properly it's hard to fault it, incredible value for money
Not clacking the pickups and generally smoother playing are why efficient guitarists present: The Jazz III!
I love my Squire Strat. I bought mime for 299, had it for four month, and its my first guitar. There is a girl I know at church. She askes me what I name my guitar all the time. She would kill me though if I actually told her the name I gave my guitar. She was the one that inspired me to play in the first place
sounds like a lovestory about to happen
This is genuinely so wholesome
Jack Pearson hands down one of the best guitarists ever loves playing Squiers that cost under 90$. It's not about the instrument, it's about your ability to make it sing.
yeah but it's a little hard to make a shitty instrument sing lol
He probably puts $200 pick ups in it.
Jack Pearson upgraded the hardware in his Squier, so not exactly the same thing.
He buys Squires then drops Fender quality upgrades in it..soooo
I got a Squier jazzmaster Jay Mascis signature edition and it is such a good guitar 🤘
I have this on my wish list for Christmas this year. I have wanted this Jazzmaster over any Fender JM for a long time. Beautiful and plays so nice (I played one at CME a couple months ago and fell in love with it. I have so many guitars that I can't justify buying another one at this time, or this would be my choice).
I have one as well, such a great guitar!
I was able to grab it off GC and with a 20% off coupon it was only 400$! It is my first and only guitar with single coil pickups and the pickups are definitely on a level above most Squiers because Jay picked them out
I'm jealous and happy for you, come on tax return!
Squier Classic Vibes are probably the best bang for the buck across the board. I've owned a number of Tele and Strat CV's and they've all been solid. They also mod very easily with Fender parts, unlike the lower lines of Squier where parts almost fit.
Had my CV 70’s for about 3 or 4 years now…. It is rock solid. It actually is better from a playability standpoint than a 1000 dollar guitar I have. 🤷♂️ And it surprisingly holds tune with very aggressive play.
Classic vibe has got to be the best value guitar around. Wish I would’ve gotten the 60s instead of the 50s but I still love my black 50s classic vibe strat. It’s a little bright for my taste but sounds great and plays PHENOMENALLY (probably has more to do with the amp but I’m still learning about gear, even though I’ve been playing about 5 years now)
The only good one is the one that made in china, wich is discontinued, the recent made in indonesia classic vibe is garbage, i mean really i'd rather spent $150-$250 more on secondhand mim fender to get much better tone, much better neck feel, playability, durable parts etc.
@@PK7796 I’ve had no complaints out of mine. Feels great. Guess that’s just difference of opinion
@@trentmckenzie343 maybe i've got a bad batch or something, but hey if you got a fine classic vibe, that's good, i kinda envy you lol😂
@@PK7796 Well I have played genuine Fender stuff but to be honest I’ve never owned any. Never saw fit to buy one of that high quality while I’m still just learning. Here we are going on six years later and I’ve still got it and don’t really care to upgrade. I don’t really know how to describe it, other than that I’m happy with it. Maybe others think it’s not great but hey I’m the one playing it 😂
@@trentmckenzie343 with the squier line, even on the highest grade wich is the classic vibe, you cannot get the exact same quality within their product, yes even on other brand like fender alike, QC is still an issue, but with squier it is more noticable really, maybe i'm just having a bad luck to get one of the worst batch of classic vibe
I actually started learning 3 weeks ago on my dad's Squire. It's a few years old now (it's not his only guitar, he for instance still has his Hondo DX 100 I grew up watching him play) and I've quite liked it so far honestly.
Good way to show that you no longer need an expensive guitar to get very decent, even professional level tone. You can always measure your size and compare all you want, but that doesn’t have anything to do with creating music.
My 2007 Custom Telecaster with chrome humbuckers is my favorite guitar. Even afer playing fender tele's and strats. Hell I own a fender strat and It just doesnt compare IMO. The Tele is just LOUD without an Amp, it is so resonate. I attribute it to no belly cut and its minimal routing. Such a great guitar, thinking about finding another one but the 2007 models still go for 300 to 400 bucks.
The Squier Bullet Stratocaster HSS is literally the best starter guitar in the world. I'm not going to let anyone change my mind.
It seems from my experience that the Squire Classic Vibe guitars and basses are a higher quality, value, fit and finish that the Fender Player series. You’ll need to get into the Vintera and Player Plus series to match that, which is literally double the price and up. Change the pots for long term reliability and you’re good to go!
I am a very happy owner of a brand new Squire Classic Vibe 50’s P-Bass. I made my own black “Bakelite” pickguard so my custom shop Broadcaster has a friend. Other than that, it’s perfect.
I have a ‘96 Japanese Squier. It’s by far my absolute favourite guitar I’ve ever played. There are definitely gems in the bunch.
Recently Squire has really upped their game.I bought a Squire 70s Classic Vibe Jaguar in surf green and the quality and build is amazingly good .Squires certainly are not junk guitars anymore.
bought the same one, really really happy with it!
I've never believed that the brand or model of guitar mattered, any guitar can sound and play amazing if you want it too. I never bought a guitar and kept it original, I've always picked and choose the pickups and fretboard I think compliment each other no matter the guitar. Don't settle for a mediocre sound because you don't want to replace original parts, that being said you wouldn't turn Lucille into a Frankenstein guitar. But a $200 squire is nothing special, unless you take the time to make it special and it's an amazing feeling when you turn a cheap guitar into an amazing and beautiful sounding work of art.
I mostly agree and it always comes down to the player but there are undoubtedly guitars out there that are garbage. I’ve had hundreds of guitar students many of them young beginners so I’ve definitely seen some that belonged in a dumpster. The guitars that is. Not the kids. ;)
@@dahliafiend ok I can understand that, I've definitely seen a few kids in my life that belong in the garbage... I mean guitars lol
Well said.
I had this absolutely no info les Paul model that was pretty cheaply made.
But i took it to a luthier. And he swapped out the guts, installed my chosen pick ups, and made little detail changes to the knobs and strap hinge that it became my best guitar ever.
Nope. Not at all.
Some of the recent guitars that Squier have brought out are insanely good.
The Classic Vibe range in particular is ridiculously good. Also a mention to the Affinity Series.
I recently bought a Skyburst Blue Contemporary Strat with a roasted maple fretboard and it's beautiful!
I guess it just depends which Squier you buy... There are still some very cheap and affordable ones around for beginners.
My first electric guitar was a red squier strat and I still love it very much. My grandpa gave it to me on my 13th birthday almost 20 years ago. Compared to my Mexican Standard Strat it is much lighter and not as refined but it's a great guitar for noodling around or band practice sessions. I changed the pickguard to a black one and blocked the poorly made tremolo with a piece of wood and since then it stays in tune perfectly. I used it for gigging for about 7 years and it worked fine for me.
Update: I just hooked it up with a fender prewired pickguard with texmex singlecoils, put 5 springs in the trem and shielded it with shielding paint. Now it kicks some serious ball and stays in tune.
I think you can hear where they've cut costs- electronics (especially the single coils), setup, fretwork buzzing... that said, some of them sounded really great and I know from experience that many feel great, too (somehow the Affinity Jazzmaster in my local store sounds as great as the one you played).
I’m seriously considering the Contemporary Strat with the Floyd Rose as my next guitar purchase. I play an Epiphone Les Paul and would like to own a guitar with a tremolo system.
No ive been playing for bout 5 years now and have passed the time you would usually upgrade to a better guitar. Ive just grown so used to 90s squire strats im sticking with them. Dont know about the new ones tho still too much money for me hahaha
a Squire with a great setup and maybe some pickup changes can sound beast. I'm a Gibson guy, but that Squier J Mascis Jazzmaster was the best playing guitar out of the box I've ever played!
I kid you not. Crazy tbh. its like 499 and played better than my Gibby did (out of the box of course). After a setup is a different story but still! For a fraction of the cost they can play great.
My first guitar was a squier bullet strat i bought for 90 bucks in a pawn shop. 2 years later and i love picking it up and jamming with it
The first brand new guitar that I bought is a MIJ mid 80s Squire Fender Telecaster. I replaced the stock pickups with Seymour Duncan Quarter Pounds. It's fantastic and it's as good as my two other American Telecasters.
I played a squier for 3 years ($100 used) and it wasn’t until this year that I purchased my first high quality guitar for $1,800 that I realize the difference. There is a *huge* difference to me between my squier and my American professional strat. The squier is fantastic for beginners and even now I could still play it with no issue.
But once you get a high quality guitar in your hands, you’ll never want to go back to the squier. The difference is incredible.
Jack Pearson won't agree
My 1st guitar was a squire 2004 bullit strat hardtail, it's my #1. After complete American fender hardware swap and fender custom shop pickups I'd put it up against any American standard. 🤘🏻
You can't go wrong with a Squier. The first guitar I ever brought was a lovely looking Squier Stratocaster with a shiny metallic blue paintjob. That thing has taken a beating over the years and is covered in dents, dinks and chips now, but it's still my favourite guitar. She's my ol' trusty axe. It would be the first thing grabbed in the event of a house fire lol
I love my Squier Classic Vibe 60's HSH Stratocaster. It has so much range and feels so great in my hands.
Stoked you came to my hometown SLC! Not only do I visit Guitar Czar, but my first guitar was a Squier I picked up at Guitar Czar. I got a harsh criticism that Squiers are more of a knockoff. But it’s been a great guitar, can’t wait until I get my seven-string. Super fun video and definitely resonates with me as this is totally my experience!
I needed this video! I've just started looking at Squiers as I'm a relative beginner. Awesome reviews. The Jazzmaster looks right up my street and budget! I wish I could triple like your vid' lol.
Hi there fellow person! Got one a couple months ago and only have nice things to say about it as a first electric: the neck is super nice, feels better than anything I've ever picked up that was under $500, is quite straightforward to set up, and the pickups fit all of my needs as a clean/delay player!
I want that jazzmaster.. but idk I also want other guitars 😅
@@EPmager Quick question! Does it cover a few bases sound wise? For instance I love playing blues more than anything but I like to crank some rock out too.
@@ellebhee5045 long as you don't try to get metal tones out of it, you're covered)
@@EPmager Thank you! You're a diamond! :) *Edit- Is that yourself singing 'Еретнов Эрнест, 15 лет, What A Day, Ben Howard'? Great vocals if so!
7:15 that Supersonic actually looks sick! Almost looks like Fender's take on a Firebird
Supersonics have always been a squier thing, I think its cool they did something separate from fender. Its an amazing guitar
It was modelled off Hendrix playing a jaguar upside down, it’s slightly smaller though and actually sounds better than all my Jaguars combined
Squire instruments are so underrated. Some of the early Squire guitars and basses are as good as their modern Fender equivalents.
I got one today and I have to say this guitar made me play better and sounds better than my last guitar and that's all that matters I hope everyone who got a bullet squire or any other type enjoys it and has a great christmas.
I've had my affinity squier strat for over 10 years. I've never needed another one it's honestly a beast and the playability, for me personally, is smooth and seemless. I can play for hours uninterrupted. I'm only now upgrading and I'm getting a squier jazzmaster. Will be loyal to the brand till given reason not too be
Once you see Max Ostro set his Squire Stratocaster on fire you can never blame your abilities, or lack thereof, on the Squire again. They are obviously making great guitars these days. I loved that p90 equipped baritone Tele! Cheers P[>
I have a squire bullet strat hss, supposed to be the lowest end of the lowest end, I use it in my churches student band and it does the job, it could definitely use some modifications to help it stay in tune longer but it does the job. Really in the end it's all in the amp lol
The squier contemporary serious is the best Stratocaster I've ever played
lol
I just got a contemporary tele and it's mind blowing how fucking good that guitar is.
I love teles but wanted something with a rail in the bridge and it was the first thing I found so I got it on a whim and it's replaced all my other guitars (some 4x the price of it).
Never thought I'd be a squier guy, but here we are.
I just got my first electric guitar last week. It’s a Squier Affinity Stratocaster. Maybe it’s because I have no frame of reference but I’d say it’s a really solid guitar
Love the squire telecaster classic vibe and the new affinity. Things they need to work on is the quality control. Other than that, Squire is gradually getting better
My wife plays an old 1990s squier telecaster she got as a teenager and it sounds amazing. Such a sweet sounding guitar.
Squire’s a really good, I just played a 279$ squire offset . It was as nice as the fenders. They even dress the fretboard edge.
Got the one you're talking about in Placid Blue as my first electric 2 months ago, couldn't ask for anything more!) Although over here it's just over $400 because VAT + shipping expenses
Yup the one at 4:34 !
@@EPmager he’s right too about it being a good mod platform too. Enjoy your new guitar 🎸☠️☠️☠️🤘🏼
After 4 months of playing an extremely cheap acoustic of about 40 bucks, I’m goona upgrade to a squier bullet strat, most probably…hopefully it’s good🤞🏻
Their classic vibe thinline telecaster (including the carbonita tele you played) is seriously one of my favorite guitars, I’m blown away every time I pick one up at a guitar store. They always sound and feel outstanding. I haven’t pulled the trigger on one yet, but maybe…..
Squier stage master is surprisingly a great sounding guitar. Bought one 15 years ago. Loved it
5:10 I've bought this exact Squier Jazzmaster a couple of days ago and I gotta say it's amazing. Sounds great, looks amazing and feels incredible to play! While trying it out in the store I also tried the Squier classic vibe 60's jazzmaster which is about 150 Euros (or 170 dollars) more than the affinity series, but I didn't feel it sounded or felt any better to play than the model for 150 euros less (it only lacks the rhythm and lead circuit but that's not important to me)
"not as high quality as American made models"
So my plus top MIM Fender Strat is what? One of the best guitars I've ever played? Yes.
MIM Strats>>>>
No point of buying a Fender when you can buy a Squier and replace the pickups with pickups made from the same material that Fender makes theirs from or just buy used pickups and you can save a fortune.
But it doesn’t say Fender on the headstock and its not made in Americah!
Oh what a shame!
The J Mascis Squier Jazzmaster is the best guitar I've ever played. The pickups are absolutely legendary
I bought a $99 Epiphone Les Paul Special in TV Yellow 7 years ago for a joke gift. The pickups were ... unimpressive but the neck. I have never felt a neck on an Epiphone, let along a Les Paul, like this before. Butter smooth, the action was dang near perfect. I put hand wound Porter Pickups (probably then about $500) in it because I loved the neck SO much. Played that thing for a number of years as my main guitar. Needless to say, I ended up keeping the guitar and got my buddy a poo brown squire instead. Same price. He ended up using that guitar to cut 3 albums.
Love the baritone Squier, I think its one of the best baritone guitars under €400. There's also Squier Baritone Custom, quite more expensive, yet it's the Cabronita that sounds better in my book. Weird thing with Squier guitars is that you might get either a decent batch or one with nastier fretwork, or some other minor, but annoying details. For Bullet and others, there are better Harley Bentons, although it's also a lottery, depending on the model, some pickups are close to the Squier, some require a replacement.
I used to own a Squire and enjoyed it. That being said, at the current price point of a lot of these guitars, I'd pony up the extra $100 or so to get a G&L Tribute.
BXGames - G & L is horribly under appreciated. You can't go wrong with one.
Nah, squier classic vibes are practically as good as the majority of fenders now. It's just elitist bloos dads who want to justify spending twice the money for a brand name who say they suck
Dude those things are SO good. You're completely right, they're as good as any Fender.
@@voqz6667 what does that even mean?
@@falcongunner33 It's a weird thing to say, most of the time when I hear a guitar in a modern song its country or doing some retro 70's thing. I feel like most if what sets "modern" guitar tones apart are the huge range of pedals.
@@nathanjasper512 yeah definitely. You can have vintage inspired pickups but those can be changed or infinity modified with effects.
Hold on a second... I am an elitist blues dad and I like today's Squiers 😉
Still playing my 50th Anniversary Squier Strat I got back in '96. Upgraded one of the pickups to a hot rail, upgraded the tuning machines and recently rewired it with new pots. Brilliant wee guitar still.