My father was a rockabily/country player back in the 60s. When he died in his retirement home in 2019, we found 14 telecasters in his room. Thank you, telecaster, for all the joy you brought to him.
That’s cool that he loved and played them. Maybe it’s an aging thing, I’m still playing all the time, and I’ll look at all my guitars, and the music I’ve written and wonder who will play them when it’s my turn to go hang out with Hendrix and SRV in Jesus’ jam room.
I love the Tele approach to versatility. Some guitars are made to sound like as many other guitars as possible, but the Tele just has a set of sounds all its own - and those sounds can be used for anything. It keeps you away from option paralysis while still giving you more than you could ask for.
Yes, they can be used for country to Hard Rock to true metal. Even surf bands you see a few using a Telecaster too. About the only genera of rock you do not see them use a Telecaster is in that Areana Rock/Hair Voltage Metal type scene where a Super Strat in the flat fret board radius like Ibanez, LTD/flat fret board radius type Les Paul guitar is the popular design due to the flat fretboard used for the speed they want to play at.
That's the best description I have heard. To me it's the variation from that powerful bridge pick up to the mellower and darker neck. I'm finding the middle position can almost pass for a Les Paul at times and that's my favorite position for covering Tool.
@@caseysmith544I think the lack of a Floyd Rose hurts it for the hair metal more than the neck profile. I have my tele set up pretty low and it's pretty flat. Only guitar I played that was faster was a Jackson Flying V with a Floyd Rose (got stolen, my wife bought it as a Christmas gift). I find I can get pinch harmonics and shred on it about as good as any other guitar I have played. The neck contours on an Ibanez certainly help make playing on the high frets easier and most teles don't have 24 frets. But for speed and tone, it can do hair metal, just no trem bar and usually just 21 frets.
6:34 - The thing about Telecasters is they have no “era”. They are timeless, genre-crossing, utilitarian machines. The original design seems to have been channeled from 1920’s *bauhaus* school, and belongs in the *MOMA* permanent collection. Even before getting into the almost limitless modification possibilities, the basic configuration gets a huge variety of sounds that, somehow, retains an identity. Pragmatic, yet soulful, the Telecaster is a work of Art that just… works. 👍 And I’ll never sell mine.
Yo Mike it's heartwarming to see you get better at guitar. The time you put into learning will pay back exponentially. I feel like the Nashville area will push anyone to expect more of themselves musically while staying somewhat humble. We all appreciate what you're doing here!
I'm 71 years old and have been playing guitar for 50+ years. Your journey through learning guitar is so reminiscent of my own (and I'm sure many other's) story. The way you tell of the excitement of owning your first electric guitar, to seeing your guitar heros in person takes me back and reminds me of why I love this cantankerous instrument so very much. Your videos and enthusiasm are wonderful. Rock on my young friend and may you never lose your musical way!
So good to hear that I wasn’t the only one as a young player that had a complete misconception of the tele. I wouldn’t even try one messing around in the music store. After about 18 years of playing, I played a telecaster for the first time, and I haven’t put it down since.
This is actually the norm these days. Can't get a youngster to even look at Telecasters most of the time. It took me years to realize that the only guitars I don't eventually sell are the T's.
One thing about modding a Telecaster: The first time I saw somebody who had one with the control plate reversed - the order from front to back is Volume, Tone, Pickup Selector -it made so much sense to me. it seemed like that’s what it should’ve been all along!
i actually did this with my first guitar, which was my tele. On the cover of Nirvanas first album, the secondary guitarist is rocking a tele with this mod. Hammering on a tele can often result in the pickup selector getting unintentionally moved. Reversing it allows you to strum as hard as you’d like.
My very first electric was an Epiphone but after deciding that I was going to take guitar more seriously I picked up a Fender Player Plus Nashville it is my go to and an absolute work horse! Love it!
To each their own, but you shouldn’t restrict yourself like that. LPs are great, too, and so are Strats and semis-hollows and Vs etc. It’s a bit like saying im just a Brand A car guy, I’d never drive a car from Brand B and therefore totally missing out on all the other great cars out there.
I went down the same rabbit hole. I was a Strat guy. Had no clue what a Tele was or why I would want one. I discovered it the weirdest way possible. I saw a youtuber playing a Cheryl Crow cover on a John 5 Tele. Loved the look, loved the sound so I found one. Not your standard Tele by any means. But it sorta opened that door. Then I found my Baja. The Baja Tele is about as close to a Mexican Made custom shop that you can find. Versatile as all heck. Fun to play and classic sounding....that opened the floodgates. I went from Strat guy to Tele guy really fast. I will play my Strat and a lot of various guitars, but if I am struggling and feeling like I just want that simple rock or country sound...right to the Tele. Teles seem to make everything right in the world :)
@7:50 There is a solution for this, reverse the control plate so the pickup switch is to the back... if you also reverse to volume & tone pots, you can do volume swells easier and don't worry about hitting it anymore!
Not too long ago, maybe 3 or 4 months or so, I was at my towns festival and they obviously had some live bands playing and they were all ok until this group of dudes in suits and a lady came out right at the very end of the night and their lead player had white Tele with a black pick guard (not exactly sure what type but it was Fender) and wow, his tone was awesome, his playing was awesome, he was awesome. He proved single handedly how awesome a Tele is with one performance, dude was improvising a million different solos and styles. After the festival I went and finish the night at the local pub and the same band was there and had a nice convo with them. That guy taught me three things that night, 1; I need practice. 2; I need a Tele, and 3; Tele players are humble and will humble you.
I was a strat guy and then my instructor at the time (Jim Campilongo!) turn me onto tellys. Turn me onto Roy Buchanan that let me down the road to players like Cornell, Dupree, Roy Buchanan, and a bunch of others. At one time I had four telecasters. I’m down to two and I play a Strat about the same amount as I do my telly. My favorite telly is my Jason. Isabell artist model. I have no use for my other telecaster right now! The Isabell artist model has everything I need in a telecaster. It’s based on a late 50s custom.
Man, when you pulled out that Vox I knew exactly where you were headed. My favorite combination is my Tele and AC-15. Tele's are the perfect weapon. Punk players have used em for decades and for good reason.
It’s interesting the way a musical instrument can mean different thing to so many people when i started playing a guitar i had no knowledge of brands or styles i just new i loved the sound of a clean guitar when i was 7 years old my parents billeted me out to friends while they packed up our lives in Norway to come to Australia while i was there they played a lot of country music as i discovered years later, time passed and in my late teens i started to learn to play guitar by the time i was thirty I discovered fender guitars first a strat and then a tele and now I’m 62 and i have 5 teles 3 strats 2 prs’s 2 gibsons one taylor and a Martin and still in love with the sound of a tele above all others trust me young man once a tele gets under your skin your hooked for life just enjoy the ride great segment.
Just got my first Tele, a Squier Contemporary RH in Pearl White. Heard there’s a real thing where guitar players don’t like teles… until one day they do. Took me 20 years. Turns out it just took the right tele.
I'm a Strat fan, but you're so right about the volume knob, lol. I'm always accidentally turning the volume down. Teles absolutely have it in a better spot. I've never played a Tele, but you're selling me on them with your points.
I have sold most of my other guitars...I kept the tele's! there's just something about them. I too thought they were ugly as hell until I actually progressed as a player and saw the actual beauty in them. The tone(s), realiablity, Comfort (subjectivly speaking) and functionality are unmatched in my opinion
I’ve always thought they looked cool. But not at the start. It progressed from something that looks nice to one of my favorite guitar shapes. And they sound cool. Not for what I play but if I were to do some funky whatnot a tele would be my first pick.
Own an 🇺🇸 strat ... looking for something new for sound. I was looking at the Mex black telecaster to modify. While I was waiting for the Mex telecaster ( I have checked out a few) , I asked the guy if they had a professional 2 telecaster. And he came out with a Miami Blue and I like the color. Then I held it in my hands ... I knew that this was my guitar ( it fits my hands so well... great neck).
When I began my guitar journey, I was all about Strats because I thought they were sexier and more versatile than Teles. Then I grew up and realized that the Telecaster was an extremely versatile guitar and the sound of American music these past 70 years. A Tele and a great 335 will cover most of the bases. Subscribed. 😺👍
My late Grandmother took me to a Brad Paisley concert when i was 14 during his Wheelhouse tour. I had never listened to him at all until that day and i was instantly hooked. His influence to this day is why I was gifted a telecaster on my 18th birthday and its my favorite guitar i own dispite it being an older MIM model. Brads playing is some of the best and i cant wait until i can scratch up the money to get a G or B bender tele.
Tried so many over the past 30-40 years. Now older and have only three guitars. Two Teles (one headless and one Reverend Blucifer) & one wonderful sunburst USA Strat. This is enuf. Thank you MC.
Same journey, I had a Strat because.. Hendrix. That got stolen and I eventually got a Tele and absolutely love it. It just sounds like a "record" on everything.
The reason the Tele is so versatile is due to how centered the bridge is to the strap pins and thigh cut (Strat to the right, LP to the left, SG/Explorer way to the left) and the increased distance to the control knobs (Tele controls run where the Strat's first tone knob is mounted, even EVH pushed the Strat volume back closer to a Tele volume position). Bill Kirchen shows how the Tele can play everything, every artist, every guitar: th-cam.com/video/8_FK6o8RPSQ/w-d-xo.html ... My favorite auto-mods to any Tele I'll play regularly is rotating the control plate like Kirchen (V-T-Switch to the rear) and installing a 4-way switch to get a stealth Les Paul Junior Humbucker out of that Tele.
I've got a 1998 American Standard Tele that I have upgraded the pickups and also installed a 4-way switch so I get both pickups together in series. Very versatile guitar good for country, rock, blues & even jazz. It's not my #1 but I have no plan to get rid of it either.
I like to build custom guitars from time to time and I built a left hand Nashville telecaster. Jimmy Page played his telecaster for the solo on Stairway.
I have a Nash E-52 (their take on a blackguard Esquire). For being a single pickup guitar, it is incredibly versatile and I am able to use it on any electric endeavor and not compromise.
You summed it all up so well, some great points here…I converted to Telecasters when I wanted to be different to the countless Stratocaster players around me when growing up and in doing that, I ended up finding the simple yet amazingly versatile world of telecasters!
Thanks for this, Mike--terrific. I have a '52 Tele that I bought 40 years ago and have played and played. I can't get enough of its sound. There's no way in the world that I'll ever--EVER--sell it. They'll have to pry it oit of my cod dead hands.
My dad been playing guitar since the 70s and always been a strat or les Paul guy. He got an itch for a Tele somehow back in the early 2000s and I don’t ever see him play anything else. He has an 81 les Paul custom and American player strat but the tele is IT for him. Also through his Vox AC130. Thanks for the cool videos, slowly getting me back into my own personal collection.
I have been an Ibanez RG style user/fan for a over couple of decades. Like you at first I thought this is the ugliest guitar. But when I bought my first tele, a couple months ago, I fell in love with it. It felt like this is what I’m looking for a long time.
True - I have sold all of my guitars this year, all except for my MIM Telecaster Deluxe that I bought new in 2004. I love that guitar, and i'll keep it til I die.
LOVE Nashville ! I live in Athens, GA and we have produced So Many good music artist. i.e. REM and B-52's. I've spent a lot of time in Nashville visiting my friends that I used to jam with.. Also, I still have my very old Telecaster.. And it still sounds great !
My first "good" guitar is a 2004 American Standard Telecaster. I loved to palm mute a lot of delay driven riffs and it just feels so comfortable. Something I always have trouble doing on a Stratocaster. Its a workhorse guitar that feels like an in between a Les Paul and Stratocaster. I've wanted a 60's rosewood fretboard but I dont think ill ever need another telecaster.
You talked me into it. I'm going Tele shopping. For years and years, I have been a Strat guy (kinda - sorta), but I always have to modify my Strats, or build my own, and move the volume control out of the way. I noticed that you mentioned having trouble with the volume control as well. Not so with a Tele. It seems like Strats and Telecasters should sound similar, but they don't. It's more than just the pickups. It's a combination of everything. I think I'm gonna have to get me another Telecaster.
I love the placement of the volume on a Strat, very easy to get to quickly, and although I love Teles more than anything else, I usually end up flipping the control panel around so that the knobs are closer. Just depends on how active you are with the volume. Usually the players I've met that hate where the Strat volume is don't use it at all anyway.
Yep, the control layout of Strats is the ONLY thing that keeps me from owning one, I hate the volume pot position (if I ever want to do volume swells I'd rather do that with a pedal) and I despise how the pickup selector is positioned and slanted in a way that it is super easy for me to hit when I'm strumming. I know I can adjust my technique for a Strat but it just feels wrong to me. I like having that extra room for my arm to move like on a Tele for example, feels awesome.
I have been playing for 48 years and always thought the Tele was ugly. Just a few weeks ago, I played a Vintera II 50s Nocaster and fell in love with it, bought it immediately, fat U neck with 7.5” radius. I can’t put it down, it’s by far my favourite.
I picked up an American Vintage II 1963 Telecaster in transparent crimson - it is indeed amazing! The crimson comes in mahogany, which is an added plus in my opinion. I also have an American Original 1960s Strat in shell pink. It still takes the cake for the most comfortable neck I’ve ever played.
I'd recommend starting your country Telecaster education with Don Rich. A real '60s Telecaster into a Fender Twin, that's it. A complicated signal path with him would have been a knot in his cable. One good thing about him is his playing is easily accessible, you can pick out his licks and learn from him.
I've seen people doing metal with a tele, and I've been opening my mind to that possibility as well. I really want to be able to get a nice tele some day and do something like this. Craziest versatility of any guitar I've seen.
I bought a pre owned Baja Tele last year, and it is now my ‘go to’ guitar. The neck is wonderful and there is a bonus with this one thanks to the Fender custom shop guys creating a 4 position selector switch with the ‘S’ button.
I'm glad I'm not the only one who used to think Telecasters were just ugly country guitars. I changed my opinion pretty quickly once I got one though lol. I like the cabronita version I have with the soap bar pickups a little more than the OG style but both sound great.
Teles rule! I have a Baja 50s with the soft V neck. Even though I have a strat, a les paul and a epiphone dot (335), I almost always reach for the Tele. I could easily let go of the others, but that Tele is a keeper. Happy to have you on Team Tele.
I have several guitars but one of my favorites is my MIM Nashville model with 3 pickups, it plays great and has great versatility, can get the sound of a Strat without the clunkiness of a Strat. Tele's are great!
I’ve owned several T-style guitars but never an actual fender telecaster and loved them all. I’ve got several fenders but right now my only tele is a Squier bullet tele that I fully upgraded. I have a mini humbucker in the neck position right now. Turned a $129 guitar into something comparable if not better than a MIM tele.
I had the opportunity a lot of times to play a 52 Telecaster black guard through a vintage AC 30. Through an original Fender basement 4/10 but going through that AC 30 it was like a locomotive engine train come through your front door full speed. Triple pick up rolled off/ back the treble pot & play
Played a TeleMex in college in 80's....then got married, etc. I've have/had about 40 nice electrics in the last few decades....never bonded with Fenders as a grown-ass man.....until NOW. I need more Teles....I'm wearing out my cheap Squier CV50 with Lindy Fralins...it's that good. Got a FGN Illiad Tele, a USA G&L Tele..and about 20 other pro-grade guitars of various makes/models (lefty)....need to sell my Gibsons to fund a boutique amp and another American Tele. May even buy back a MexTele with upgrades I sold a pal a few years ago...he ain't playing it much..
I am a huge Strat fan all my ero play Strat or super Strat Body Holly, Budy Guy, Steve Ray Voghan, Keny Wayne Sheppard, Eddy Van Halen. Few weeks ago I was in a guitar shop and picking up a Tele whiteout any reason and this thing in my hands was magical everything was so much easier than my loved Strat.
Seeing John Frusciante play his vintage Telecaster really turned me on to the instrument for the first time after actually disliking them up until that point. I then bought a Squier Classic Vibe 60’s Custom Tele and never looked back. It’s my absolute #1 guitar.
I sold my Tele once I got a Jazzmaster, and I personally felt the Tele started feeling redundant since I already had a Strat and Les Paul. The Jazzmaster's middle pickup is just as good as the Tele's imo and the bridge has enough bite. The trem system on a Jazzmaster is so much fun especially since I'm in my shoegaze/indie phase. But the Tele would probably be my choice if I was very serious about only having 1 guitar. I enjoyed the small body shape and simplicity. I might get another one someday since I get inspired whenever John Frusciante plays his Tele. The Chris Shiflett Tele Deluxe would be amazing too.
Billy Squire plays a Tele. He's probably my favorite Telecaster player, with songs like Lonely Is the Night, The Stroke, In the Dark... just a whole bunch of hits. One thing that I urge you to do, if you get a chance, pick up a Jazzmaster. It will blow your mind. Don't let the name fool you, that's a rocking guitar.
My "tele" is a 1999 G&L ASAT Classic that I've had since 2012 - and it sounds fantastic through an AC30. It's my default recording guitar. Also - that shell pink Tele looks awesome.
started on a strat knockoff, 1st guitar, saved my entire life to afford a real gibson les paul, still own it, not fun to play, now play a modded american professional II tele, it's my #1 and #2 is an american pro II strat, the tele just does something nothing else does, and it's a jack of all trades, but all the things you mentioned I laughed because I've thought and said all those things myself and still do, it's not the prettiest guitar, it doesn't look the coolest, but dang it, it's just does it all. Great video and I'm glad I found your channel, subbed.
I don’t like how teles look either. When I built my own parts caster I went with a mounting ring for the neck pickup and got rid of the scratch plate. Gold hardware on a sky blue stained body and a maple neck. Love it.
I started out wanting to be a Strat guy because the guys I idolized played Strats. I loved the way Strats sounded and looked. But I never quite found one that felt good. I didn’t dislike the look of Teles but they were clearly my second choice. One day in Sam Ash I picked up a ‘52 reissue and that was it for me. It felt so comfortable, like it was made for me. There was nothing extraneous. It had everything I needed and nothing I didn’t. The sound was full, rich, and muscular, but also nuanced and articulate unlike some of the the Les Pauls and SGs that I also am fond of. There are certainly other Fender, Gretsch, and Gibson models that I love but none top my Telecasters. Leo got it right the first time.
I had my heart set on a stratocaster and I ended up walking out with a 50s reissue tele and it's been my main guitar ever since. I love strats, les Pauls, jazzmasters etc but that old tele just feels right and can sound like almost anything, it's simplicity is its biggest asset because you have to rely more on your technique to get certain sounds rather than having 6 knobs a phase switch etc Also if you're primarily a Strat guy just put a Strat pickup in the neck position and boom you've got the best of both worlds
I own 12 various guitars sg's , Lp , PRS , strats etc and was never aesthetically attracted to the Tele and too associated it with country UNTIL i decided to buy a MM Tele on a whim and at the beginning didn't play it much at all. Then one day I looked over at it and picked it up and since it has been one of my most favorite guitars. Something about it just really works and the notes fall into place unlike some of my other prettier guitars ??
I grew up (I’m 53) looking at & thinking of the Telecaster as ‘Country & Western’, dorky, not at all versatile, etc. I didn’t even think I’d want to touch a Tele. I was a Strat fan and a fan of most Gibson’s. Until on a goof I picked up and played a buddy’s Telecaster. I noodled on it for maybe 5 minutes… and the Tele did what it does to so many people… it got under my skin. So much so I decided to build a Tele during the lockdowns, and I ended up building my dream Tele. Every guitar is cool to someone I guess, but my baby… uhh, I mean my Tele, can just about do ANYthing. The only limitation is me. (Edit/Additional): The ONE thing I still criticize about the Tele, is the ‘ashtray’ bridge. I’ve banged up my right palm SO bad on them. I always end up going with a flat bridge.
Jonny Greenwood, James Burton, Julian Lage, some of my favorite players played on a Tele. I wanted to get a Telecaster for my first electric but there wasn't one at the store so I got a strat instead. I remember that Led Zeppelin's first album was done with Jimmy Page on a Telecaster and it still sounds super heavy.
I purchased a MiM strat a couple years ago and quickly returned it for another strat that was cheaper and on sale, but I hated the strat, the middle pick up was awkward for me to play near. So I returned that one as well. I got a tele MiM and it had some buzzing and I wasn’t really feeling that one either so another return. Then I said to myself I need to just spend a bit more money and get a pretty fair guitar so I got the American Professional II Tele and wow I was just impressed with everything about it, the feel, the 3 color burst, and when I plugged it in I was like wow ok, that’s what good pickups sound like, and I was hooked. I love my tele, I’m glad I returned so many others on the path to find it.
My favourite guitar is my Fender Baja Telecaster shell pink special edition custom shop design. At the time i brought her i was to buy the Fender American Professional ii Telecaster but i found the Baja be the greatest deal ever and the color was irresistible to not buy it . I look now back and i can't believe how desirable she is by other musicians and how much have increased in value
Tele is like wine ... It gets better with age ❤. I bought the acoustasonic Tele by fender cause I wanted versatility (so not a real Tele but still quite similar for the tones you can get out of it) and even if I love my strat and 335, I just keep coming back to it.
I've got a Fender American Performer Telecaster in Vintage White with a humbucker in the neck position and a single coil in the bridge position. That's my Keith Richards guitar. It's the only one of my guitars I keep tuned to Open G. Since I keep it tuned to Open G, I took off the bottom string, which would be D in Open G, but I just removed that string, which is what Keith does. So now, it's only got five strings and it's tuned to Open G. If you're going to keep one tuned to open G, try removing that bottom string. I've also got a Vox AC15C2, which is just an AC15, but it's got two 12" speakers instead of just one. It's the same as an AC30, except it's only 15 watts instead of 30 watts. AC30's are just too loud for my needs. So, anyway, you're a man after my own heart. Keep on jammin'! 😊
So when I started playing about 15 years ago I though a tele is just an ugly guitar shaped object. First guitar was a strat, followed by an SG and finally a Les Paul. I've owned over 100 guitars since then, all the big brands, all the dark horses, some guitars with a 5 figure pricetag, some sub 200 bucks. I tried all kinds of shapes and pickup configurations. I got my first tele about 3 years ago and instantly fell in love. Since then I have never been without a tele for more than a week. I lost my job a year ago and so I had to sell of a lot of guitars. It broke my heart to sell my Player Plus Nashville Tele. I only have 5 guitars left. An Ibanez Prestige with Floyd and HSH, an Ibanez Fanfret HH, a SG with 2x P90, a Gretsch with Bigsby and Filtertrons and finally a budget Tele. Jet JT300. It has incredibly huge value for the money and I play it every day. So if there's anybody out there not sure about Teles there are affordable options.
Dude, I HEAR YOU about the volume knob on a Strat. I primarily played acoustic and I always wanted a Strat when I was younger. I play pretty hard and let my hand fly across the strings when I'm strumming, and the first time I played a Strat I absolutely pummeled that volume knob. I picked up a Tele and LOVED the way it felt. I could hit it hard and not have to worry about messing with the knobs. Watch Springsteen absolutely wreck his Tele in concert and the thing holds up.
Joe Strummer and the Clash, not to mention Tele was on recordings of players who normally used different guitars as well (Jimmy Page, Jeff Beck, Mike Bloomfield, and way more!)
Im 36, been an acoustic player since i was a teenager. I only got into electric guitar a couple years ago. Since i like metal and hard rock, i just assumed i'd want a guitar with humbuckers, so thats what i got. Theres nothing wrong with it, i like it, it plays nice and sounds good. But i got a bit of money together and, almost on a whim, i bought a Squier Paranormal Offset Tele because i thought it looked cool. But holy hell... it quickly became my number 1 choice to play, even over my acoustic. I run it through an AC style amp, and that combo of amp and telecaster with a bit of overdrive is like magic.
I loved my Am Pro ii Telecaster…I did sell it and bought a Revstar with P90s in its place…I would not change my decision. That said I did love my Telecaster.
My father was a rockabily/country player back in the 60s. When he died in his retirement home in 2019, we found 14 telecasters in his room. Thank you, telecaster, for all the joy you brought to him.
That Should be thanks Leo Fender for the Telecaster.
not saying you should sell them, but i wonder how much they are worth
@@firdaus125 I’m a lefty so I couldn’t play them. I kept one for my daughter and sold the rest.
Thank dad for all the money teles brought you
That’s cool that he loved and played them. Maybe it’s an aging thing, I’m still playing all the time, and I’ll look at all my guitars, and the music I’ve written and wonder who will play them when it’s my turn to go hang out with Hendrix and SRV in Jesus’ jam room.
I love the Tele approach to versatility. Some guitars are made to sound like as many other guitars as possible, but the Tele just has a set of sounds all its own - and those sounds can be used for anything. It keeps you away from option paralysis while still giving you more than you could ask for.
Yes, they can be used for country to Hard Rock to true metal. Even surf bands you see a few using a Telecaster too. About the only genera of rock you do not see them use a Telecaster is in that Areana Rock/Hair Voltage Metal type scene where a Super Strat in the flat fret board radius like Ibanez, LTD/flat fret board radius type Les Paul guitar is the popular design due to the flat fretboard used for the speed they want to play at.
exactly. I have a MiM Baja with a bunch of interesting electronics but I still just use the basic tele stuff because it just slaps so hard
@@shaungreer3350 my brother got a bass 6 telecaster off Reverb and he loves the versatility of the instrument 🎸.
That's the best description I have heard. To me it's the variation from that powerful bridge pick up to the mellower and darker neck. I'm finding the middle position can almost pass for a Les Paul at times and that's my favorite position for covering Tool.
@@caseysmith544I think the lack of a Floyd Rose hurts it for the hair metal more than the neck profile. I have my tele set up pretty low and it's pretty flat. Only guitar I played that was faster was a Jackson Flying V with a Floyd Rose (got stolen, my wife bought it as a Christmas gift). I find I can get pinch harmonics and shred on it about as good as any other guitar I have played. The neck contours on an Ibanez certainly help make playing on the high frets easier and most teles don't have 24 frets. But for speed and tone, it can do hair metal, just no trem bar and usually just 21 frets.
6:34 - The thing about Telecasters is they have no “era”. They are timeless, genre-crossing, utilitarian machines. The original design seems to have been channeled from 1920’s *bauhaus* school, and belongs in the *MOMA* permanent collection. Even before getting into the almost limitless modification possibilities, the basic configuration gets a huge variety of sounds that, somehow, retains an identity. Pragmatic, yet soulful, the Telecaster is a work of Art that just… works. 👍 And I’ll never sell mine.
>> belongs in the MOMA permanent collection.
Hear, hear! I like that.
I agree absolutely everything you said. But he was talking about players having eras of particular guitars, not the guitars
@@thestuffmikedoes2309 Point taken. I didn’t mean to sound contradictory.
Daniel Ash,the guitarist of Bauhaus plays a Telecaster.
Yo Mike it's heartwarming to see you get better at guitar. The time you put into learning will pay back exponentially. I feel like the Nashville area will push anyone to expect more of themselves musically while staying somewhat humble. We all appreciate what you're doing here!
I'm 71 years old and have been playing guitar for 50+ years. Your journey through learning guitar is so reminiscent of my own (and I'm sure many other's) story. The way you tell of the excitement of owning your first electric guitar, to seeing your guitar heros in person takes me back and reminds me of why I love this cantankerous instrument so very much. Your videos and enthusiasm are wonderful. Rock on my young friend and may you never lose your musical way!
So good to hear that I wasn’t the only one as a young player that had a complete misconception of the tele. I wouldn’t even try one messing around in the music store. After about 18 years of playing, I played a telecaster for the first time, and I haven’t put it down since.
This is actually the norm these days. Can't get a youngster to even look at Telecasters most of the time. It took me years to realize that the only guitars I don't eventually sell are the T's.
Dude, Ben Rector is 100% one of the most underrated musicians in Nashville. I’ve listened to him for YEARS. Awesome video 🤘
I love the Tele. I wasn’t a fan of the look for a long time, but once I got one, it just felt like the guitar I was always looking for
I feel the same way and have yet to get one lol
One thing about modding a Telecaster: The first time I saw somebody who had one with the control plate reversed - the order from front to back is Volume, Tone, Pickup Selector -it made so much sense to me. it seemed like that’s what it should’ve been all along!
i actually did this with my first guitar, which was my tele. On the cover of Nirvanas first album, the secondary guitarist is rocking a tele with this mod. Hammering on a tele can often result in the pickup selector getting unintentionally moved. Reversing it allows you to strum as hard as you’d like.
@@skajwjejxAccidentally hitting the pickup selector on a Tele? You’re talking to a guy who grew up learning guitar on a Strat!
My very first electric was an Epiphone but after deciding that I was going to take guitar more seriously I picked up a Fender Player Plus Nashville it is my go to and an absolute work horse! Love it!
Just bought my first Tele (G&L asat) after having a strat and les paul for many years. For now, it's all I want to play
You got it right the first time.
As a young teen it was les Paul epiphone... Then I got a telecaster and never went back. 🤟🔥🔥🔥
Same as me! :)
@@lilleaton 🤟
Yup! Les Paul Special II was my first, then I bought a MIM Telecaster and fell in love. Selling that guitar is a big regret of mine.
To each their own, but you shouldn’t restrict yourself like that. LPs are great, too, and so are Strats and semis-hollows and Vs etc. It’s a bit like saying im just a Brand A car guy, I’d never drive a car from Brand B and therefore totally missing out on all the other great cars out there.
LITERALLY MYSELF AS WELL.
I love your way of storytelling and your presence in your videos. Rapturous and casual and most importantly you make it about the music.
I went down the same rabbit hole. I was a Strat guy. Had no clue what a Tele was or why I would want one. I discovered it the weirdest way possible. I saw a youtuber playing a Cheryl Crow cover on a John 5 Tele. Loved the look, loved the sound so I found one. Not your standard Tele by any means. But it sorta opened that door.
Then I found my Baja. The Baja Tele is about as close to a Mexican Made custom shop that you can find. Versatile as all heck. Fun to play and classic sounding....that opened the floodgates. I went from Strat guy to Tele guy really fast. I will play my Strat and a lot of various guitars, but if I am struggling and feeling like I just want that simple rock or country sound...right to the Tele. Teles seem to make everything right in the world :)
Damn fine is the Baja Telecaster, everything you could ask for and more
John 5 is an awesome Telecaster player. The guy is downright impressive.
It’s like your favorite pyjamas. :)
@@Soldano999 Of all the Tele players, I feel he is the least interesting and has a sloppy tone which I love to hate. His guitars are only Tele-shaped.
Mike you are a blast. You put a lot of enthusiasm which is contagious. How many people are grabbing their tele's while watching this video.
Came for guitar reviews, stayed for awesome storytelling
@7:50 There is a solution for this, reverse the control plate so the pickup switch is to the back... if you also reverse to volume & tone pots, you can do volume swells easier and don't worry about hitting it anymore!
Not too long ago, maybe 3 or 4 months or so, I was at my towns festival and they obviously had some live bands playing and they were all ok until this group of dudes in suits and a lady came out right at the very end of the night and their lead player had white Tele with a black pick guard (not exactly sure what type but it was Fender) and wow, his tone was awesome, his playing was awesome, he was awesome. He proved single handedly how awesome a Tele is with one performance, dude was improvising a million different solos and styles. After the festival I went and finish the night at the local pub and the same band was there and had a nice convo with them. That guy taught me three things that night, 1; I need practice. 2; I need a Tele, and 3; Tele players are humble and will humble you.
I was a strat guy and then my instructor at the time (Jim Campilongo!) turn me onto tellys. Turn me onto Roy Buchanan that let me down the road to players like Cornell, Dupree, Roy Buchanan, and a bunch of others. At one time I had four telecasters. I’m down to two and I play a Strat about the same amount as I do my telly. My favorite telly is my Jason. Isabell artist model. I have no use for my other telecaster right now! The Isabell artist model has everything I need in a telecaster. It’s based on a late 50s custom.
Holy crap!
Jim Campilongo was your instructor?
WOW!
Man, when you pulled out that Vox I knew exactly where you were headed. My favorite combination is my Tele and AC-15. Tele's are the perfect weapon. Punk players have used em for decades and for good reason.
It’s interesting the way a musical instrument can mean different thing to so many people when i started playing a guitar i had no knowledge of brands or styles i just new i loved the sound of a clean guitar when i was 7 years old my parents billeted me out to friends while they packed up our lives in Norway to come to Australia while i was there they played a lot of country music as i discovered years later, time passed and in my late teens i started to learn to play guitar by the time i was thirty I discovered fender guitars first a strat and then a tele and now I’m 62 and i have 5 teles 3 strats 2 prs’s 2 gibsons one taylor and a Martin and still in love with the sound of a tele above all others trust me young man once a tele gets under your skin your hooked for life just enjoy the ride great segment.
I love my strats but have been thinking about picking up a Tele at some point. Love those things!
Just got my first Tele, a Squier Contemporary RH in Pearl White. Heard there’s a real thing where guitar players don’t like teles… until one day they do.
Took me 20 years. Turns out it just took the right tele.
Your right Mike. got humbucker Tele, it goes toe to toe with my les Paul when playing blues.
I'm a Strat fan, but you're so right about the volume knob, lol. I'm always accidentally turning the volume down. Teles absolutely have it in a better spot. I've never played a Tele, but you're selling me on them with your points.
I've replaced my volume pots with high friction pots. You can't accidentally adjust those lol
@@justaguy2365 Good idea!
I have sold most of my other guitars...I kept the tele's! there's just something about them. I too thought they were ugly as hell until I actually progressed as a player and saw the actual beauty in them. The tone(s), realiablity, Comfort (subjectivly speaking) and functionality are unmatched in my opinion
I’ve always thought they looked cool. But not at the start. It progressed from something that looks nice to one of my favorite guitar shapes. And they sound cool. Not for what I play but if I were to do some funky whatnot a tele would be my first pick.
Telecasters are the swiss army knives of guitars. They are so versatile! And they are the best looking guitar in my opinion.
Own an 🇺🇸 strat ... looking for something new for sound. I was looking at the Mex black telecaster to modify. While I was waiting for the Mex telecaster ( I have checked out a few) , I asked the guy if they had a professional 2 telecaster. And he came out with a Miami Blue and I like the color. Then I held it in my hands ... I knew that this was my guitar ( it fits my hands so well... great neck).
When I began my guitar journey, I was all about Strats because I thought they were sexier and more versatile than Teles. Then I grew up and realized that the Telecaster was an extremely versatile guitar and the sound of American music these past 70 years. A Tele and a great 335 will cover most of the bases. Subscribed. 😺👍
My late Grandmother took me to a Brad Paisley concert when i was 14 during his Wheelhouse tour. I had never listened to him at all until that day and i was instantly hooked. His influence to this day is why I was gifted a telecaster on my 18th birthday and its my favorite guitar i own dispite it being an older MIM model. Brads playing is some of the best and i cant wait until i can scratch up the money to get a G or B bender tele.
Tried so many over the past 30-40 years. Now older and have only three guitars. Two Teles (one headless and one Reverend Blucifer) & one wonderful sunburst USA Strat. This is enuf. Thank you MC.
Same journey, I had a Strat because.. Hendrix. That got stolen and I eventually got a Tele and absolutely love it. It just sounds like a "record" on everything.
The reason the Tele is so versatile is due to how centered the bridge is to the strap pins and thigh cut (Strat to the right, LP to the left, SG/Explorer way to the left) and the increased distance to the control knobs (Tele controls run where the Strat's first tone knob is mounted, even EVH pushed the Strat volume back closer to a Tele volume position). Bill Kirchen shows how the Tele can play everything, every artist, every guitar: th-cam.com/video/8_FK6o8RPSQ/w-d-xo.html ... My favorite auto-mods to any Tele I'll play regularly is rotating the control plate like Kirchen (V-T-Switch to the rear) and installing a 4-way switch to get a stealth Les Paul Junior Humbucker out of that Tele.
Have a 94 American tele. Had my luthier pull the neck pickup and replace it with a humbucker. Sounds amazing and plays great. Never getting rid of it.
I've got a 1998 American Standard Tele that I have upgraded the pickups and also installed a 4-way switch so I get both pickups together in series. Very versatile guitar good for country, rock, blues & even jazz. It's not my #1 but I have no plan to get rid of it either.
I have tried quite a few telecasters, but never bought one! Danny Gatton is a country guitarist you would like!
I like to build custom guitars from time to time and I built a left hand Nashville telecaster. Jimmy Page played his telecaster for the solo on Stairway.
And in the first two Zep records!
I bought a 20th Anniversary '68 in '88...loved that guitar. Madly sold it 8 years ago and have been slapping myself ever since.
I have a Nash E-52 (their take on a blackguard Esquire). For being a single pickup guitar, it is incredibly versatile and I am able to use it on any electric endeavor and not compromise.
Jimmy Page used a tele to record the first 2 Zep albums. Love teles, they can do anything.
Love my am pro 2 tele, deep c neck fits my hand perfectly, great comparison on the tele mike
You summed it all up so well, some great points here…I converted to Telecasters when I wanted to be different to the countless Stratocaster players around me when growing up and in doing that, I ended up finding the simple yet amazingly versatile world of telecasters!
Thanks for this, Mike--terrific. I have a '52 Tele that I bought 40 years ago and have played and played. I can't get enough of its sound. There's no way in the world that I'll ever--EVER--sell it. They'll have to pry it oit of my cod dead hands.
We should maybe hang out sometime.... and talk about updating your will. 😉
My dad been playing guitar since the 70s and always been a strat or les Paul guy. He got an itch for a Tele somehow back in the early 2000s and I don’t ever see him play anything else. He has an 81 les Paul custom and American player strat but the tele is IT for him. Also through his Vox AC130. Thanks for the cool videos, slowly getting me back into my own personal collection.
I have been an Ibanez RG style user/fan for a over couple of decades. Like you at first I thought this is the ugliest guitar. But when I bought my first tele, a couple months ago, I fell in love with it. It felt like this is what I’m looking for a long time.
True - I have sold all of my guitars this year, all except for my MIM Telecaster Deluxe that I bought new in 2004. I love that guitar, and i'll keep it til I die.
LOVE Nashville ! I live in Athens, GA and we have produced So Many good music artist. i.e. REM and B-52's. I've spent a lot of time in Nashville visiting my friends that I used to jam with.. Also, I still have my very old Telecaster.. And it still sounds great !
My first "good" guitar is a 2004 American Standard Telecaster. I loved to palm mute a lot of delay driven riffs and it just feels so comfortable. Something I always have trouble doing on a Stratocaster. Its a workhorse guitar that feels like an in between a Les Paul and Stratocaster. I've wanted a 60's rosewood fretboard but I dont think ill ever need another telecaster.
Guitars, Cadillacs, Hillbilly music 🎶 Only Thang that keeps me hanging on 🎵 Dwight Yoakum my favorite.
Telecaster and an AC15 is the best sound ever
You talked me into it. I'm going Tele shopping. For years and years, I have been a Strat guy (kinda - sorta), but I always have to modify my Strats, or build my own, and move the volume control out of the way. I noticed that you mentioned having trouble with the volume control as well. Not so with a Tele. It seems like Strats and Telecasters should sound similar, but they don't. It's more than just the pickups. It's a combination of everything. I think I'm gonna have to get me another Telecaster.
I love the placement of the volume on a Strat, very easy to get to quickly, and although I love Teles more than anything else, I usually end up flipping the control panel around so that the knobs are closer. Just depends on how active you are with the volume. Usually the players I've met that hate where the Strat volume is don't use it at all anyway.
Yep, the control layout of Strats is the ONLY thing that keeps me from owning one, I hate the volume pot position (if I ever want to do volume swells I'd rather do that with a pedal) and I despise how the pickup selector is positioned and slanted in a way that it is super easy for me to hit when I'm strumming.
I know I can adjust my technique for a Strat but it just feels wrong to me. I like having that extra room for my arm to move like on a Tele for example, feels awesome.
I have been playing for 48 years and always thought the Tele was ugly. Just a few weeks ago, I played a Vintera II 50s Nocaster and fell in love with it, bought it immediately, fat U neck with 7.5” radius. I can’t put it down, it’s by far my favourite.
I picked up an American Vintage II 1963 Telecaster in transparent crimson - it is indeed amazing! The crimson comes in mahogany, which is an added plus in my opinion.
I also have an American Original 1960s Strat in shell pink. It still takes the cake for the most comfortable neck I’ve ever played.
I'd recommend starting your country Telecaster education with Don Rich. A real '60s Telecaster into a Fender Twin, that's it. A complicated signal path with him would have been a knot in his cable. One good thing about him is his playing is easily accessible, you can pick out his licks and learn from him.
I've seen people doing metal with a tele, and I've been opening my mind to that possibility as well. I really want to be able to get a nice tele some day and do something like this. Craziest versatility of any guitar I've seen.
I bought a pre owned Baja Tele last year, and it is now my ‘go to’ guitar. The neck is wonderful and there is a bonus with this one thanks to the Fender custom shop guys creating a 4 position selector switch with the ‘S’ button.
Telecaster is life. I will never get rid of my Teles. Absolute perfection of the guitar!
I learnt on a Mexican tele and loved it. I sold it but I picked one up the other day and really want one again. I like the shape the feel and the tone
I'm glad I'm not the only one who used to think Telecasters were just ugly country guitars. I changed my opinion pretty quickly once I got one though lol. I like the cabronita version I have with the soap bar pickups a little more than the OG style but both sound great.
Teles rule! I have a Baja 50s with the soft V neck. Even though I have a strat, a les paul and a epiphone dot (335), I almost always reach for the Tele. I could easily let go of the others, but that Tele is a keeper. Happy to have you on Team Tele.
I have several guitars but one of my favorites is my MIM Nashville model with 3 pickups, it plays great and has great versatility, can get the sound of a Strat without the clunkiness of a Strat. Tele's are great!
I’ve owned several T-style guitars but never an actual fender telecaster and loved them all. I’ve got several fenders but right now my only tele is a Squier bullet tele that I fully upgraded. I have a mini humbucker in the neck position right now. Turned a $129 guitar into something comparable if not better than a MIM tele.
I have 7 Teles. A MIM Thinline, 2 Squiers, 3 partscasters, plus a 12-string partscaster.
They’re all sweet, because you can so easily customize them.
I had the opportunity a lot of times to play a 52 Telecaster black guard through a vintage AC 30. Through an original Fender basement 4/10 but going through that AC 30 it was like a locomotive engine train come through your front door full speed. Triple pick up rolled off/ back the treble pot & play
Played a TeleMex in college in 80's....then got married, etc. I've have/had about 40 nice electrics in the last few decades....never bonded with Fenders as a grown-ass man.....until NOW. I need more Teles....I'm wearing out my cheap Squier CV50 with Lindy Fralins...it's that good. Got a FGN Illiad Tele, a USA G&L Tele..and about 20 other pro-grade guitars of various makes/models (lefty)....need to sell my Gibsons to fund a boutique amp and another American Tele. May even buy back a MexTele with upgrades I sold a pal a few years ago...he ain't playing it much..
I am a huge Strat fan all my ero play Strat or super Strat Body Holly, Budy Guy, Steve Ray Voghan, Keny Wayne Sheppard, Eddy Van Halen. Few weeks ago I was in a guitar shop and picking up a Tele whiteout any reason and this thing in my hands was magical everything was so much easier than my loved Strat.
what model of tele was it ?
Seeing John Frusciante play his vintage Telecaster really turned me on to the instrument for the first time after actually disliking them up until that point.
I then bought a Squier Classic Vibe 60’s Custom Tele and never looked back. It’s my absolute #1 guitar.
I sold my Tele once I got a Jazzmaster, and I personally felt the Tele started feeling redundant since I already had a Strat and Les Paul. The Jazzmaster's middle pickup is just as good as the Tele's imo and the bridge has enough bite. The trem system on a Jazzmaster is so much fun especially since I'm in my shoegaze/indie phase.
But the Tele would probably be my choice if I was very serious about only having 1 guitar. I enjoyed the small body shape and simplicity. I might get another one someday since I get inspired whenever John Frusciante plays his Tele. The Chris Shiflett Tele Deluxe would be amazing too.
Jazzmasters are awesome. That, and an LP covers so much ground.
@@blastofo Agreed! Those would probably be my choice if I could only choose 1 single coil and 1 humbucker guitar.
Billy Squire plays a Tele. He's probably my favorite Telecaster player, with songs like Lonely Is the Night, The Stroke, In the Dark... just a whole bunch of hits. One thing that I urge you to do, if you get a chance, pick up a Jazzmaster. It will blow your mind. Don't let the name fool you, that's a rocking guitar.
My "tele" is a 1999 G&L ASAT Classic that I've had since 2012 - and it sounds fantastic through an AC30. It's my default recording guitar.
Also - that shell pink Tele looks awesome.
This is the first video of yours I've seen. Just wanted to say that I really enjoy your storytelling. Great work.
Hello Mike! Thanks for the video it is great.
I actually purchased few weeks ago Telecaster 2013 50’s reissue made in Japan and it is a great guitar!
I just got done playing along to The Clash, The Ramones and some 2 Tone Ska with my av2 63 tele. It does it all and sounds and looks good doing it.
started on a strat knockoff, 1st guitar, saved my entire life to afford a real gibson les paul, still own it, not fun to play, now play a modded american professional II tele, it's my #1 and #2 is an american pro II strat, the tele just does something nothing else does, and it's a jack of all trades, but all the things you mentioned I laughed because I've thought and said all those things myself and still do, it's not the prettiest guitar, it doesn't look the coolest, but dang it, it's just does it all. Great video and I'm glad I found your channel, subbed.
Love your videos bro! I tune in for the guitars, and stay for the convos and stories haha.
I have a Squier Standard Telly that I got five years ago for $150 used. Not a scratch on it, when I bought it. I think it's all I need.
You nailed it--Teles are about as versatile as it gets. I've got 3 G&L American teles with different pickup configurations. They can do it all.
G'day Mike, I'm Mike from Australia! I absolutely love your videos mate!
Cheers
I don’t like how teles look either. When I built my own parts caster I went with a mounting ring for the neck pickup and got rid of the scratch plate. Gold hardware on a sky blue stained body and a maple neck. Love it.
I started out wanting to be a Strat guy because the guys I idolized played Strats. I loved the way Strats sounded and looked. But I never quite found one that felt good. I didn’t dislike the look of Teles but they were clearly my second choice. One day in Sam Ash I picked up a ‘52 reissue and that was it for me. It felt so comfortable, like it was made for me. There was nothing extraneous. It had everything I needed and nothing I didn’t. The sound was full, rich, and muscular, but also nuanced and articulate unlike some of the the Les Pauls and SGs that I also am fond of. There are certainly other Fender, Gretsch, and Gibson models that I love but none top my Telecasters. Leo got it right the first time.
Same here. But that Strat neck tone can't be beat! I've thought about putting a Strat pup in the neck position on a Tele!
I bought an American Pro in 2020. By far the best guitar ive ever played
Ben Rector makes songwriting and performing so effortless. Glad you got to see him!
I had my heart set on a stratocaster and I ended up walking out with a 50s reissue tele and it's been my main guitar ever since. I love strats, les Pauls, jazzmasters etc but that old tele just feels right and can sound like almost anything, it's simplicity is its biggest asset because you have to rely more on your technique to get certain sounds rather than having 6 knobs a phase switch etc
Also if you're primarily a Strat guy just put a Strat pickup in the neck position and boom you've got the best of both worlds
I own 12 various guitars sg's , Lp , PRS , strats etc and was never aesthetically attracted to the Tele and too associated it with country UNTIL i decided to buy a MM Tele on a whim and at the beginning didn't play it much at all. Then one day I looked over at it and picked it up and since it has been one of my most favorite guitars. Something about it just really works and the notes fall into place unlike some of my other prettier guitars ??
I grew up (I’m 53) looking at & thinking of the Telecaster as ‘Country & Western’, dorky, not at all versatile, etc. I didn’t even think I’d want to touch a Tele. I was a Strat fan and a fan of most Gibson’s.
Until on a goof I picked up and played a buddy’s Telecaster. I noodled on it for maybe 5 minutes… and the Tele did what it does to so many people… it got under my skin. So much so I decided to build a Tele during the lockdowns, and I ended up building my dream Tele. Every guitar is cool to someone I guess, but my baby… uhh, I mean my Tele, can just about do ANYthing. The only limitation is me.
(Edit/Additional): The ONE thing I still criticize about the Tele, is the ‘ashtray’ bridge. I’ve banged up my right palm SO bad on them. I always end up going with a flat bridge.
After 50 years, of Strats, and Les Pauls, I finally bought my first Tele yesterday. I absolutely love it.
i totally agree i thought the same about telecasters until i recently got one in a trade to sell but....i fell in love with it
Jonny Greenwood, James Burton, Julian Lage, some of my favorite players played on a Tele. I wanted to get a Telecaster for my first electric but there wasn't one at the store so I got a strat instead. I remember that Led Zeppelin's first album was done with Jimmy Page on a Telecaster and it still sounds super heavy.
Hell yeah! What a great list of interesting tele players.
Don't forget Bill Frisell and Danny Gatton, as well as early Jeff Beck.
@@yargnad ahh how could I forget Gatton! He might really be the greatest ever guitar player
I purchased a MiM strat a couple years ago and quickly returned it for another strat that was cheaper and on sale, but I hated the strat, the middle pick up was awkward for me to play near. So I returned that one as well. I got a tele MiM and it had some buzzing and I wasn’t really feeling that one either so another return. Then I said to myself I need to just spend a bit more money and get a pretty fair guitar so I got the American Professional II Tele and wow I was just impressed with everything about it, the feel, the 3 color burst, and when I plugged it in I was like wow ok, that’s what good pickups sound like, and I was hooked. I love my tele, I’m glad I returned so many others on the path to find it.
My favourite guitar is my Fender Baja Telecaster shell pink special edition custom shop design. At the time i brought her i was to buy the Fender American Professional ii Telecaster but i found the Baja be the greatest deal ever and the color was irresistible to not buy it . I look now back and i can't believe how desirable she is by other musicians and how much have increased in value
I will buy almost anything in shell pink or burgundy mist metallic.
Sold my telecaster. Had a player Strat and player Nashville Deluxe Tele for about a year. Just gravitated towards the Strat every time I went to play.
I got myself a tele, it has become my most used guitar. It is versatile and sounds killer
Love my fat-neck CS Tele with twisted Tele neck pickup and broadcaster bridge pickup. The Nash version with Lollar pickups looks inviting as well.
Tele is like wine ... It gets better with age ❤. I bought the acoustasonic Tele by fender cause I wanted versatility (so not a real Tele but still quite similar for the tones you can get out of it) and even if I love my strat and 335, I just keep coming back to it.
I've got a Fender American Performer Telecaster in Vintage White with a humbucker in the neck position and a single coil in the bridge position. That's my Keith Richards guitar. It's the only one of my guitars I keep tuned to Open G. Since I keep it tuned to Open G, I took off the bottom string, which would be D in Open G, but I just removed that string, which is what Keith does. So now, it's only got five strings and it's tuned to Open G. If you're going to keep one tuned to open G, try removing that bottom string. I've also got a Vox AC15C2, which is just an AC15, but it's got two 12" speakers instead of just one. It's the same as an AC30, except it's only 15 watts instead of 30 watts. AC30's are just too loud for my needs. So, anyway, you're a man after my own heart. Keep on jammin'! 😊
So when I started playing about 15 years ago I though a tele is just an ugly guitar shaped object. First guitar was a strat, followed by an SG and finally a Les Paul. I've owned over 100 guitars since then, all the big brands, all the dark horses, some guitars with a 5 figure pricetag, some sub 200 bucks. I tried all kinds of shapes and pickup configurations. I got my first tele about 3 years ago and instantly fell in love. Since then I have never been without a tele for more than a week. I lost my job a year ago and so I had to sell of a lot of guitars. It broke my heart to sell my Player Plus Nashville Tele. I only have 5 guitars left. An Ibanez Prestige with Floyd and HSH, an Ibanez Fanfret HH, a SG with 2x P90, a Gretsch with Bigsby and Filtertrons and finally a budget Tele. Jet JT300. It has incredibly huge value for the money and I play it every day. So if there's anybody out there not sure about Teles there are affordable options.
Dude, I HEAR YOU about the volume knob on a Strat. I primarily played acoustic and I always wanted a Strat when I was younger. I play pretty hard and let my hand fly across the strings when I'm strumming, and the first time I played a Strat I absolutely pummeled that volume knob. I picked up a Tele and LOVED the way it felt. I could hit it hard and not have to worry about messing with the knobs. Watch Springsteen absolutely wreck his Tele in concert and the thing holds up.
Joe Strummer and the Clash, not to mention Tele was on recordings of players who normally used different guitars as well (Jimmy Page, Jeff Beck, Mike Bloomfield, and way more!)
I agree with you Sir.... now I am going to have to add one to the collection...
Im 36, been an acoustic player since i was a teenager. I only got into electric guitar a couple years ago. Since i like metal and hard rock, i just assumed i'd want a guitar with humbuckers, so thats what i got. Theres nothing wrong with it, i like it, it plays nice and sounds good. But i got a bit of money together and, almost on a whim, i bought a Squier Paranormal Offset Tele because i thought it looked cool. But holy hell... it quickly became my number 1 choice to play, even over my acoustic. I run it through an AC style amp, and that combo of amp and telecaster with a bit of overdrive is like magic.
Made this comment before i watched the video. Lmao @ mike pulling out the Vox and talking about the glassy tone 😅
I loved my Am Pro ii Telecaster…I did sell it and bought a Revstar with P90s in its place…I would not change my decision. That said I did love my Telecaster.