For this week I had some nice borrowed guitars around which made me record a short youtube video comparing them with some of mine, all played over the same amp with the same setting – only the volume knob was adjusted for each. This was rather a spontaneous session recorded with the camcorder mic. I tried to play both some similar licks on different guitars and different licks that sound nice on the particular guitar.
The guitars were:
1 – Part-o-caster
This guitar is basically a copy of Mark’s Fender which he used on that early Dire Straits stuff. It is not too accurate, wrong body wood, one-piece maple neck instead of laminated maple fingerboard etc. but it sounds nice in most situations. In the neck position it has a DiMarzio FS-1, in the middle position an old vintage Strat pick-up. One of the tone potis was replaced with a rotary switch that allows all kinds of pick-up combinations, even fat humbucker-like sounds.
2 – 1974 Gibson Les Paul Custom
70ies Gibson are surely not that much sough-after but this one is a nice guitar. It is tobacco sunburstwhich resembles a faded sunburst of those 50ies Paulas. Originally the plastic parts were black but they were replaced with white ones to look more like an ’58 Les Paul.
3 – 1983 Squier Stratocaster
These very first Squiers were really great, almost all of them sound cool. I put one of my loaded Schecter-style pickguards on it that allow a total of 27 sound combinations from the three tapped pick-ups.
4 – 2006 Suhr MK-1
This guitar looks and plays like a dream – and it sounds fantastic, too. The top is one of the fanciest I have ever seen, the wood looks almost three dimensional. Unfortunately it is here only for a couple of days, a guitar you can easily fall in love with.
5 – Fender Stratocaster
What to say about this one? The neck pick-up is not original (a FS-1), bare wood finish, needs to be refinished but it looks cool as it is, too.
6 – 68 Fender Telecaster
The late 60ies Telecasters are really cool, so is this one. The combination of the ash body with the maple cap neck sounds really bright, but alwasy war at the same time. The neck pick-up is a Japanese copy, the owner still has the original pick-up that needs to be rewound.
7 – 77 Greco Super Sounds
Greco guitars are better known under tha Ibanez label. I think the domestic guitars were called Greco, the export guitars Ibanez. It sounds amazing – especially for its price! The gold anodized metal pickguard is not original.
Here you can vote for which one sounds best to you. You will see the results so far after voting.
7 thoughts on “Comparing different guitars”
These all sounds pretty nice. I’m partial to Suhr and the vintage strat. I wouldn’t give up that Suhr, if I were you 🙂
I have to say that I am a little disappointed about Suhr´s sound. I think that Suhr sounds best with slight overdrive. Partocaster with FS-1 is great and also your Schecter copy pickguard strat. And fantastic playing touch!
Ingo is it possible marks maple strat to have machine wound pickups? The greenish guard with the fs-1 from the ’61 normally will be handwound, but the other white pickguard like on the communique album can’t be like e.g. 50s wound by a machine? Eg on WDYTYG or on once upon a time in the west(after the 1st half) can clearly hear that there was a middle + neck combination with vintage output pickups and not fs1 like.
That era back then the pickups done by a machine. (70s+) I suppose they weren’t wound by hand the pickups on Marks maple strat. Ingo?
ingo i have a question for you… wich frets used mark knopfler on his partocaster?
The neck pick-up is a Japanese copy, the owner still has the original pick-up that needs to be rewound.