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Tele = Versatility

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Tone2TheBone

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Last night I played the Tele for 2 hours straight. Played everything I knew how to play from Country, Blues, Rock and Metal. I don't know any Jazz but I'm sure it can be done. :) Anywho I think you can pretty much nail about any tone you want using a Tele. Country, Blues and Rock are kinda a moot point but Metal and Jazz? Well for metal I simply put the Bad Monkey in front of the already overdriven channel on my amp and add the maximum amount of low tone and rolled back the tone knob on the guitar about halfway, eliminating the bright highs off the bridge pup and guess what...instant 'humbucker' tones. Ballsy and ready to slay. A good 'humbucker' simulation once the tone knob is rolled back halfway. Even though I don't play much metal like I used to in the '80s I was easily convinced of some tasty metal tones the Tele was producing with the way I had it set up on the pedal and amp. If I wanted to go back to Blues or Country all I had to do was turn the pedal off and there I was. Just turned the tone knob back up and adjusted the guitar volume again. And I believe that the Tele produces very round warm yet airy Jazz like tones off the neck with the tone knob rolled off completely.

Since this is my first ever Telecaster I felt compelled to write about this experience. I'm sure many of you already know how versatile a Tele really is. I've come to the light!
 
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tone2thebone said:
Last night I played the Tele for 2 hours straight. Played everything I knew how to play from Country, Blues, Rock and Metal. I don't know any Jazz but I'm sure it can be done. :) Anywho I think you can pretty much nail about any tone you want using a Tele. Country, Blues and Rock are kinda a moot point but Metal and Jazz? Well for metal I simply put the Bad Monkey in front of the already overdriven channel on my amp and add the maximum amount of low tone and rolled back the tone knob on the guitar about halfway, eliminating the bright highs off the bridge pup and guess what...instant 'humbucker' tones. Ballsy and ready to slay. A good 'humbucker' simulation once the tone knob is rolled back halfway. Even though I don't play much metal like I used to in the '80s I was easily convinced of some tasty metal tones the Tele was producing with the way I had it set up on the pedal and amp. If I wanted to go back to Blues or Country all I had to do was turn the pedal off and there I was. Just turned the tone knob back up and adjusted the guitar volume again. And I believe that the Tele produces very round warm yet airy Jazz like tones off the neck with the tone knob rolled off completely.

Since this is my first ever Telecaster I felt compelled to write about this experience. I'm sure many of you already know how versatile a Tele really is. I've come to the light!

I had a Fender FMT tele that had two humbuckers with a coil tap. Great guitar. I'm so stuck on strats though I hardly played it though and gave it to my brother. Very versatile and could deliver on everything from great cleans to high gain leads.
 
My Tele is my main ax. I practice with it everyday and play it out on Wensday nights. I love the two humbuckers. With the bridge one higher than the neck pup, I can get close to the tele sound, just a little deeper than the single coil Tele. It's just missing that ash tray twang.
 
Fender's Deluxe Tele is still one my favourite guitar of all time, but also the vintage '52 is a heavenly instrument!

If your Tele is set up correctly, you won't miss anything.
 
Good responses guys. Some of you have humbucker equiped Teles which is great. I initially meant stock pickup configuration for versatility...obviously with a humbuckered Tele you've got a different animal. Nevertheless I think everyone should have at least one Telecaster in their collection. If they don't they're missing out. :) Seriously.
 
tone2thebone said:
I initially meant stock pickup configuration for versatility...obviously with a humbuckered Tele you've got a different animal.
true....when i think tele i think single-coil...but humbucker options are interesting...

ww
 
The question is, is a dual humbucker tele still a tele? I have tried one of the Squier telecasters with dual humbuckers but I dont think it has that trademark tele tone anymore. Still very good guitars though.
 
I agree. I think that any guitar shaped like a Tele but with a humbucker would/should not be considered a Telecaster simply because the original model had/has single coil pickups of specific intention and design. When I say go get an original Tele and all your dreams will come true I truly mean this! But with single coils please! :)
 
TS808 said:
I had a Fender FMT tele that had two humbuckers with a coil tap. Great guitar. I'm so stuck on strats though I hardly played it though and gave it to my brother. Very versatile and could deliver on everything from great cleans to high gain leads.

I have this beast...LOVE IT. And with it being all mahogany (with maple top), set neck, and the two humbuckers, I really have a hard time getting true tele tone. With the coil tap engaged I can get pretty close though when I use the bridge pickup or the bridge and neck. I can almost get sort of straty when I use the neck. And when the humbuckers are used, nice crunch. Very versatile guitar. Sort of like the perfect blend between a les paul and a tele. And the fretboard is awesome. Like a 16 inch radius or something. Almost flat it seems, if you're into that sort of thing. It's hard for me to put this guitar down. I strongly advise everyone to go get one. :D
 
Rabies said:
I have this beast...LOVE IT. And with it being all mahogany (with maple top), set neck, and the two humbuckers, I really have a hard time getting true tele tone. With the coil tap engaged I can get pretty close though when I use the bridge pickup or the bridge and neck.


Rabies I'm glad you mentioned this cause I was expecting it to come up. I think that a humbucker on a Tele with the ability to split the coil still would not sound exactly like an original Tele. As you said...the "true Tele tone". Still as you also mentioned it does have it's own versatility.
 
Ok, I said close. That is why I have the bridge pup raised close to the strings. I produces the trebly tone, but not the twang.

Jimi75 - I never had the Tele Deluxe set up by a pro. Maybe I should. Something is not right. When the notes begin to fade away, they take on a sour tone to them. Then they completely fade away. I try to mute the strings before this happens to advoid it from be heard.
 
Tim said:
Ok, I said close. That is why I have the bridge pup raised close to the strings. I produces the trebly tone, but not the twang.

Jimi75 - I never had the Tele Deluxe set up by a pro. Maybe I should. Something is not right. When the notes begin to fade away, they take on a sour tone to them. Then they completely fade away. I try to mute the strings before this happens to advoid it from be heard.

Maybe the pup is TOO close to the strings...causing arrest.
 
Its my neck pup and it is sitting a the recommended 4/64 inch. I am wondering it the higher capacitor that I installed is having an effect. One would think not. But I do not remembering the pup doing this before I installed new pots and caps. Hmmm????
 
My MIM Tele has a GFS Fat Alnico on the neck and a GFS Hot TC Alnico on the bridge. I was looking for hotter output while still keeping the Tele sound. Let me tell you that I hit jackpot!

With my Tele I get the classic twang with...spheres... ;), getting overdrive easier, but if I wanna keep it clean I just roll back the volume. The neck pickup is very deep, round, quite different from the bridge, and with this one I can get easily into humbucker territory. Both pups on land me into Strat territory, not sounding exactly like one, but close enough...

Yeah, Teles are very versatile. :D
 
Hey tone, glad to see you came to light with the tele.

I love my squier custom tele. Here is my thread on the mods I did to it, including coil splitting. I bought the guitar with versatility in mind all along. It gets a great variety of sounds with the coil splits. After having played some standard teles I must say that mine with the coils split does not sound quite like a tele, although it does come close. It gets some great blues tones throughout, and some nice rock sounds with humbuckers.

Kerc, I also used GFS pups in my tele, and they are great. the FAT PAF's are very fat, and I think that may cause the pups to sound a bit fuller and rounder, leading them away from the twang. But the versatility and uniquness are what I was going for, and I couldn't be more satisfied.
 
tone2thebone said:
Good responses guys. Some of you have humbucker equiped Teles which is great. I initially meant stock pickup configuration for versatility...obviously with a humbuckered Tele you've got a different animal. Nevertheless I think everyone should have at least one Telecaster in their collection. If they don't they're missing out. :) Seriously.

All the Teles I've had, whatever the configuration, have been versatile. Of those, though, this one is the most versatile:

TexMesSmaller.jpg


It's got coil-splitting on the neckbucker and 5-way switching on the pup selector.
 
Now I guess im alone in a crowd here...cause I fell in love with a tele that blew me off (I didn't have the money for it ;) ) and sent me home cryin the blues.

It was the SET NECK areodyne tele with an F hole, a P90 in the neck and a regular humbucker with Coil Tap in the bridge.....super jumbo frets and strat style saddles.....not much of a tele I know but damn did it have tone oozing out of the binding....it was all black with creme binding. IMO it was a great ROCK guitar and could pull of the country twang so-so cause of the coil spit I played some brad paisley stuff through a fender champ and it was pretty good sounding. Then I went to a Peavey XXX and blew the doors off the Sam Ash I am always at.

Tele's are loved and respected by most guitarist that have been playing for a while. Though they do have to "grow on you". I didn't want a tele when I started playing 19 years ago....I wanted a warlock so I could be cool and play metallica :rolleyes: and impress my brother....but then again I was also 6 years old.
 
Lately I play more and more with my teles (recently I got a second one), leaving my other beloved guitars on their stands...

Tele fever!!! :D

16_car_blonde.jpg


17_car_blonde.jpg
 
Good photos Elavd. Those puppies looked like they are lock in a love embrace. I imagine they are inseperatble, but which one do you like the best?
 
That's a great pic!

I only posted my Tex-Mex with the neck bucker before, here's my other two, a '52 AVRI and a cheapo beater Frankentele I got for a Benjamin, with a Seymour Duncan mini-humbucker in the neck:

52RIsmaller.jpg


violet.jpg
 
Nice guys! That '52 style sure seems popular. I have seen a lot these days. There is a Sunburst Maple neck MIM from around the 02 or 03 at a local pawn shop with one chip near the bottom that he wants $275 for. Sure gets to be tempting! I played it and did not fall in love right away with this one though.
 
One more tele owner here. Surely a versatile instrument. The neck pickup can easily cover the humbucker territory, but with more definition than the average. Like other fretters pointed out, it has a round tone, slightly compressed and great sustain; more output than a regular strat pickup. The bridge is trebly, great for clean, shimmering 60's stuff, can be a bit harsh sometimes (I noticed that from the first time I played it, through my Valve Jr.), output also higher than the average strat pickup, great when overdriven, for those stinging leads, think about Mike Bloomfield and Jimmy Page on the first Zeppelin album, though I'm gonna change it for a Duncan Broadcaster pickup I bought soon, just to smooth the things out a bit.
 
Tim said:
Good photos Elavd. Those puppies looked like they are lock in a love embrace. I imagine they are inseperatble, but which one do you like the best?

The white blonde one is my new love... I got it last weekend...

The Candy Apple Red one is older and beloved...

The one is my wife and the one is my ... girlfriend

Take a look at 3 more photos:

CANDY APPLE RED:

P1010063.jpg


WHITE BLONDE:

02_top.jpg
 
I've got a Squier tele with a neck humbucker...I wanted the neck humbucker so I could approximate the "Keef" sound (on a budget)...I also wanted the single coil bridge pup to get that tele spank. (I love chicken picken' with the tele twang!)

I am not 100% happy with the way this guitar plays though....its not bad, just doesn't seem to have the warm feel of my MIM strat or even my Squier 51. I have been a bit undecided whether to upgrade its parts (pups, nut, etc) or save up and get a MIM tele...if I go for a bonafide fender though, getting one with a neck humbucker is going to get kind of expensive...so I will probably just keep the Squier and fix it up some. I'm thinking maybe a new bridge might help to0

Reading this thread makes me want to coil-split the neck pup...that seems like a good idea which I hadn't thought about much. A lot of my favorite players are/were tele devotees, they definitely are very versatlie guitars!
 
Fender Standard Telecaster Guitar

What do you guys think about this one?
Fender Standard Telecaster Guitar
electric_guitar_fender_TELECASTER_Standard.jpg

- Vintage Styling,
- 2 Classic Single-coil Pickups,
- 6-Saddle String-Thru-Body Bridge.
 
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