Guitarist

FENDER AMERICAN ULTRA STRATOCAST­ER & TELECASTER BOTH £1,859

- CONTACT Fender Musical Instrument­s EMEA PHONE 01342 331700 WEB www.fender.com

You don’t want to stand still at Fender for too long or you might get refreshed or renamed. That’s what has happened to the relatively new American Elite series. This range replaced the American Deluxe series back in 2016, and has now had a name change, plus some altered features with it, although it remains the most modern series – or “advanced”, as Fender prefers to call it – in Fender’s production ranges, as with the previous Elite and Deluxe.

“There are three main strands to the product categories: vintage-inspired, contempora­ry and advanced,” explains Fender’s senior product manager, Matt Davey. “The vintage-inspired is obviously Vintera and American Original; contempora­ry is Player, American Performer and American Profession­al; and then advanced is the Mexican-made Deluxe series and now the American Ultra – the pinnacle.”

The outgoing Elite series consisted of five models: a Strat in SSS and HSS pickup configurat­ions, a Tele and Tele Thinline, plus a lefty Strat. All were priced at £1,799, the Thinline Tele at £1,819. The new Ultra series swaps the Tele Thinline for a Jazzmaster and, at launch, there’s no sign of a left-handed model. As ever, each model comes in a wide range of new and more classic colours, and the maple or rosewood fingerboar­ds are colour dependent. And, yes, the list prices move up a notch to £1,859 for the Strats and Tele, and to £1,959 for the Jazzmaster. All include the same moulded cases we’ve seen with the American Profession­al range. With a Strat and Tele as samples, let’s dive deeper…

American Ultra Stratocast­er

The Elite added many improvemen­ts: a new neck profile and a contoured heel; a compound radius fingerboar­d; fourth generation Noiseless pickups; truss rod adjustment wheel; S-1 switching; soft-touch knobs; and short-post locking tuners with a modern two-post vibrato. So, what’s new? Nothing in terms of features, but many of the Elite’s improvemen­ts have been slightly altered or refined here.

The neck moves from the Elite’s ‘C-to-D’ profile to a ‘Modern D’, and the fingerboar­d radius subtly switches from 241 to 356mm (9.5 to 14 inches), to 254 to 356mm (10 to 14 inches). The previous fourth generation Noiseless pickups are renamed Ultra Noiseless and come in ‘vintage’ (as here) and ‘hot’ (as seen on the HSS Strat) flavours, while the tricky switching options we saw on the Elite Strat have been simplified.

In the flesh, there are other changes, too. First, the clean ‘white’ maple neck is toned to give a more vintage-y appearance and the finish is, we’re told, a ‘faster’-feeling satin.

“We’re trying to make the switching options more user-friendly and intuitive than the Elites’” Matt Davey, Fender

The metallic headstock logo changes from silver to gold, which adds to the warm hue, although the hardware is still chromed. Along with a maple fingerboar­d, the Elites used ebony – here it’s back to rosewood. The wheel adjust truss rod is gone and we move back to a more typical adjustment point behind the nut, too. Hardware remains the same with rear-lock tuners (all with short posts), a bone nut and the twopost modern vibrato with block saddles.

Perhaps the most notable change is the body shaping in the heel area. While the Elite featured a rounded nose heel with matching heelplate, here that’s retained but with more chamfering to further reduce the bulk, and even a palm contour on the back of the treble cutaway.

The Ultra’s scratchpla­tes are colour dependent and include the three-ply Mint Green here (also used on the Plasma Red Burst and Mocha Burst), a four-ply Tortoise Shell (Aged Natural and Arctic Pearl), a three-ply Aged White (Cobra Blue), and the very natty-looking Gold Anodized ’plate used on the Texas Tea colour. The majority of body woods are alder; ash is used on the Aged Natural and Plasma Red Burst. They all appear to include the rather cool Aged White soft-touch knobs.

Speaking of colours, the only two we’ve seen in the flesh aren’t quite what they seem. The Tele’s Texas Tea (a name for the US state’s oil, we’re told) appears solid black, but throw a bright light on it and you’ll see there’s a fine gold metallic running through it. And whereas a traditiona­l 2- or 3-Color Sunburst is usually translucen­t allowing you to see the wood grain, here our Strat’s 3-Color Ultraburst is opaque and noticeably dappled over the amber centre with darker black flecks.

As with the Elite Strat, we have expanded switching via the S-1 push-switch that’s housed within the volume knob as usual. Outwardly, the Noiseless single-coil-sized stacked humbucking pickups appear the same as the Elite’s with the far-from-vintage ‘Fender’ and ‘Noiseless’ logos, unchamfere­d rod magnets in a modern stagger – the high

E and D string magnets are the highest, the lowest are the G and low E, while the B and A string poles sit in between. Unlike earlier Noiseless sets, all three pickups here have the same 52mm pole spacing.

The S-1 switch is a potentiall­y very powerful four-pole switch that changes the usual Strat protocol when depressed. But compared with the previous Elite, the options here are reined in to what is essentiall­y the ‘seven-sound’ mod: the neck pickup is added to the middle and bridge, so all three are on together, and also to just the bridge pickup for a Tele-like neck-andbridge combinatio­n. It also means that we get some duplicatio­n. The same neck-andmiddle combinatio­n is voiced in positions 4 and 3 with the S-1 depressed. Without that switch engaged, of course, we have the same combinatio­n in position 4 on the five-way selector. Position 5, in both modes, is the same solo neck pickup, too.

“The Elite had some great switching options, but it was actually difficult to remember what they were,” explains Matt, “so here we’re trying to make it more user-friendly, more intuitive. When we’re spec’ing out a new guitar we often look at the Custom Shop to see what people have been ordering, and trends, for example, that we can pick up on. We found quite a lot of people going for the S-1 switch to add in the neck pickup.”

American Ultra Tele

This Texas Tea-finished Tele is quite the looker, particular­ly with its Silver Anodized (aluminium) scratchpla­te. Like the Strat, though, the ’plates are colour dependent with the option of single-ply Black (Butterscot­ch), three-ply Mint Green (Ultraburst and Mocha Burst), three-ply White (Arctic Pearl), three-ply Aged White (Cobra Blue) and three-ply Aged White Pearl (Plasma Red Burst). Alder is standard for the bodies; ash is used on the Plasma Red Burst and Butterscot­ch Blonde only.

As you’d expect, we get the same neck profile and the same additional heel shaping as our Strat. Along with that palm contour we also get a rib-cage cut, while the top edge is bound. The tuners are the same

as our Strat, but the bridge is obviously different: a modern Tele-style unit with six chromed brass block saddles. Like the Elites, both guitars include Schaller S-Lock strap buttons with the locking elements for your strap included in the case. Another note to modernism here is the Electrosoc­ket jack mount, which is side-placed as usual.

The Ultra Noiseless bridge pickup has flat stagger poles that sit just above the cover. The neck pickup is suspended from the scratchpla­te (unlike an original that screws directly to the body), which means that height adjustment here is easy. Fender doesn’t mess with the switching options here, either: like the previous Elite wiring, we get one extra sound – both pickups in series.

Feel & Sounds

Fender specs on the previous Elite necks are 20.8mm (.82 inches) at the 1st fret and 22.6mm (.89 inches) at the 12th fret. Our Strat measures 20.7mm at the 1st fret and 22.2mm at the 12th; our Tele is virtually identical at 20.9mm and 22mm, which would indicate that little has changed, perhaps just a slightly fuller shoulder in lower positions. If your idea of a ‘D’ shape is fairly flat-backed with square shoulders, then that’s not what this feels like. It’s relatively thin-depth’d but extremely comfortabl­e with wellrounde­d fingerboar­d edges and a smart fret job from a wire gauge that falls into Fender’s medium jumbo category. Some people can get pretty het up about quoted fingerboar­d radiuses, but while this doesn’t feel as rounded as vintage (184mm/7.25 iches), it’s on par with a host of more modern makers and really feels far from flat. Setups on both are very good and playabilit­y is therefore excellent, too.

Weight wise, both are in the right spot – a little lighter than the majority of Fenders

It’s a grown-up, vibrant Tele with some sophistica­ted voices and a very intuitive control setup – a different but pleasurabl­e drive

we’ve played in the past couple of years. They’re not feather-light, but are far from falling into the heavy category.

As to the flavour of the classic recipes these guitars present, we certainly wouldn’t be sending either back to the chef. It’s interestin­g to consider, though, that of all the production models offered by Fender, these (and the Mexican Deluxes) are the only ones with hum-cancelling pickups. Clearly hum pick-up isn’t – in percentage terms – a huge problem for most. It’s certainly not a problem here and comparing to standard single coils, yes, they work. The compromise? You might imagine a humbucker to be hotter than a single coil, but here it isn’t. In fact, there’s quite a refined lightness to the Strat’s voice with the lower mids cleaned up a little. The high-end is smooth but far from rounded, and that treble bleed circuit retains the detail as you knock it back, whereas we’re used to the attack softening. There’s a difference to the attack, too; it’s less ‘metal hammer smash’ as if the resonant frequency peak has been pulled down a little. Constant comparison reveals the subtle difference­s and we can’t help thinking that this seems to sit a little more nicely in a crowded track at the expense of the rawness of a good set of single coils in a rootsier trio ensemble, for example. ‘Well behaved’ might be a better phrase, which can also be applied to the in-tune vibrato system.

If anything, the Tele seems to wear its Ultra dress a little more stylishly. It’s not the thickest vintage-y voice we’ve heard and the bridge has plenty of treble slice until you back off the tone a little (don’t

The Tele is a lively guitar and that steely bridge voice seems happy in cliché country territory or a more modern Nashville vibe

You might imagine a humbucker to be hotter than a single coil, but there’s quite a refined lightness to the Strat’s voice here

forget it’s a no-load type, so effectivel­y with the control fully up it’s bypassed for maximum high-end). It’s a lively guitar and that steely bridge voice seems happy in cliché country Tele territory or a more modern, crunchy and gained Nashville vibe. The neck captures that slightly softer attack to calm things down a little, the parallel mix is bouncy and accurate, while the series mix with the S-1 switch depressed adds thickness and a little volume while retaining some edge. Many of us will be familiar with the four-way Tele selector switch, which does the same, but on this model the three-way feels more familiar and simply depressing that S-1 switch feels a little more intuitive.

The treble bleed keeps things clean as you pull back the volume, and the tone is wide ranging and nicely voiced. Swapping between this and our reference Teles, the neck feels noticeably thinner – in both depth and, oddly, width – but played for extended periods on its own, well, this one got more playtime than our Strat. It’s a grown-up, vibrant Tele with some sophistica­ted voices and a very intuitive control setup – a different but very pleasurabl­e drive compared with a bignecked, brutally simplistic vintage piece.

Verdict

Each Fender production series has its own theme and style and, even if they were all priced the same, it’s not an easy thing to find your new Fender fit. The Ultras represent the most modernist vision, with their obvious refinement­s, yet still feel and sound very ‘Fender’, stopping short of features such as stainless steel frets or roasted maple necks and the like. The Modern D neck profile really isn’t far from the previous Elites’ neck shape, nor is it any ‘speedier’ due to its compound radius, which effectivel­y centres on a Gibson-like 12-inch curve. You’re not going to get kicked out of your blues jam if you turn up with one of these, either. Rather they offer a different playing experience – better or worse? That depends on you.

The combinatio­n of very good weights here, a neck heel that disappears and more subtle features such as the improved intonation of the Tele’s bridge, the humfree pickups, sensible expanded switching and well-voiced control circuits means that there’s very little to get in the way of creating the music you want to. We’d call it good guitar-making, rather than vintagebli­nkered replicatio­n.

The Ultras represent the most modernist vision, with their obvious refinement­s, yet still feel and sound very ‘Fender’

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1. These rear-locking tuners work excellentl­y and feature short posts to maximise the strings’ break angle behind the bone nut
2. The Ultra models retain the rounded heel and shaped heelplate of the Elites but with more chamfering and a palm cutaway
3. Both the Strat and Tele have an S-1 push-switch to introduce more sounds… should you want them
1 1. These rear-locking tuners work excellentl­y and feature short posts to maximise the strings’ break angle behind the bone nut 2. The Ultra models retain the rounded heel and shaped heelplate of the Elites but with more chamfering and a palm cutaway 3. Both the Strat and Tele have an S-1 push-switch to introduce more sounds… should you want them
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3 3
 ??  ?? 4. The raised metallic logo changes from chrome to gold here. The maple necks are lightly toned, too. As with the Elites, bone nuts are standard. Note the truss rod adjustment behind the bone nut
5. Rosewood replaces the ebony used on the Elites. The compound fingerboar­d radius very slightly changes and neck profile moves to a Modern ‘D’ 4
4. The raised metallic logo changes from chrome to gold here. The maple necks are lightly toned, too. As with the Elites, bone nuts are standard. Note the truss rod adjustment behind the bone nut 5. Rosewood replaces the ebony used on the Elites. The compound fingerboar­d radius very slightly changes and neck profile moves to a Modern ‘D’ 4
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5
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Now called Ultra Noiseless Vintage, these are hum-cancelling stacked humbuckers, not single coils. Note that the bridge has easyto-intonate chromed brass block saddles
6 Now called Ultra Noiseless Vintage, these are hum-cancelling stacked humbuckers, not single coils. Note that the bridge has easyto-intonate chromed brass block saddles
 ??  ?? These Noiseless pickups have a modern magnet stagger and the same 52mm pole spacing for all three. They’re stacked humbuckers, not single coils
These Noiseless pickups have a modern magnet stagger and the same 52mm pole spacing for all three. They’re stacked humbuckers, not single coils
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7. The Tele’s Texas Tea is the only finish that uses a Silver Anodized scratchpla­te. The neck pickup mounts to it, so it’s easy to height-adjust, unlike on vintage-spec models
7 7. The Tele’s Texas Tea is the only finish that uses a Silver Anodized scratchpla­te. The neck pickup mounts to it, so it’s easy to height-adjust, unlike on vintage-spec models

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