Guitarist

The Soul Of A Strat

- Words Jamie Dickson Photograph­y Phil Barker

WHAT MAKES ONE STRAT ORDINARY AND ANOTHER OUT OF THIS WORLD? IT’S A QUESTION PLAYERS HAVE PONDERED FOR THE LAST SEVEN DECADES – AND WHO BETTER TO EXPLAIN THAN MASTER BUILDERS PAUL WALLER AND AUSTIN MACNUTT OF FENDER’S CUSTOM SHOP. WE JOIN THEM TO TALK VINTAGE TONE, MIRACLE MODS AND SANDING – LOTS OF SANDING…

Which is the greatest era of Strat in your personal opinion?

Paul Waller: “For me, it’s early 60s. I think that’s when the Strat really started to come into its own. Putting the rosewood on there, slimming out the neck, and the pickups started getting dialled in to really make what pure Strat sounds are for me.” Austin MacNutt: “I like the late-50s Strats – just the classic look. They all look great, but I feel like they really got it right, right out of the gate.”

What do you regard as an ideal weight for a Strat?

Paul: “I personally like just under 8lbs – maybe 7¾lbs.”

Austin: “Yeah, that’s a good range. I’m not terribly picky about it, honestly. I’ve got Strats all over the weight spectrum [in my personal collection] and I don’t tend to go for one more than the other because of the weight – it doesn’t a‡ect my choice as much as [it might for] some people.”

What’s your favourite body wood for a Strat?

Austin: “I have go to with ash. I love the look of it, especially if you can get a nice, lightweigh­t piece. And they’re out there. I like seeing the grain – it’s a little more interestin­g than an alder body, speaking personally.”

Paul: “Yeah, I really like ash-body Strats and it’s a dirty little secret that, because I like the 60s neck, when I get a customer that orders an ash-body 60s, I’m like, ‘My dude!’ [laughs]”

What are your favourite pickups for Strats?

Paul: “It’s tough.”

Austin: “That is tough.”

Paul: “Do you want to go Žrst?”

Austin: “I feel like it’s a revolving door… I mean, I just Žnished one that had Ancho Poblanos in it and I was just playing it and I was like, ‘Wow, this sounds really good.’

Paul: “I almost feel like certain pickups might sound better in certain combinatio­ns, but, yeah, it defiŽnitely moves around for me. I’ve designed sets of pickups that we have here and I’ve put a lot of those sets in guitars, and they tend to be on the lower-output side, more like a vintage [set]. But, then, I also really like ’69s, anything with enamel [wire]. The set I designed actually has one enamel in it, in the neck, so you can get that really fat ‘Jimi’ stu with it, but then I also like the ’62s as well. So that was my way of getting the best of both worlds: having a ’62 set in the bridge and middle, and an enamel ’69 in the neck. That was a fun set to do. I get a lot of orders for those.

“But it’s so hard to say what’s best because they’re all so good. Especially when you have access to the winders that are making the premium stu . Pickups are also easily altered by adding copper or taking copper away, mixing magnets… It’s quite a soup recipe with a lot of ingredient­s that can be changed very easily.”

A lot of players want Strats with quarter-sawn maple necks. What bene ts does a quarter-sawn neck bring, in lutherie terms?

Paul: “One of the guys here took a piece of maple and cut it into a 1x1-inch cube and we made sure it was dimensiona­lly the same in both grain directions with a calliper. Then we put it in a press and measured the deection from point A to point B – you know, the deection in the middle [when both ends were subjected to a high-pressure load] – and it was the same in both at-sawn and quarter-sawn. So that really spoke to how maple is one of those materials where it’s already really strong, even without the grain orientatio­n. So I would say ‘stability’ is a word that people should be using, not ‘strength’ when it comes to grain orientatio­n. A [quarter-sawn maple neck] is going to be a more stable neck, probably, but not necessaril­y any stronger.”

What are your thoughts on using roasted or torrified maple in Strat necks?

Austin: “I like it. It has a nice look. It oils up well if you’re going down that route of an oiled neck; it feels great.” Paul: “I like it, too – I would say the light-roasted version, though. Anything beyond that starts to get too brittle for me and you can get other issues with cracking, and I would be concerned about the longevity of the instrument. I mean, Fenders are designed and built to last forever, so material is an important aspect of that. Anything beyond a light roast I’m not going to be interested in. That has to do with experience of having issues with the darker roasted pieces.”

Tell us a really cool setup tip or maintenanc­e tip for Strats.

Paul: “Just leave the bridge alone. The traditiona­l Fender [Strat bridge

“Pickups are easily altered by adding copper or taking copper away, mixing magnets… It’s quite a soup recipe” PAUL WALLER

setup] is the –oating bridge. And that’s …ne if you’re using the bar all the time. But, after speaking with a lot of guys, they’re not really hammering on the bar. Maybe it’s for a specifi…c song or something… but not too many live in that world all the time. And so now I set up Strats where the bridge is actually sitting on the face of the guitar. That way, it’ll always come back to pitch and you don’t have to worry about putting your thumb on it and changing its pitch. Then, if you decide you want to use the bar, you can put the bar in and dive it, which would satisfy most people.

“For the few that want the –oating bridge, you can –oat your bridge, but you’re just asking for trouble at that point. That’s why things like Floyd Rose exist, because of –oating bridges, and the type of music that came out of that era. That was a problem that needed to be solved and so [the Floyd Rose] came about. But, now, with today’s music, that’s not really necessary so much. Running with the trends of how guitar players are playing today, that’s how I set mine up and I would suggest anybody do it that way.”

Some players believe that hardtail Strats have something extraspeci­al about them. What are your thoughts on that?

Austin: “They have a di erent feel to it, for sure. Yeah, I like them.”

Paul: “I do, too. I’ve always liked them because I’ve always been into Teles, so it was an easy segue for me to do a hardtail Strat. But I would say that they’re a bit more hit and miss than a standard Strat. Hardtails are more like Teles, where there tends to be a bit more variance and good ones and bad ones. But when you get a good one it’s like, ‘Oh boy, what have I been missing?’ They can be special, for sure.”

What are your personal favourite electronic­s mods for Strats?

Austin: “I like having the ‘blender’ in it, so you have [three knobs that control] volume, tone and the blender [allowing bridge-andneck and all three pickups to be engaged at once]. I think that’s incredibly useful.”

Paul: “I’ve been doing that a lot lately, too, especially with a humbucker [in HSS builds], because now you can get the humbucker and the neck [using] the blender. I would say in the last 20 years, that’s been one of the greater upgrades for the Strat. Because you really can’t …x much on the Strat, but that helped bring in some stu and now somebody that’s maybe playing country can kind of get a Tele thing out of it with the blender.”

What’s the best Strat you’ve ever played?

Austin: “I did a refret on a ’58 years ago that someone brought me, that one just sounded amazing. Maybe it was just one of the …rst vintage ones I worked on, but I played that one for a while before I called the owner and had him come pick it up!”

Paul: “That’s a tough question. A couple that stick out – Ronnie Wood has a hardtail Strat and that one was incredible, I think it was a ’55. And then Nile Rodgers’ Hitmaker Strat, that one’s incredible.”

“For the few that want the floating bridge, you can float your bridge, but you’re just asking for trouble” PAUL WALLER

 ?? ??
 ?? ?? This original 1956 Strat is an early alder-bodied example from around the time Fender transition­ed away from ash – but Master Builders Paul Waller and Austin MacNutt personally prefer the more striking looks of ash
This original 1956 Strat is an early alder-bodied example from around the time Fender transition­ed away from ash – but Master Builders Paul Waller and Austin MacNutt personally prefer the more striking looks of ash
 ?? ?? 1
This re nished (but otherwise original) 1961 Strat embodies what Paul Waller calls the period when “the Strat started to come into its own... and the pickups started getting dialled in”
1 This re nished (but otherwise original) 1961 Strat embodies what Paul Waller calls the period when “the Strat started to come into its own... and the pickups started getting dialled in”
 ?? ?? 2
2. On the massproduc­tion side, Fender’s Vintera
II 60s Strat o ers suprisingl­y authentic vintage tones, as a recent shootout video con rmed (see above). Pickups remain a key area where makers can dial in sonic character to suit a particular era
2 2. On the massproduc­tion side, Fender’s Vintera II 60s Strat o ers suprisingl­y authentic vintage tones, as a recent shootout video con rmed (see above). Pickups remain a key area where makers can dial in sonic character to suit a particular era
 ?? ?? 1 1. This Fender Custom Shop Heavy Relic 1962 Stratocast­er was made by Master Builder Dale Wilson and shows how adept the Custom Shop is at relicing guitars
1 1. This Fender Custom Shop Heavy Relic 1962 Stratocast­er was made by Master Builder Dale Wilson and shows how adept the Custom Shop is at relicing guitars
 ?? ?? This 1966 Strat, re nished by renowned British specialist Clive Brown in Firemist Silver, is set up with the bridge at against the body. According to Paul Waller, this is the most practical arrangemen­t for most players
This 1966 Strat, re nished by renowned British specialist Clive Brown in Firemist Silver, is set up with the bridge at against the body. According to Paul Waller, this is the most practical arrangemen­t for most players
 ?? ?? 4
4. Nile Rodgers with the 1960 Strat that became known as the ‘Hitmaker’. He used it to create songs that led to some 500 million record sales – Paul Waller says it’s one of the bestsoundi­ng Strats he’s ever played, too
4 4. Nile Rodgers with the 1960 Strat that became known as the ‘Hitmaker’. He used it to create songs that led to some 500 million record sales – Paul Waller says it’s one of the bestsoundi­ng Strats he’s ever played, too
 ?? ?? 3 3. This Custom Shop Strat belongs to Chris Turpin of roots-rock band Ida Mae. It features a control plate patterned after one  tted to a 1954 prototype presented to George Fullerton, then Vice President of Production at Fender
3 3. This Custom Shop Strat belongs to Chris Turpin of roots-rock band Ida Mae. It features a control plate patterned after one tted to a 1954 prototype presented to George Fullerton, then Vice President of Production at Fender

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