Australian Guitar

Ernie Ball Music Man Sabre

EN GARDE! THIS NEW MUSIC MAN DOUBLE-CUT MIGHT BE UNSHEATHED FROM DESIGNS OF YORE BUT IS NO VINTAGE FLASHBACK. REVIEW BY ED MITCHELL.

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W. e have to ’fess up here. If we hadn’t eyeballed the headstock of the new for 2020 Sabre, we’d never have guessed it was built by Music Man.

It’s easy to pick a Music Man StingRay or Axis out of a line-up. The body shapes are a dead giveaway, not to mention the StingRay’s conspicuou­s control plate. The St Vincent model is too outlandish to go incognito, and the Albert Lee and Steve Lukather signatures couldn’t mask their origins if they hid behind big sunglasses and a Magnum PI moustache.

The same could be said of the new Sabre’s illustriou­s if short-lived ancestors. The original

Music Man Sabre made its debut in 1978 and was in production for a couple of years. Aside from a better known bass variant, the guitar was available in two formats, the imaginativ­ely titled I and II.

Designed by Leo Fender and George Fullerton shortly before they scuttled off to found G&L, the I had a 12-inch fingerboar­d radius and regular-size frets. The II featured an old-school 7.25-inch radius, with skinnier vintage-style frets to match. Both models were spec’d with an active preamp, two-band EQ, and a phase reversal switch.

In fact, aside from a Strat-ish chassis, bolt-on neck and HH pickup layout, the new Sabre has just about zero in common with those original guitars. Oh well, out with the old… Like any ‘S-style’ guitar with directmoun­t humbuckers, the Sabre is also a descendent of Eddie Van Halen’s Frankenstr­at.

Yet while Eddie’s old amigo looked like it had been dragged through a hedge backwards, our Sabre is way more refined, like it gets its clobber from a tailor on Savile Row. The spec sheet opens with a okoume body crowned with a 13mm thick slice of bookmatche­d flame maple, finished in high-gloss polyester.…Okoume is an African hardwood that’s sustainabl­e and provides aesthetics and weight that might convince some that they’re dealing with mahogany. The “subtly carved” flame maple top has exposed edges that act as pretty body binding. Just like PRS.

As previously mentioned, the humbucking pickups are direct-mounted. Both units are wound in-house. The bridge pickup is loaded with Alnico V magnets with a quoted DCR of 18kohms. The neck pickup runs a Ceramic 8 magnet with a reading of 12.2kohms.

The wiring loom offers none of the over-engineered exuberance of a 70s Sabre. Here, all you’ll find is a master volume, master tone and a five-way pickup selector switch. Peeking inside the control cavity, you’ll uncover a well-ordered layout protected by graphite acrylic resin paint and an aluminium cover plate to ward off electrical hum.

The vibrato cover plate is also made from aluminium. We were surprised to see that these plates are not recessed. That little craftsman’s touch is something we’d expect on a guitar of this value. You must have noticed this guitar’s ‘Modern Tremolo’.

Music Man describes it as having a “crescent cover” and vintage bent steel saddles. We’d agree with all that. The cover is reminiscen­t of the ashtray thing that came with old Strats and their Custom Shop doppelgäng­ers.

It’s possible to palm-mute with the Sabre’s cover in place, and you can also intonate the guitar with it in place. There are six access holes. If it gets in your way, it can be removed by undoing a couple of screws from inside the vibrato cavity – it doesn’t just pop on and off like the old Fender covers.

That just leaves the push-in vibrato arm wanting of a mention. It’s all good news there, too. There’s no thread to strip and the arm obediently stays put wherever you abandon it. Moving in to the pointy bit, the 648mm (25.5-inch) bolt-on roasted figured maple neck is held to account by the body with five screws.

Playabilit­y is maximised by a 254mm (10-inch) fingerboar­d radius, 22 high-profile medium stainlesss­teel frets, and a sculpted neck/body join. A handrubbed gun stock oil and wax finish helps you avoid any sticky situations. Tuning stability is maintained with a slippery graphite compensate­d top nut and a set of Schaller M6-IND tuners.…The headstock is, of course, your now iconic ‘four over two’ format. The original Sabres came with the Fender six-in-line tuner design.

If you’ve ever heard the expression ‘this thing plays itself’ then this is your opportunit­y to experience that first hand. Despite being supplied with Ernie Ball Slinkys 0.010 to 0.046-gauge strings, the feel is super-light. We figured incorrectl­y that we were dealing with a compound radius ’board here. The fact is, this guitar is just very well set up.

Brandished at an amplifier’s clean channel, the sustain is immediatel­y impressive. First impression­s? These humbuckers are full, punchy-sounding characters, but there’s a lot of tonal variety on tap. At either end of its

VERDICT

PROS travel, the five-way selector switch offers access to the bridge or neck ’bucker running solo in series.

Position 2 is the coil-split outer coils on each pickup in parallel. The third position is both ’buckers on full in parallel. Finally, you get a coil-split option with just the inner coils of the bridge and neck pups.…The Sabre presents itself as a guitar for modern players. The high-output bridge pup is mouthy enough for metal and its countless sub genres. There’s bags of definition in those coils. You can hear every note, and harmonics ping off the ’board like fizzy bottle tops.

Engaging the coil-split modes introduces some woodiness, but it doesn’t come across as retro. It’s more like laser-cut than hand-crafted. The two coil-split modes might appear pretty similar, but there is a discernibl­e increase in bottom-end when you employ the outside coil option.…The inside coil setting gets you some ways down the road to an in-between Strat thing that’s perfect for that funky stuff.

While we were initially sceptical of the neck pickup’s ceramic magnets, we’re sold on the sharp definition this thing pumps out. Bottom-end is all present and correct, but there’s a sliver of top-end that lays waste to any muddiness, regardless of the amount of gain on show.

Ultimately, the Sabre is hard to fault on any level. In other words, this gem represents contempora­ry guitar building at its finest.…It looks fantastic and practicall­y plays itself, with fit and finish that’s tidier than Marie Kondo’s sock drawer. It also comes with a lightweigh­t but tough moulded hard case.

These days, a few grand (which is what the Sabre will run you – there’s no Australian RRP, but expect to shell out a fair chunk of pocket money) will get you wrapped around any number of high-spec electric guitars. That choice is narrowed if your heart’s set on a vintage reissue from the likes of Fender and Gibson. There are, however, many guitarists looking for something with all mod cons, and all the faultless playabilit­y and expanded tone palette that implies.The Sabre is a guitar that can compete with Grosh, Suhr and the like. It might not immediatel­y scream “Music Man” but it does live up to its weaponised name tag. Yes, those who choose to live by this sword will be very happy indeed.

CONS

DISTRIBUTO­R

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