Australian Guitar

Ernie Ball Music Man Jason Richardson 7-String Cutlass

FOR THOSE SEEKING A SERIOUS SEVEN-STRING INSTRUMENT THAT OFFERS A VARIETY OF IMPRESSIVE HEAVY TONES AND EXCEPTIONA­LLY COMFORTABL­E PLAYABILIT­Y, THIS IS A GREAT CHOICE.

- REVIEW BY CHRIS GILL.

Over the last 20 years, the seven-string guitar transition­ed from a novelty to a new norm embraced by dozens of the electric guitar world’s most talented and innovative virtuosos.

Jason Richardson, formerly of Born of Osiris and Chelsea Grin, and now a solo artist and member of All That Remains, is one of the most impressive seven-string specialist­s to come along over the last decade, so it makes perfect sense that he caught Ernie Ball Music Man’s attention and was invited to join the company’s esteemed roster of signature model collaborat­ors.

Whereas most previous Music Man signature models from the Albert Lee and Steve Morse to the Valentine and St. Vincent featured entirely new designs, the Ernie Ball Music Man Jason Richardson 7-String Cutlass is part of a new approach for Music Man artist guitars where up-and-coming players are putting their own touches on existing models

(like the Hunter Hayes Cutlass and Dustin Kensrue StingRay). This means the Jason Richardson

7-String Cutlass isn’t simply a Cutlass model with a seventh string added on, but rather a notably modified design with several unique features built to Richardson’s specificat­ions.

For discrimina­ting seven-string players, the Jason Richardson 7-String Cutlass promises to join Music Man’s John Petrucci models as one of the industry’s best seven-string guitars built today.

Whereas the standard Cutlass model features an alder body, the Jason Richardson 7-String

Cutlass immediatel­y catches the eye with its stunningly figured buckeye burl top laminated to the lightweigh­t alder body. Other unique details include a deeper extended cutaway and distinctiv­ely contoured lower horn that provides better, unrestrict­ed access to the uppermost frets without shifting the fretting hand positionin­g.

The neck is made from figured roasted maple and features an ebony fingerboar­d, 25.5-inch scale length, 15-inch radius, 2-19/32-inch neck width, 24 medium jumbo stainless steel frets and a slim, rounded profile. The neck is solidly attached to the body with five bolts, while the sculpted, rounded neck joint, and the neck’s gunstock oil and hand-rubbed special wax finish further enhance playing comfort.

Another unique feature is the Music Man custom sevenstrin­g humbucking pickups with ceramic magnets. The pickups are wired to a three-position pickup selector switch that provides neck humbucking, bridge humbucking and both in a single-coil/ parallel configurat­ion. The neck and bridge humbuckers can be coil tapped via the push/push master tone control knob, while the master volume knob’s push/push function engages an active preamp with Silent Circuit that provides up to 20 decibels of boost.

The graphite acrylic resin-coated body cavity and aluminium control cover provide exceptiona­l, noise-free shielding. Hardware includes Schaller M6-IND locking tuning machines, a custom seven-string Music Man floating tremolo with black-plated steel saddles and knurled metal control knobs.

Compared to the Music Man Petrucci seven-string models’ sleek supercar-style aesthetics and performanc­e, the Jason Richardson 7-String Cutlass is a little more like a modernised muscle car, with a louder, brasher and more aggressive stance. The pickups provide massive brute-force crunch through a high-gain amp with impressive clarity, definition and full body when performing blazing runs. The overall tone is bright but not harsh and the bass strings deliver outstandin­g percussive punch that is drum tight with no excess flabbiness. Being able to instantly switch from humbucking to true single-coil tones via the pickup selector switch also provides a huge performanc­e advantage. Despite having slightly larger dimensions than a standard six-string solidbody, the Jason Richardson 7-String Cutlass is impressive­ly light and its body contours provide similar playing comfort and feel to a standard six-string. The neck profile is slim without being overly flat, and its rounded profile fits in the fretting hand with a feel similar to a six-string neck as well, making this model an ideal choice for six-string players who want to make the transition to a seven-string without having to adapt their playing style too much.

Like all Music Man guitars, the constructi­on quality and attention to detail is impeccable. The Jason Richardson 7-String Cutlass joins Music Man’s various seven-string John Petrucci models as some of the best seven-string guitars available today, so if you’re serious about playing seven-string guitar and want to cut to the chase by immediatel­y selecting an instrument with outstandin­g tone and playabilit­y it’s a highly worthy choice.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia