Guitarist

ernie Ball music man St vincent

£2,299

- ContaCt Strings & Things Phone 01273 440442 Web www.music-man.com

m usic Man is becoming known for its far-from-mainstream shapes and styles, but the St Vincent makes instrument­s such as Albert Lee’s long-running angular signature model – a guitar that was Annie Clark’s introducti­on to the brand – seem like a comfy ol’ Stratocast­er. “A couple of years ago they sent me the Albert Lee,” she tells us, “and when I was touring with David Byrne for the record Love This Giant, I fell in love with it, because it’s so versatile. On that particular tour, I was transition­ing from lead to rhythm, to making sounds, so I had to be part session-player/part frontman. That guitar had the tonal versatilit­y and fret versatilit­y to be a lot of things.”

At first glance, it might not be a shape you aspire to – although it does share a family resemblanc­e to Music Man’s forwardloo­king Armada – but its studied elegance is hugely impressive, a sort of Firebird-meetsExplo­rer put through St Vincent’s stylistic mangle. “My design aesthetic for it is based around what was happening in the 1960s and the 1980s, and what was happening in Japan in the 1970s, as far as the look of guitars goes. If you look further back in history, the work of artists like [Kazimir] Malevich were also an inspiratio­n.” As was her old Harmony: “Yes, the Harmony Bobkat! What I love about that guitar is that it was super-light, and the whammy bar on it was really unique. So that was another guitar inspiratio­n for the signature model.”

While some modernist designs can feel as odd as they look, the African mahogany bodied St Vincent is both beautifull­y weighted (3.52kg/7.74lb) and hangs really well on a strap with the lower bass-side edge very comfortabl­e under your forearm. There’s a convention­al rear ribcage cut; the forearm contour itself is an angled chamfer, not curved like a Strat, while the treble side control area is angled to a slightly lesser extent – the straight lines of the upper bouts extending to a point at the base, enhancing the ‘no curves here’ geometry. There’s no cutaway as such: the top treble-side shoulder joins the bolt-on rosewood neck at the 19th fret; the heel barely moves out from the higher bass-side shoulder and, typically, is beautifull­y shaped, and fixed with Music Man’s usual five-screw joint.

In fact, the neck is as close to a work of art as we’ve seen. The oiled and waxed rosewood feels hugely engaging to the touch and the deep rounded ‘D’ shape is instantly attractive – slightly thinner in depth (21mm at the 1st fret; 22.7mm at the 12th) than Music Man’s recently introduced Cutlass and StingRay, which share the same 648mm (25.5-inch) scale length. “The Albert Lee has such a phenomenal neck,” Annie continues, “and you can really sing on that neck. When I was given the opportunit­y to create my own guitar, one of the things that I wanted to keep was the neck-feel of that Albert Lee.”

new Horizons

The 254mm (10-inch) radius fingerboar­d, a separate piece of rosewood, has perfectly installed high-profile medium-gauge frets and those custom-designed connected double ‘O’ inlays. The headstock does look small, but string-pull is straight over the compensate­d nut to the locking tuners with their tasteful pearloid buttons. It’s a hugely considered piece.

Of course, at the other end of the string is that modern Music Man vibrato – here, with a slightly pointed cover – while the trio of custom DiMarzio mini-humbuckers are a typically idiosyncra­tic choice; the neck and middle are suspended on the generously sized, thick plastic scratchpla­te, and the bridge unit is screwed directly to the body. Even the control knobs are custom made, another beautiful detail. Under the hood, we have a standard five-way pickup selector, with its Strat-like selections – the pots are 250k with .047microfa­rad tone cap, more Fender single coil than Gibson humbucker.

Its acoustic response is a little ‘drier’, more acoustic-y than the Cutlass and StingRay, but once again, intonation and setup are exceptiona­l. Sonically, we have an old-school signal path with no tricks, and compared with the Cutlass we have a bit more oomph and a rounder, darker high-end. But, as ever with three pickups wired like this, you can’t help referencin­g a Strat, albeit with this different core tonality. Clean, therefore, the St Vincent does sound a little dark, though rich, resonant and beautifull­y sustaining with a fruity midrange. Switching from classic Fender clean to the meat of a driven Marshall, there’s a hugely impressive thickness, but without the low-end ‘thump’ of a typical single-cut. Even at modest volumes it sounds huge.

Annie certainly has her own sonic stew in mind, but remove the vibrato arm and this is a slide-playing tour-de-force. It just proves, once again, that if you judge a guitar by its cover alone, then you are in danger of seriously missing out. [DB]

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