Guitarist

CREAM T AURORA STANDARD 2PS £2,499

- CONTACT Cream T Guitars PHONE 01695 570023 WEB www.creamtguit­ars.com

Earlier in the year we reported on the birth of this new guitar company, Cream T Guitars. If you missed that Blueprint feature in issue 477, here’s a recap. In brief, Norwegian pickup-maker-to-the-stars Thomas Nilsen joined forces with Tim Lobley, the owner of Sound Affects in Ormskirk, to restart his pickup-making business in the UK. As regular readers will know, Thomas has a unique take on pickup design, scanning pickups from old ’Bursts and the like via his Oracle Pickup Scanner and replicatin­g them. The Cream T Whiskerbuc­kers, for example, are scanned from Billy F Gibbons’ fabled ‘Pearly Gates’; the Bernie Buckers are from Bernie Marsden’s almost-as-famous ‘Beast’. Tim Lobley had been impressed by futuristic Swiss-based guitar maker Relish and decided to see if its pickup-swapping technology could be applied to more convention­al guitars – obviously featuring Cream T pickups. Increasing­ly visible York-based guitar maker PJD was given the job of producing the guitars designed by Billy and Thomas and brought to market by Tim.

In that Blueprint article we featured Prototype #2, and the team has been very busy refining that into a mini-range

of seven models – three of which are effectivel­y Billy’s signature guitars, while four are more regular models (see What’s On The Menu on page 99). Our Standard model here is the blue-collar workingman’s guitar – but with pickup swapping.

Feel & Sounds

If you’ve been able to get your hands on a PJD guitar, there are obviously a lot of similariti­es here, particular­ly the clean, unfussy build, which is faultless. Along with a very good weight for the style of 3.69kg (8.12lb), the guitar feels a little more muscular than that previous prototype with an alive acoustic resonance.

Described as a “59 LP Style” profile, the glued-in neck is certainly meatier than that earlier prototype. Dimensiona­lly, it’s around half a millimetre slimmer in depth than Gibson’s ’50s Les Paul Standard, measuring 21.4mm at the 1st fret and 24.6mm by the 12th before the neck increases in depth to flow into a pretty classic style D-shaped heel. It’s a full-width tenon, too, although the neck doesn’t extend into the neck pickup cavity because that is an open hole to accept the pickups, which simply push in from the back. It all feels pretty traditiona­l, though; there is a slightly undulating feel to the neck back due to the very thin satin nitro finish, but the profile is a really good-feeling C.

The Standard is unbound on both the fingerboar­d and top body edges, a little more Les Paul Special if you like, and it’s the only model with dot inlays. It may appear a little austere for some, bearing in mind the £2,499 price of our pickup-swapping model, especially as it only comes with a gigbag. But a logo’d Hiscox case – cream in colour, of course – can be ordered for an additional £75.

This is a very good player with sensible Jescar frets (spec’d at 2.27mm wide with a measured height of approximat­ely 1.32mm) that are immaculate­ly fettled on the dark rosewood ’board with lightly rolled edges. The setup is really good,

This Aurora Standard is a simple design, beautifull­y executed, and a perfect vehicle for Nilsen’s pickups

too, and this Aurora comes across as very familiar in feel, seated or strapped on. So, with its shoulder-placed toggle switch and those dual humbucking-sized pickups, now surrounded by the ultra-stylish Anomaly pickup rings, we don’t get four controls as you might expect but three: a volume for each pickup (with a pull-switch to engage a coil-split on any humbucker) and a master tone.

If the feel and playabilit­y haven’t got you by now, the sounds we hear are superb. We start our test with the Whiskerbuc­kers installed and a hour or so later we haven’t even considered swapping them. It would be silly to suggest they’re the ‘best’ PAF clones we’ve ever heard, but we’d definitely say they capture that magic. The lean bite of the bridge with its almost single-coil character really cuts through, contrasted by the softer attack of the neck pickup with an equally vocal character. As we’ve said before, they don’t sound potted, but they are, and at higher volume levels you get plenty of handling noise – things sound very lively, in a good way. Any classic rock fan needs to hear (at least) this bridge pickup through a cranked Marshall-style amp: it’s woody, edgy… total rock ’n’ roll.

On this all-mahogany platform, there’s not quite the crisp edge we hear from our maple-topped Les Paul Classic with Burstbucke­rs. The Aurora sounds a little sweeter, rounded in the high-end, and pulling back the volume slightly, the tone further, the vintage-style wiring thins the voice without losing its clarity. You could quite possibly have a career on either pickup and across hugely broad musical styles.

The coil-split switches voice the inner slug coils of each humbucker, and while they come across as being a little thin sounding initially, with a little tone roll-off they add some musical ‘Fender’ to the voice, and both provide frankly superb early electric blues sounds with a more narrow focus than the bigger humbucker voices. But let’s not pigeonhole this guitar or its pickups: the sounds we describe work just as intuitivel­y with some heavy modulation and delay. They’re simply very musical.

But what about the other pickups? This is where the fun starts as we pull out the neck Whiskerbuc­ker and pop in the humbucking-sized Duchess single coil. There’s a little more edge to the neck position now, less smooth than the Whiskerbuc­ker and slightly more dynamic – it’s a great way to A/B pickups. Pickup aside, everything about the guitar is the same. Of course, it’s a single coil so pulling up the split switch on neck volume control doesn’t have any effect, and you can’t help thinking that a tapped version of this pickup would suit. Maybe we’ll see that down the line.

Finally, we pop in the unique Banger & Mash – the only pickup here that’s not a clone – and it’s very impressive again, especially when paired with the Duchess at the neck. There’s seemingly a little less girth compared with the Whiskerbuc­ker and you hear a little more ‘Fender’, and winding up our test amp it’s a great rootsy Americana rhythm sound, whereas our Tele bridge reference sounds thinner and more spiky. Mix it with either that Whiskerbuc­ker or Duchess at the neck and, well, it’s pretty Keef. Split, again voicing the slug coil, things get a lot thinner, but when mixed with either neck pickup and our pedalboard it does a pretty good Pretenders or clean-edged early Police-era Andy Summers. To be fair, we’re scratching the surface of the potential here.

Its simplicity is exactly the appeal. It’s not apeing a classic-era design yet it feels very vintage informed

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 ?? ?? Billy F Gibbons drew out this classic Martin-style square-topped headstock, which gives the guitar quite a retro vibe. The Cream T logo has also been enlarged since the earlier prototype we looked at
Billy F Gibbons drew out this classic Martin-style square-topped headstock, which gives the guitar quite a retro vibe. The Cream T logo has also been enlarged since the earlier prototype we looked at
 ?? ?? Since the pickups are surrounded by the purely cosmetic Anomaly pickup rings, no-one would know you can swap them out in seconds. This Cream T Whiskerbuc­ker is the default choice for the Aurora guitars, scanned from Billy F Gibbons’ fabled ‘Pearly Gates’
Since the pickups are surrounded by the purely cosmetic Anomaly pickup rings, no-one would know you can swap them out in seconds. This Cream T Whiskerbuc­ker is the default choice for the Aurora guitars, scanned from Billy F Gibbons’ fabled ‘Pearly Gates’
 ?? ?? The open-backed Gotoh tuners with their cream plastic buttons add to the old-school aesthetic. The volute was added by PJD’s Leigh Dovey to reinforce the narrowest part of the neck under the access hole for the double-action truss rod
The open-backed Gotoh tuners with their cream plastic buttons add to the old-school aesthetic. The volute was added by PJD’s Leigh Dovey to reinforce the narrowest part of the neck under the access hole for the double-action truss rod
 ?? ?? 1 1. Aside from the Whiskerbuc­ker, the Standard comes with a humbucking-sized Duchess P90 single coil (neck) and Banger & Mash (bridge). The beauty of the pickup-swapping concept is you can put the bridge in neck position, or vice versa
1 1. Aside from the Whiskerbuc­ker, the Standard comes with a humbucking-sized Duchess P90 single coil (neck) and Banger & Mash (bridge). The beauty of the pickup-swapping concept is you can put the bridge in neck position, or vice versa
 ?? ?? 2 2. The three-control layout here gives a volume for each pickup (with a push-switch coil-split) and a master tone. Billy just rides the volumes and doesn’t use a toggle switch. For us mere mortals, we get a pickup selector, too!
2 2. The three-control layout here gives a volume for each pickup (with a push-switch coil-split) and a master tone. Billy just rides the volumes and doesn’t use a toggle switch. For us mere mortals, we get a pickup selector, too!

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