Total Guitar

SQUIER PARANORMAL SUPER-SONIC

A truly bonkers guitar at under £400

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Short-scale guitars are having a moment right now. Whether it’s because of the influx of new guitarists during the pandemic, or the raft of musicians playing guitar alongside other instrument­s, more accessibly proportion­ed models seem to be hitting the market now than ever before. But while the format lends itself to quirky-by-nature offset bodies, none are quite so bizarre as the late-’90s Squier Super-sonic, which received a reissue this year as part of the Paranormal Series.

Before you ask; no, we haven’t accidental­ly flipped the image. The legend goes that former Squier marketing manager Joe Carducci was so inspired by an image of Jimi

Hendrix playing a Jazzmaster upside-down, he took it upon himself to recreate this aesthetic for right-handed players. The result is certainly a curious creature, with a back-to-front body and colossal reverse Cbs-era headstock. But the difference­s between the Super-sonic and the rest of the Fender stable run deep.

For starters, the two own-brand Atomic humbuckers – one of which is offset – are controlled by a pair of volume controls, without a tone knob in sight. As guitarists increasing­ly turn to pedals rather than tone controls to change their sound, that’s no great loss – and it even means you can switch one pickup off to get your Morellian toggle-switching on. The bridge volume is located nearest to the player, a quirk which could be a pro or a con depending on which pickup you use most frequently. There’s also a Strat-style vibrato, as opposed to the typical Jaguar/ Jazzmaster floater you might expect, an ‘S’-stamped neck plate with integrated strap pin screw, and a heel that’s so highly contoured it rivals even Fender’s big-ticket American Ultra series.

That’s a damn good thing, because the Super-sonic’s USP is not only its short scale length (24”), but also its narrow 40mm nut width. For context, most Fenders are around the 42mm mark, and even Squier’s beginner-targeted Mini models have a width of 40.6mm. It’s that combinatio­n of tight string spacing and a downsized fingerboar­d that lends the Super-sonic its name – provided your digits are shapely enough, you can speed around this thing with the greatest of ease. Laser-gun sweep picking and Message In A Bottle- style add9s suddenly become a breeze, and going back to a ‘regular’-scale guitar feels like a chore after a few hours on this lithe number.

Of course, there are payoffs. Alternate-picking runs at the top of the ’board can end up feeling like the final rounds of a game of Twister. But that’s all down to hand size and personal taste. We do take issue, however, with Fender’s decision to fit 0.009-gauge strings on a 24” scale length guitar that features a Strat-style vibrato. Yes, the light strings reinforce the lightningq­uick feel, but they simply

A PLAYING EXPERIENCE UNLIKE ANY OTHER FENDER MODEL

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