SQUIER PARANORMAL SUPER-SONIC
A truly bonkers guitar at under £400
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