Guitar Player

Ernie Ball Music Man Jason Richardson Signature Cutlass HH

JASON RICHARDSON SIGNATURE CUTLASS HH

- TESTED BY ART THOMPSON

FIRST INTRODUCED IN the 1970s, the Cutlass has stood the test of time as one of Music Man’s preeminent rock guitars. This latest Cutlass is designed in collaborat­ion with Jason Richardson (Chelsea Grin, All That Remains) and is a six-string version of the Cutlass HH seven-string we reviewed in our October 2019 issue. The super-sleek guitar on deck here features an alder body with a buckeye-burl top and a roasted-maple neck wearing a hand-rubbed oil-and-wax finish and topped with a 25.5-inch-scale ebony fingerboar­d.

The neck’s ultra-slim profile and flat 15-inch radius make for a playing surface that’s as fast as an F-16, and the 24 stainlesss­teel frets with their perfectly shaped crowns, mirror polish and rounded tips add to the supersonic feel. There’s simply nothing to impede your hand here (although the corners of the nut are a little sharp), and ripping to the fretboard’s upper reaches is facilitate­d by the deep cutaway and rounded heel. The neck attaches very solidly with five bolts, and the truss-rod adjustment wheel is right at the end of the neck, making it easy to tweak the neck relief as needed.

The Cutlass’s double-cutaway body is a work of art with its awesome Rorschach Red sunburst finish (also available in Natural Buckeye Burl) that fades to black around the edges and meets a binding strip of figured maple as it curves over to the red-finished contoured back. Gold hardware further dresses things up and includes tuners, control knobs, strap buttons and the recessed Music Man Custom Tremolo floating bridge. This well-crafted piece of machinery rides on two fulcrum points and features bent-steel saddles and a push-in bar. The strings top load through the back of the curved housing (itself a comfy place to lay your hand), and with three springs attached to the inertia block, the trem feels glass smooth and stays reliably in tune. Kudos to the locking Schaller tuners, straight string pull and slippery Melamine nut, all of which contribute to the stability of the system.

Our review Cutlass played beautifull­y, and its factory setup provided low action and tuneful intonation in all positions. The moisture-free woods and solid hardware give the Cutlass a lively and sustaining acoustic tone, and when amped up it delivered

impressive sounds, whether played relatively clean through a Fender Deluxe Reverb or with heavy overdrive via a Mesa/Boogie Rectifier Badlander head through its onboard speaker IRs and a Celestion-loaded cabinet, as well as with a selection of overdrive pedals.

The direct-mounted Music Man humbuckers feed a master-volume control with a push-push 20dB volume boost, a master tone with push-push coil split, and a three-way toggle switch. There’s very little free wiring inside the control cavity, since most of the components are arranged on a PCB. One internal trim pot adjusts the boost gain, and another adjusts the Silent Circuit gain for maximum effectiven­ess. Music Man doesn’t recommend altering it from the stock setting, nor was it necessary, as the Silent Circuit nukes noise very effectivel­y.

The pickups sound crisp and well defined, and their balance of bite, midrange complexity and bottom-end girth is perfect. The neck pickup transition­s smoothly from rhythm to lead as gain is increased (either from an amp or pedal), and it doesn’t get mushy or lose its touch responsive­ness when the tone control is rolled down.

The bridge ’bucker is bright and ballsy, and it stayed well focused when using high levels of grind. The unboosted output is on par with a PAF, so you can drive an amp fairly hard and go right back to a clean sound by rolling down the volume. These pickups also have a twangier sound when they’re on together, which is useful when something besides a crushing rock or metal tone is needed. In split-coil mode, the Cutlass does a good Strat impersonat­ion, especially on the chimey middle setting, which sounds great for blues, R&B and funk. The neck and bridge settings also benefit from the onboard boost when you want to hit the amp with a hotter signal to grind up a rhythm part or push a solo above the mix.

It all underscore­s the versatilit­y of the Jason Richardson Signature Cutlass HH, which has a lot to offer those who want a slick-playing guitar with a ton of personalit­y and tonal power. It’s expensive for sure, but you’ve got to hand it to Music Man for pulling out the stops to make the

Cutlass HH a top gun in its class.

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