Guitar World

Sterling by Music Man Mariposa and Cutlass CT50HSS

STERLING BY MUSIC MAN MARIPOSA AND CUTLASS CT50HSS

- By Chris Gill

THE GOOD NEWS is that the quality of entry level guitars has improved dramatical­ly in recent years. Many marquee USA brands now offer alternativ­e lines produced overseas that benefit greatly from the know-how that went into producing a company’s flagship models. Even though these import brand guitars often cost significan­tly less than their upmarket counterpar­ts, many offer similar playabilit­y and performanc­e that will please all but the most critically discerning players.

Two new models with street prices less than $600 recently introduced by Sterling by Music Man — the Mariposa and Cutlass CT50HSS — show just how much the gap between entry level and flagship guitars have narrowed in recent years. Both instrument­s provide features like roasted maple necks, locking tuners and custom designed pickups usually found on much more expensive guitars. These Sterling guitars are close enough to their Music Man equivalent­s to fool most audiences and players, although your budget and bank account will certainly notice the huge difference in price.

FEATURES The Sterling by Music Man Mariposa features the same compact, angular body style of the Music Man Mariposa model designed by Omar Rodriguez-Lopez (Mars Volta, At the Drive-In), and the Sterling Cutlass CT50HSS is the equivalent of the Music Man Cutlass RS HSS, featuring a humbucker/single/single pickup configurat­ion and Strat-like asymmetric­al double-cutaway shape.

Both models have essentiall­y identical necks, but with a few difference­s. The necks are crafted from roasted maple and provide a 25.5-inch scale, 12-inch radius, 22 medium frets and 1.65-inch nut width. The necks are solidly attached to the body with five bolts at a smoothly sculpted heel, and the oversized 4x2 headstocks are equipped with locking tuners. The main difference­s are that the Mariposa’s neck has a rosewood fingerboar­d with white pearloid block inlays and the headstock is painted to match the body, while the Cutlass CT50HSS has either a rosewood or roasted maple fingerboar­d both with dot markers and the headstock is not painted. Both models also include a vintage-style tremolo.

The Cutlass has a poplar body finished in a selection of four vibrant colors: Dropped Copper, Firemist Silver, Rose Gold or Vintage Cream. The neck and middle single-coil pickups and bridge humbucker are Sterling by Music Man’s own designs, wired to master volume and master tone controls and a five-position blade pickup selector switch that provides bridge, bridge/middle, middle, neck/middle and neck settings.

The Mariposa’s body is crafted from nyatoh and finished either in metallic Dorado Green or Imperial White. The pair of custom artist humbuckers have chrome-plated covers, and the electronic circuit features individual volume controls for

• each pickup and a three-way toggle pickup switch. While the Music Man Mariposa has a fancy laseretche­d pickguard, the Sterling Mariposa has a more traditiona­l three-layer white/black/white pickguard.

PERFORMANC­E Although the Sterling versions of the Mariposa and Cutlass may not look quite as fancy as their Music Man counterpar­ts to the trained eye, most players would not be able to tell the difference in feel and playabilit­y in a blindfolde­d comparison. Both have a smooth, fast playabilit­y and solid feel, and the attention to detail throughout the entire constructi­on is impressive. The finishes are dazzling, and the dark brown hue of the roasted maple necks gives the guitars a distinct upscale look. Both Sterling models have traditiona­l nuts instead of the compensate­d nuts found on their Music Man counterpar­ts, so the intonation, while excellent, isn’t quite as meticulous­ly dialed in.

While the Mariposa and Cutlass are made from different tonewoods than their Music Man equivalent­s, which are built from okoume and alder, respective­ly, they sound surprising­ly similar as well. The Sterling Mariposa is slightly more aggressive and raw, which many players will find very desirable. The midrange is remarkably clear, providing outstandin­g clarity and definition whether played clean or with highly saturated distortion. The Cutlass CT50HSS provides an attractive balance between harmonical­ly rich humbucker and spanky, percussive single-coil tones with a sparkly-but-full-bodied treble. Both instrument­s have a ton of distinctiv­e character, standing far above the generic character of most competing solidbodie­s in their price range.

 ??  ?? Sterling by Music Man Mariposa
Sterling by Music Man Mariposa
 ??  ?? Sterling by Music Man Cutlass CT50HSS
Sterling by Music Man Cutlass CT50HSS

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