Guitar World

Pinky Blinder

SCHECTER GUITAR RESEARCH MACHINE GUN KELLY PT

- By Paul Riario

ON THE SURFACE, Machine Gun Kelly (or MGK) appears much like window dressing as an artist. With rockstar looks and a skyrocketi­ng career from rapper to pop-punk upstart, it’s dismissive­ly easy to surmise his entire musical persona feels a bit cutand-pasted, which leads you to wonder whether it’s all an act (I mean, he used to wear a vial of Megan Fox’s blood around his neck, which, I guess, proves he’s committed to something or someone). But MGK is a legit musician, and for what it’s worth, he’s one of the few stars who seriously plays guitar and is savvy enough to take a backseat by recruiting fret-burning British guitarist Sophie Lloyd for his tour, who adds a great deal of musical energy to his performanc­es. Despite all this, his surging Hollywood celebrity garnered him a signature guitar with Schecter (in a Ticket to My Downfall hot pink finish) and since then, MGK stoked a lot of excitement by appearing on his Mainstream Sellout album cover with the same thematic guitar in a new colorway — raising hopes that this newly unreleased six-string would soon be available to his wildly popular fanbase or for players who dig a super-streamline­d T-style guitar with eye-catching graphics. Well, the wait is over: this Guitar Center exclusive Schecter Guitar Research Machine Gun Kelly PT in satin black with hot pink line graphics is here and yours to flaunt and rip some tasty licks on.

FEATURES If you want to get your hands on one, you should know this particular MGK PT model is available only through Guitar Center. It’s no secret the music retailer has long been partnering with top guitar manufactur­ers like Schecter to design uniquely spec’d guitars that are exclusive only to them. And here, the Machine Gun Kelly PT in hot pink line graphics is exactly the same as the other MGK PT (in Downfall Pink) with just a few cosmetic difference­s. Outside of the black satin finish that covers the whole guitar, flecks of hot pink stand out, starting with the line graphics on the body, hot pink “XX” inlay at the 12th fret, pink logo and pink splash at the headstock’s lower peak, and a hot pink open-coil Schecter Pasadena Plus pickup in its Schecter PT-H bridge. First and foremost, the MGK PT feels solidly constructe­d with an alder body and a Canadian rock maple neck with a dark ebony fretboard, 22 jumbo frets, a Graph Tech XL TUSQ nut and Schecter locking tuners. Its bolt-on neck is finely contoured at the heel for easy access to higher fret registers and a thin “C” profile neck shape along with a flat 14–inch fretboard radius makes playing it a breeze. When you’re ready to hit the stage, the MGK PT becomes alive or dead with a sole master volume and kill switch.

PERFORMANC­E Most of us can agree there won’t be any lukewarm reaction to the MGK PT guitar. It will likely be “Oh, hell no” to “That guitar is FIRE” — and probably nothing in between. Still, I’ll wager that for most of my Millennial and Gen-Z brethren, it’ll be more of the latter. And while it’s not a guitar I would gravitate to currently, a younger version of myself would be all over it. One thing I noticed is that the line graphics create a three-dimensiona­l optical illusion when looking down between the strings, which I thought was striking. Moving on from appearance­s, everything else about the MGK PT’s playabilit­y and tone is topnotch. With a tiny tweak of its carbon-fiber-reinforced truss rod to straighten the neck, the guitar plays effortless­ly and in tune with the magical trifecta of locking tuners, jumbo frets and low action. But the showstoppe­r for me is the lone Schecter Pasadena Plus pickup that combines punchiness and warmth in a high-output pickup. It’s a surprising do-all humbucker that is perfectly voiced where it’s neither bright nor too dark but finely focused for tighter mids with a clean bite. And something you don’t often find on a guitar like this is the master volume can be gently rolled off for articulate cleans without losing any treble response. I gotta hand it to MGK for relying on this back-tobasics approach of going from full output to clean at just a simple roll of the knob. The kill-switch inclusion is cool, but I’m also shocked MGK went for the old-school selector rather than a modern kill-switch button (but I’m assuming he’s just shutting the guitar off rather than going for the stutter effect), although I wish the kill-switch was closer to the cutaway a la Tom Morello’s “Arm the Homeless” guitar. The MGK PT is a guitar that makes a big statement, but one that is clear and concise.

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