Monday, February 13, 2006

The Jimmie/Jimmy Vaughan Tex-Mex Fender Stratocaster Review


I've been looking for just the right Fender(tm) Stratocaster(tm). My heart wants a nice , Custom Shop American Strat(tm), my wallet wants a Squier(tm) Strat.

Let me begin by saying that the American-made Strats and Telecasters are superb, and that there is no substitute for a Custom Shop or high-end Strat/Tele if you're looking for a high-end instrument. With that said, I've been playing an extremely wide variety of Stratocasters for quite some time now. My big question has been, how can I get just the right playability, feel, price, and sound for less than $1000US??? This review answers lots of those questions for me, and I hope will help you, too.

My Previous Strat; I had the basic Squier Strat with the maple fretboard for quite a while. It was extremely well-made, very reliable, OK tuning, and OK intonation (it could not be adjusted to the point where the tempered tuning I use would stick...). The neck was a very soft "C" shape, and the body was the lightest Strat I've ever played (it was even neck-heavy when you played it with a relaxed strap position). I made several great pop tunes with that guitar. I sincerely think that the little black Squier strat is absolutely phenominal for a beginner, or for someone who wants a Strat to take to the beach on vacation (don't get beer or sand on your Custom Shop Strat!). The maple fretboard variety is a favorite of mine. I like the feel, the hardness of the wood, and I like the fine grain it offers for pitch-bending. I sold the Squier to a beginning guitarist, and she's havin' a blast with it (I think it's great when guitars live multiple lives! Do they have Karma??? If they do, that particular Strat should be great to go - it's been wonderful.)

OK... now to the part about my next Strat... enter Deus Ex Machina

I had been playing a nice Olympic White (maple fretboard) Jimmie Vaughan Stratocaster at my local guitar store – on and off for an entire year – it was like I was magnetized to it – it drew me every time I came into the store.

Quick Opinion: I've played the Jimmie Vaughan many times over the past several months - verdict: An Absolute Steal!!!!!! It plays like an un-tinted-maple-neck American Strat, handles and feels like any Standard American strat I've played, and has a great, growly, low-noise sound only found on guitars with Tex-Mex pickups.
The picture of the Oly white Strat above is similar to the Jimmy Bear Strat (although the real thing is acually a more pleasant off-white and less of a beige like the picture indicates). I liked it so much that I borrowed some cash and bought the floor-model example. It is the nicest and best-playing Fender I have ever owned.

Free Shipping and more information about the wonderful Jimmie Vaughan Fender Stratocaster here at GuitarCenter.com

Playability: The neck is a light "u" or "v" type of shape, is easy to grasp for large or small hands, and has the quick feel of sealed satin hard maple. Near the headstock, the back profile of the neck is a deeper “v”, and as you go towards the body, the neck softens to a “u.” The neck is a delight, similar to the un-tinted-neck $1200 Strat variety, and is not found on any currently-available non-US Strat that I have been able to find. The body is medium in weight - not too heavy, and not as light as some of the lightweight ash Strats. The JV Strat is much more comfortable than the '70s Strats I played as a kid. Tuning-wise, Fairly aggressive string bending did not pull it out of tune.

Sound: Rox your sox!!! Nice midrange, not too noisy, clean when clean, aggressive when played distorted, and sings the blues (especially through the Fender Hot Rod at the guitar shop) like an old pro! Far surpasses Standard and Highway 1 Strats in the sound department... The Jimmie Vaughan Strat is set up with .one volume knob and two tone knobs (neck to bridge if viewed from the player’s side of the guitar).

Value: This is a $999 guitar in value (not 'retail', 'street'). Period. The sound, quality of make, and appointments are top-notch and represent the Mexican Strat pinnacle. (NOTE: I've not had the pleasure of trying out the new 60th Anniversary Strat yet. I suspect it will be a really nice alternative to the Standard. {new window} ) If you can afford the JV Strat, go for it. You'd have to step up to American Deluxe or Custom Shop to get a more satisfying instrument.

Features: Nearly every feature makes this a 'working musician's Strat'. The pickups: great; the vintage tuners: just fine; the neck: good for hours at a time;, the trem, bridge, and weight: just fine; the paint finish: flawless. The gig bag is a nice touch (although I have a Freedom hard shell case for this wonderful instrument). The Schaller-strap-lock-compatible strap buttons are a really nice feature. I’ve got a nice strap that is set up for Schallers, and I can use it on this Strat without installing new buttons. The neck plate is the four-screw variety and does not have micro-tilt.

More about the tuners: I removed the guitar-store-played Fender 250Ls (stock strings) and cleaned everything up for carnauba waxing and re-stringing. I bought some 3350L strings (Fender stainless-steel light .09-> bullets) and restrung the guitar. The tuners are the delightful vintage tuners, with the scooped-bean-shape and the old-style rear covers. The strings are mounted in the machine head stalk much like those on Fender basses – you place an end of the string down into a hole in the stalk, bend it down in the flat slot, and turn the machine key until the string winds along the stalk. These are fine tuners and are easy to get threaded for the start. I did not wind the entire string on the stalk, but cut a few inches from the end. The strings tended to run sharp as I “broke them in” with gentle pulling and string bending. After about five or six tunings and pulling, the tuning became rock-solid and the guitar has not detuned at all in a day or so.

Wishes: The one-ply pick guard on the one at the Guitar Center is flat and firm, but unexpectedly cheap of Fender. A nice white/black/white or pearloid pick guard would have been more appropriate. If I had the guts to yank the pick guard and put one of the super-duper Terrapin Guitars Custom Pick guards (THE BEST pick guards, fit like/better than factory)(Opens new window), I'd do it in a skinny minute. The neck-bolt plate should have an "F", or "Fender", or something on it. The plain neck-bolt plate is surprisingly plain-looking on this great Strat.

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4 Comments:

At 7:36 AM, Anonymous Chris said...

This is a great very balanced review unLike some on Harmony Central that are too gushing and unbalanced. It gives the real world facts. This guys done his homework! I'm certainly going to check one out. I'm a slide player currently using an American Fat Strat Texas Special strung with 15 to 56 strings with a rewound humbucker (Bareknuckle Crawler) and a replacement Allparts SRV profile neck I also use a Chris George Custom Variax which is set up for slide and strung with 15 to 56 acoustic strings. I'd like to go back to guitar school and learn some conventional guitar and more theory. I've tried many guitars and always come back to Strats. I don't play conventionally as a rule so don't want to spend too much on another guitar. The JV seems to fit the bill nicely.
Thanks

Chris

 
At 10:40 AM, Blogger mark said...

Hi Jim, came across your review after doing a 2-sec Gooogle search - I have a few Us Strats from the past 20 years already as well as some other stuff and was trying to decide whether to go for a Classic 60's Player or a Hot Rod but then saw the JV on the Fender site...
Looks like a good compromise between the 2, as I wanted medium jumbo frets, funky pick ups and Candy Apple - the 60's doesn't come in that colour and the similar version has the wrong frets - short of a custom shop job, this looks like the way to - only thing is I'll have to take the lacquer off the neck like my VG, Eric Johnson and US Plus Deluxes!! Shame they didn't have a rosewood board.
Hope you are still enjoying the beast and thanks for posting a review - I agree with the other; it's balanced and well written. Cheers! Mark

 
At 5:39 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

I have owned a JV Strat for about 2 years now. The neck is like "butter" as they say. I played many guitars before I decided on this one. It is one of those things where I just new it was the right guitar for me as soon as I played it. My only complaint is the 1 ply pick guard. That can be easily changed. Probably the best value for the price out there. I liked it better than alot of the U.S. $1000 Strats!

Terry

 
At 1:46 PM, Blogger scot.gormley said...

Scot Gormley
I have four JV Tex Mex strats, and I love them all. I had a very rare, custom shop Lacewood strat with a figured maple neck ($6,000 list price) that I never could get a decent sound out of. I sold that guitar and bought several JV's. If I had my ultimate preference, the neck would be a 12" radius with 6100 super jumbo frets, but I believe most people will love the 9.5" JV radius and the medium jumbo frets. The pickups on the guitar sound great to me, and like the fact that the bridge pickup has a tone control. Overall, these guitars are light, well balanced, resonant, and very traditionally strat-like. The vintage tremolo with a full block is excellent, too.

 

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