steve10358
New member
Yesterday, I received the Suhr Custom Classic T I ordered.
It's a partial twin to the Classic S I ordered last year. Thin skin, jumbo stainless, vintage c medium on a roasted maple neck, rosewood, JS sig on the headstock, traditional bridge, bucker route hidden where you'd expect it, etc. Main differences being the T is Ash with 9-12" radius, the S is Alder with 10-14" radius.
All sorts of "right" in 2 packages. Both guitars have seemingly endless sustain, play like butter and offer the type of tones you'd expect. My favorite thing is both guitars have some punch to them. They sound massive and literally ring like pianos. Again, it usually takes me a minute to feel like a new guitar is "mine" but the S-style was the fastest I've bonded with a guitar since my EBMM Axis in 2001. The Tele shares all the same attributes and I feel totally comfortable on it already. In other words- instruments in every sense of the word. Very thankful.
It's a partial twin to the Classic S I ordered last year. Thin skin, jumbo stainless, vintage c medium on a roasted maple neck, rosewood, JS sig on the headstock, traditional bridge, bucker route hidden where you'd expect it, etc. Main differences being the T is Ash with 9-12" radius, the S is Alder with 10-14" radius.
All sorts of "right" in 2 packages. Both guitars have seemingly endless sustain, play like butter and offer the type of tones you'd expect. My favorite thing is both guitars have some punch to them. They sound massive and literally ring like pianos. Again, it usually takes me a minute to feel like a new guitar is "mine" but the S-style was the fastest I've bonded with a guitar since my EBMM Axis in 2001. The Tele shares all the same attributes and I feel totally comfortable on it already. In other words- instruments in every sense of the word. Very thankful.