If you’re even marginally into
guitar gear, you won’t have any
trouble envisioning the vast conceptual
chasm that opened before
us when we decided to do a series
of stories on guitar makeovers for
this issue. Even for players interested
in the same style of music,
there are a zillion different cool
mods you could do to a zillion
different types of guitars. Factor in
all the genre and subgenre possibilities,
and it gets even messier. If
we tried to please, say, the hordes
of blues and blues-rock players
in our audience, which “canvas”
should we start with—a Les
Paul? A Strat? A Tele? Or one of
the many boutique variants that
blend elements of all three? You
get the idea. It was a bit daunting.
That said, we’ve got plenty
of makeover ideas for our own
gear, not to mention lots of
gear-crazy friends. So we were
confident we’d find some cool
stories. We just knew we had
to choose things that were
unique enough that even guitar-tweaking
junkies who’ve seen it
all would at the very least think,
“That’s not for me, but y’know
what—that’s still damn cool!”
To that end, we thought Ben
Friedman’s story of getting a
call from his art-collector friend
about an autograph-scribbled
’80s Paul Reed Smith for sale
on an antique auctioneer’s website
(“Blasphemy or Alchemy?”
p. 56) would appeal to more
traditional players because of
its quasi classicist bent. But the
company’s reputation with up-and-coming players in heavier
genres, as well as the story’s
interesting historical considerations,
should also render
it interesting to hard-rock or
metal fans, or anyone else who’s
struggled over whether to mod
an old piece of gear. Thanks for
sharing your adventure, Ben!
I didn’t originally intend
to put myself into any of the
makeover stories—you get quite
enough of me on this page
every month as it is. But it just
so happened that I was scoping
out a Squier Vintage Modified
Telecaster Custom to upgrade at
the very time that someone else
on the PG staff suggested the
makeover theme. Knowing we
needed a project that fell in the
middle of the makeover-intensity
scale, I eventually figured,
“Hey, I’m having Bill [Hook,
author of “Surf-Twang Tweak-a-
Rama,” p. 66] do stuff you don’t
see everyday, so why not?”
Think Yuri Landman’s beat-to-hell guitar on the cover of this issue is
freaky? You ain’t seen nothin’. Even the four totally whack instruments
above aren’t the most out-there designs from his restless, fearless mind.
Brings new meaning to the term “experimental,” doesn’t it?
My whole project got a lot
more intense than swapping
pickups and modding the
ashtray bridge to work with a
Bigsby just when it was supposed
to be done. One of my
pickup choices just wasn’t sending
my ears into fits of ecstasy
like I wanted, so I decided late
in the game to buy a completely
different type that required getting
a new pickguard to mount
everything to. I want to publicly
thank everyone who rolled
with the punches to make it all
come together lightning-fast in
order to meet our deadline.
Wayne Richman at Tone-
Guard pickguards was incredible.
When I called him about
buying one of his anodized-aluminum
pickguards for a Tele
Custom, but with a Jazzmaster-pickup
neck route—a design
for which he didn’t have a CAD
file yet—he didn’t even blink.
After seeing a pic of my guitar,
he opened his Fender Tele
Deluxe rendering file, called
me up, and knew exactly which
areas to have me measure. He
tweaked his file’s measurements
a bit, then marshaled his NASA-approved
vendors to make sure
something that normally takes
weeks happened over a weekend.
That’s some serious hustle!
Curtis Novak got me his fantastic
pickups in record time, too.
Mr. Hook then busted a move
on the guitar the same day I
got the pickguard. And last,
but definitely not least, senior
art editor Meghan Molumby
turned around and shot great
pics on a dime. Thanks to all of
you for kicking major ass!
We could’ve gone many
different routes for the third,
more extreme makeover story,
but the provident timing—and
extremely unique nature—of Yuri Landman and Bart
Hopkin’s new book, Nice Noise,
pretty much made “Flying Double Dutchman Crunch” a shoo-in. If you visit
issuu.com/yurilandman and
see some of the crazy stringed
instruments Landman specializes
in, you’ll quickly realize
that the project he details for us
is actually pretty tame relative
to what he normally does. Yuri
was a pleasure to work with and
didn’t hesitate to help when I
called out of the blue to recruit
him for the task. Thanks, Yuri!
So what about you? I’m
guessing you’re eager to share
your own mods, your dream
mods, and your opinions of the
ones we settled on. And, actually,
we do welcome your input.
Hell, if the stuff so many of you
tell us about via email and on
Facebook is any indication of
the wider Premier Guitar audience,
you guys have some pretty
damn ingenious and insightful
ideas. So consider this your
invitation. What are your most
adventurous makeover stories?
We’d love to hear them on our
Facebook page, on Twitter, or
via email.
Shawn Hammond
shawn@premierguitar.com