If you’re not well-versed in the structure of PRS’s expansive lineup, the S2 instruments might seem to occupy a curious place in the line. They offer a more affordable path to U.S.-made PRS guitars. But to the uninitiated, the S2 Series can seem nearly as fancy as the Core series in many respects, and the guitars are generally distinguished by less ornate top woods than anything else. When it comes to playability and craft, you’re definitely not sacrificing much. So it goes with this new S2 Special Semi-Hollow.
It’s been just shy of three decades since the first semi-hollow PRS came out, and they remain very appealing and intriguing instruments. The semi-hollow construction offers a truly different voice and feel, and the extra airspace is definitely heard and felt in this new S2 Special Semi-Hollow. It’s built with full-size 58/15 LT humbuckers in the neck and bridge positions , plus a Narrowfield pickup in the middle, which creates a bounty of voices via a 5-way blade switch and coil taps. With a PRS Patented Tremolo and Phase III locking tuners in the mix, the new S2 Special Semi-Hollow is pretty much ready for anything.
Bird Brain
The S2 Special Semi-Hollow is capped by a top made of figured solid maple, with a body fashioned from chambered solid mahogany. It features an asymmetrical bevel around its edges rather than the gently arched top of violin-carve PRS models. That’s a cost-saving element, but it also makes its own stylistic statement and may well lend something unique to the guitar’s voice in certain situations. The chambering brings the otherwise beefy construction in at around 7.4 pounds (a spec that’s likely to vary somewhat from guitar to guitar).
The glued-in mahogany neck is topped with a 22-fret rosewood fretboard with traditional PRS bird inlays. It’s carved to the company’s long-standing Pattern Regular profile (more PRS-speak for a rounded C carve that should be comfortable for most hands). Further cost savings are achieved via the scarfed headstock and heel joint. Specs-wise, the neck is built around PRS’s signature dimensions: a 25" scale length, 10" fingerboard radius, and a nut width of 1 21/32", which famously represents a middle ground between Fender and Gibson specs.
PRS applies a high-gloss nitro finish to the model—a brilliant lake blue on our test guitar that really makes the subtly flamed maple top pop. Black amber, dark cherry sunburst, faded gray black purple burst, faded gray black blue burst (say that 10 times fast), and fire red burst are also available, all with either matching or complementary headstocks. The nickel-plated hardware should hold no great surprises for PRS aficionados: the floating PRS Patented Tremolo is one of the smoother and more successful evolutions of the original Fender Stratocaster vibrato concept from 1954, and the Phase III locking tuners are a proven and time-tested component.
Sound View
The S2 Special Semi-Hollow’s sonic capabilities are broad thanks to the complement of electronics, including the three Maryland-made pickups. The popular 58/15 LTs live unmistakably on the vintage PAF-style pickup spectrum. Both have dedicated mini-toggle coil-tap switches, and the front pickup is reversed from the standard orientation, putting the coil with the adjustable poles on the bridge side simply because, as PRS tells us, “We tested the pickups in both orientations and simply preferred it in this setting.”
Between them is a Narrowfield humbucker that’s only used for the Stratocaster-like 2 and 4 positions on the 5-way blade switch, which means you still get the neck-and-bridge combination that many three-pickup guitars leave out. Between the 5-way and the dual mini-toggles, there are 12 pickup selections in total, all governed by master volume and tone controls.
If the S2 is the “stripped-down” entry to PRS’s USA-made guitars, there’s no evidence of it in the fit and finish, which is what we’ve come to expect from PRS. Sure, it lacks the maple faux-binding around the body top and the bound fingerboard that bring the bling to fancier models, and the birds are acrylic rather than mother of pearl or abalone, but it’s all very well put together and is perfectly playable right out of the included gig bag.
Triple Threat
Hooked up to a Tone King Falcon 1x10, a Bassman head and 2x12 cab, and a Fractal FM9 modeler, the S2 Special Semi-Hollow proved flexible and adaptable to many amps and musical styles. Output from the 58/15 LT humbuckers generally walks the line between clarity and articulation in clean and edge-of-breakup tones and the warmth and thickness of vintage-wind humbuckers. With overdrive, they still bite and wail with the same sense of balance, bending to whatever gain and saturation you throw at them without losing their essence.
It’s a truism of sorts that split humbuckers never quite sound like single-coils, but PRS has gone a long way toward rectifying that by adding a resistor between the deleted coil when you throw each pickup’s mini-toggle—leaving a little of the dumped coil-in signal to fatten the tone slightly. The result still might not sound exactly like a good Telecaster or Stratocaster pickup, but it’s an excellent representation of those tones when the songs demand it, and I’m doubtful anyone in the audience will protest the difference at your next gig. The real secret sauce, however, comes from the Narrowfield in the middle position. And although you never hear it on its own, it pairs well with either pickup in full or tapped mode to help nail those funky, scooped, wiry, in-between sounds. While the ability to flick among so many tones is a pleasure, it can feel fiddly jumping between favorite settings on the fly, but that seems like a small price to pay for this much utility.
The Verdict
Top marks are due to PRS for packing so much versatility into the S2 Special Semi-Hollow. Construction quality, fit, and finish are all exceptional as well, and if the contemporary looks and mixed-triple-pickups suit your tastes, the more accessible, if still significant, $2,599 price will represent real value to the right player.