Shred like Shifty with the Fender "Chris Shiflett" Telecaster Deluxe! Enter before January 29, 2024 for your chance to win.
Win Chris Shiflett's Signature Fender Telecaster Deluxe!
Enjoy the videos and music you love, upload original content, and share it all with friends, family, and the world on YouTube.Chris Shiflett TelecasterĀ® Deluxe
Chris Shiflett has his feet firmly planted in two worlds, with impeccable punk/hard rock credentials as longtime guitarist in the Foo Fighters and with an authentic love for country, as heard in Chris Shiflett & the Dead Peasants. His abiding love for the Telecaster guitar and for huge humbucking sound comes together in one kickass instrument with his name on it - the Chris Shiflett Telecaster Deluxe. Modeled on his favorite '72 Tele Deluxe, it's an especially affordable beauty that rocks hard with authentic Fender tone.
For these new recreations, Fender focuses on the little things that make original golden-era Fenders objects of obsession.
If thereās one thing players love more than new guitars, itās old guitarsāthe unique feel, the design idiosyncrasies, the quirks in finish that all came from the pre-CNC era of instrument manufacturing. These characteristics become the stuff of legend, passed on through the years via rumors and anecdotes in shops, forums, and community networks.
Itās a little difficult to separate fact from fiction given these guitars arenāt easy to get your hands on. Fender Telecasters manufactured in the 1950s and 1960s sell for upwards of $20,000. But old is about to become new again. Fenderās American Vintage II series features 12 year-specific electric guitar and bass models from over two decades, spanning 1951 to 1977, that replicate most specs on their original counterparts, but are produced with modern technologies that ensure uniform build and feel.
Chronologically, the series begins and ends, fittingly, with the Telecasterāstarting with the butterscotch blonde, blackguard 1951 Telecaster (built with an ash body, one-piece U-shaped maple neck, and 7.25" radius fretboard) and ending with the 1977 Telecaster Custom, which features a C-shaped neck, a CuNiFe magnet-based Wide Range humbucker in the neck position, and a single-coil at the bridge. The rest of the series spans the highlights of Fenderās repertoire: the 1954 Precision Bass, 1957 Stratocaster in ash or alder, 1960 Precision Bass, 1961 Stratocaster, 1963 Telecaster, 1966 Jazz Bass, 1966 Jazzmaster, 1972 Tele Thinline, 1973 Strat, and 1975 Telecaster Deluxe. The 1951 Telecaster, 1957 Strat, 1961 Strat, and 1966 Jazz Bass will also be offered as left-handed models. Street prices run from $2,099 to $2,399.
Fender '72 American Vintage II Telecaster Thinline Demo | First Look
Specād To Please
Every guitar in the series sports the eraās 7.25" radius fretboard, a mostly abandoned spec found on Custom Shop instrumentsāMexico-made Vintera models, and Fenderās Artist Series guitars like the Jimmy Page, Jason Isbell, and Albert Hammond Jr. models. Most modern Fenders feature a 9.5" radius, while radii on Gibsons reach upwards of 12". Videos experimenting with the 7.25" radiusā playability pull in tens of thousands of viewers, suggesting both a modern fascination with and a lack of exposure to the radius among some younger and less experienced players.
T.J. Osborne of the Brothers Osborne picks an American Vintage II 1966 Jazzmaster in Dakota red.
Bringing back the polarizing 7.25" radius across the entire series is a gamble, and itās been nearly five years since Fender released year-specific models. But Fender executive vice president Justin Norvell says that two years ago when the Fender brain trust was conceptualizing the American Vintage II line, they decided the time was right to āgo back to the well.ā
āWeāve been doing the same [models], the same years, over and over again for 30 years,ā says Norvell. āWe really wanted to change the line and expand it into some new things that we hadnāt done before and pick some different years that we thought were cool.ā
āIt takes a lot of doing to go back in time and sort of uncover the secret-sauce recipes.āāSteve Thomas, Fender
To decide on which years to produce, Fender drew from what Norvell calls a āhuge cauldron of informationā from Custom Shop master builders to collectors with vintage models to former employees from the 1950s and 1960s. The hands-on manufacturing of Fenderās golden years meant guitars produced within the same year would have marked differences in design and finish. So, the team had to procure multiple versions of the same yearās guitar to decide which models to replicate. Norvell says some purists would advocate for the ācleanest, most down-the-middle kind of variant,ā while others would push for more esoteric and rare versions. Norvell says that ultimately, the team picked the models that they felt best represented āthe throughline of history on our platforms.ā
Simple and agile, the Fender Precision Bassāhere in its new American Vintage II ā54 incarnationāearned its reputation in the hands of Bill Black, James Jamerson, Donald āDuckā Dunn, and other foundational players.
Norvell says the American Vintage II series was developed, in part, in response to calls to reproduce vintage guitars. Just like with classic cars, he says, people are passionate about year-specific guitars. Plus, American Vintage II fits perfectly with the pandemic-stoked yearning for bygone times. āFor some people, these specific years are representative of experiences they had when they were first playing guitar, or a favorite artist that played guitars from these eras,ā says Norvell. āThese are touchstones for those stories, and that makes them very desirable.ā
Cracking Codes
Fenderās electric guitar research and design team, led by director Steve Thomas, dug through the companyās archive of original drawings and designsādating all the way back to Leo Fenderās original shop in Fullerton, California. They found detailed notes, including some documenting body woods that changed mid-year on certain models. Halfway through 1956, for example, Stratocaster bodies switched from ash to alder. That meant the American Vintage II 1957 Stratocaster needed to be alder, too. That, in turn, meant ensuring enough alder was on hand to fulfill production needs.
Among the seriesā Stratocaster recreations is this 1973-style instrument, with an ash body, maple C-profile neck, rosewood fretboard, and the companyās Pure Vintage single-coils.
Thomas and his team discovered another piece of the production puzzle when researching how pickups for that same 1957 Strat were made. āWe realized that if we incorporated a little bit more pinch control on the winders, we could more effectively mimic the way pickups would have been hand-wound in the ā50s,ā says Thomas. āIt takes a lot of doing to go back in time and sort of uncover the secret-sauce recipes.ā
Thomas proudly calls the guitars āsome of the best instruments weāve ever made here in the Fender plant,ā pointing to the level of detail put into design features, including more delicate lacquer finishes which take longer to cure and dry, and vintage-correct tweed cases for some guitars. New pickups were incorporated in the series, like a reworking of Seth Loverās famed CuNiFe Wide Range humbuckers, which were discontinued around 1981. Even more minute details, like the width of 12th fret dots and the material used for them, were labored over. Three different models in the line feature clay dot inlays at unique, year-specific spacings.
Ironically, modern CNC manufacturing now makes these design quirks consistent features in mass-produced instruments. While the hand-crafted guitars from the ā50s and ā60s varied a lot from instrument to instrument. āEverything needs to be located perfectly, and it wasnāt necessarily back in the day,ā says Norvell. āNow, it can be.ā
Donāt Look Back
With this new series so firmly planted in the rose-tinted past, Fender does run the risk of netting only vintage-obsessed players. But Norvell says the team, despite being sticklers for period-correct detail, sought to strike a balance between vintage specs, practicality, and playability. The 1957 Stratocaster, for example, has a 5-way switch rather than the originalās 3-way switch. Norvell also asserts that the āergonomicā old-school radius feels great when chording. āIt might not be [right for] a shred machine, but it feels great and effortless.ā
The 1966 Jazz Bass is also represented, shown here in a left-handed version.
Norvell also pushes back on the notion that Fender is playing it safe by indulging nostalgia and leaning on their past successes. He says that while the vintage models are some of the most desirable on the market, the team āpurposely did not stick to the safe bets,ā citing unusual year models like the 1954 P Bass and the 1973 Stratocaster.
Thereās a good reason why anything that hails back to āthe good olā daysā hits home with every generation. Weāre constantly plagued by a belief that what came before is better than what weāve got now. But with the American Vintage II series, Fender makes the case that guitars from the ā50s, ā60s, and ā70s can very easily be a relevant part of the 2020s.How sweeping generalizations, a toy tape recorder, and a Gibson freebie loom large for the cosmic progger.