Intro: This year's best
12 months of great guitars, awesome amps and loads more
In many ways, 2013 was the year that those folks that build
the planks of wood we spend our lives obsessing over got back to basics.
Take the Cabronita. Fender struck gold with a design that
looked like it was sketched on the back of a cigarette packet in 1959,
producing a new-old style of guitar that we all wanted and yet was barely a
hop, skip and a jump away from existing designs.
So what have we learned? Well, guitarists still like
beautifully put together products with a human touch - Gibson Memphis goes from
strength to strength for that exact reason. We're all happy to pay big money
for an instrument that has that vital mix of sophistication and the ability to
rock the world off its axis.
Solid woods put to good use, valve amps that can survive in
modern gigging environments and the subtle integration of technical advances
into traditional shapes and concepts: that's what we want.
And 2013 has provided. Check out our pick of the best guitar
gear of the year, and let us know what we've missed and what your picks of this
year's products were on Facebook and Twitter.
We'll see you in 2014 for a whole lot more guitar
goodness...
1. Solidbody of the year
Squier Vintage Modified Cabronita Telecaster with Bigsby £346
2013 was the year of the Cabronita. Fender's street-smart,
uber-stylish design has been everywhere this year, and has managed to make its
way on to almost every guitarist's wish list.
So why are we shouting about a Sqiuer version of the
Cabronita? Well, this is a guitar that encompasses everything that the
Cabronita does well - the look and that unshakable vibe - plus some extras
(that Bigsby), at a price point that almost anybody could afford.
Superficially, the Squier and Fender-badged Cabs look very
similar indeed. Unlike the Custom Shop models, there's no relic'ing, no TV
Jones pickups and no S-1 switching. Instead, you get one of Fender's own
Fideli'Tron pickups - no prizes for guessing from where their inspiration is
drawn - and, erm, an extra fret.
2. Semi-acoustic of the year
Guild Starfire IV £1006
Now, we're aware that the Starfire IV has a serious flaw: a
bridge that needs pinning. But we forgive it. Why?
Well, it's still a serious
ES-335 alternative that's just one mod away from greatness, especially when you consider the fact that current street prices mean that you can get two Guilds for the price of one Gibson.
ES-335 alternative that's just one mod away from greatness, especially when you consider the fact that current street prices mean that you can get two Guilds for the price of one Gibson.
Sure, it's made in Korea, and the siren song of an
American-built guitar will forever drag many of us into troubled financial
waters, but the reality is that it would be impossible for Guild to bring a
guitar of this quality in at this price point were it crafted in the USA.
Instead, the company has breathed new life into an old
design that still has much to say in a contemporary context and is better value
than ever. Welcome back!
3. Acoustic of the year
Sigma OMR-21 £383
How do Sigma do it? We're not really sure, but they keep on
turning out fantastic guitars at prices that just shouldn't be possible.
The OMR-21 feels like a child's travel guitar feel to this
writer at first. Still, the nonetheless fully formed 14-fret OMR-21 exudes
class and heritage.
It has a solid Sitka spruce top, a satin neck, back and
headstock crafted from laminated Indian rosewood and the mahogany neck appears
of a high visual grade. It's beautifully understated: the dark
tortoiseshell-style binding has no inner purflings, and its small tortie
pickguard gives it real sophistication.
4. Bass of the year
Fender Pawn Shop Bass VI £826
Originally designed as the ultimate baritone guitar to
combat the monopoly of the market by Danelectro's U2, the Fender Bass VI was
soon adopted by bass players (particularly in Britain), because it was tuned
fully in the bass octave with a very tight, short scale.
The original 1961 design underwent a few mods for the
revised model in 1963, but nothing quite so drastic as we now see on this
eye-catching and much-simplified Pawn Shop version. It's awesome. We love it.
5. Head of the year
Hughes and Kettner GrandMeister 36 £1129
Probably the best amp you'll see this year, if not this
decade, we reckon the new GrandMeister 36 is totally unbeatable at the price
and heading for amp superstardom.
Four channels. Boost. Onboard digital effects. Red Box DI.
Noise gate. Five output levels down to zero for silent recording. If that's not
enough to get you salivating, how about total MIDI control, not just of every
switched functions, but all the pots too?
That's what Hughes & Kettner has shoehorned into the
same slim steel chassis, with its trademark side-lit Perspex control panel.
6. Best combo of the year
Blackstar ID:260TVP £459
From a distance, this 2x12 ID:260TVP combo looks traditional
enough, but closer inspection reveals plenty of action on the front panel.
Basically, this amp has it all...
At the preamp end, you dial in a basic tonality with the
voice control, with six Blackstar flavours available, ranging from virgin
snowfall clean to disgraced television presenter dirty, and many points
between.
7. Best bass amp of the year
Peavey TNT 115 Tour Series £499
From the curved metal grille, inset side handles, metal
corner protectors and black covering, this is sturdily built and ready for
action. Its pedigree is unmistakably Peavey, and that includes those
all-important reliability and road-worthiness factors that the company is known
and respected for.
8. Accessory of the year
LR Baggs M80 £329
The M80 certainly has more of a magnetic character than a
mic system, but with a little outboard EQ you really can narrow the gap. Still,
the round, full sound it produces might be right up your street in terms of how
you want to hear your acoustic when amplified or recorded.
9. Kickstarter of the year
Electric Loog
7. Best bass amp of the year
Peavey TNT 115 Tour Series £499
The TNT 115 Tour Series is built for battle.
8. Accessory of the year
LR Baggs M80 £329
Yes, it's a soundhole pickup, but its wide sensitivity
produces a sound with bags of modern clarity and zing.
9. Kickstarter of the year
Electric Loog
Tiny three-string guitars have never looked as tasty as the
Electric Loog.
Conceived by Rafael Atijas, the Electric Loog is the plugged
in big brother of the Acoustic Loog, and it was, to our eyes anyway, the
runaway Kickstarter success story of the year.
Why does that matter? Well, 2013 was the year that
guitarists discovered crowd funding platform Kickstarter, with all manner of
weird, wonderful and downright wacky accessories, guitar-oriented ideas popping
up on the site.
But none of them looked or sounded quite as good as the
Electric Loog, and few were as successful - the Loog ended up raising clear of
$70,000, and we can't wait to get our hands on one.
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