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Is the Telecaster the Most Versatile Guitar Ever?

Is the Telecaster the Most Versatile Guitar Ever?  ·  Source: Jef Stone

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The most versatile guitar? Why every guitarist needs a Telecaster in their collection. I know it’s a bold claim, but I’m here to convince you that you need a Tele in your life.

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The Telecaster

The Telecaster guitar design is iconic and also one of the most versatile modern instrument designs.

I really think Leo Fender was way ahead of his time, and his work lives on in the hands of musicians around the world.

The Ultimate Electric Guitar?

The Fender Telecaster is often called the “plank” for a reason. It’s essentially a slab of ash or alder (even earlier models were pine) with a neck bolted onto it, yet it has remained virtually unchanged since its debut in 1950. While “ultimate” is subjective, the Telecaster makes a stronger case for that title than perhaps any other instrument in history.

I adore T-style guitars; however, they were not my first choice, as I started out on Stratocasters and S-style instruments. As a kid, I thought that Teles were an ‘old man’s guitar’ and it took me a few years to work out how wrong I was with that teenage conclusion.

My taste in electric guitars is pretty varied, and I have owned hundreds of models and styles over the years. Yet, I keep coming back to Tele-style guitars. There is something about them that resonates with me.

I’ll admit that I own Esquires with a single bridge pickup, and ’60s-style Teles, plus modern ones with humbuckers in the bridge or neck positions, and even a triple-humbucker John 5 model.

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Esquire
Esquire · Source: Jef Stone

Most Versatile Guitar Ever?

For me, the ability to simply ‘modify’ a Telecaster is what makes them so versatile. Whether we are looking at Jeff Beck’s famous Esquire with chamfered armrest, or Richie Kotzen’s single-coil-sized DiMarzio bridge humbucker, they are all rock-solid instruments.

Modular Design

Leo’s original modular design, consisting of a bolt-on neck, is where the magic happens; it is simple, solid, and very much from the mind of an engineer. Yes, we could argue that glued-in necks using horse-hide glues are tonally superior, but I’d say that argument is pointless and best left to cork-sniffers.

Squier
Squier · Source: Jef Stone

The Twang

If you stick to the more traditional design, the bridge pickup is mounted on a large metal plate that, for want of a better phrase, reflects magnetic energy (maybe it focuses it? I’m no scientist) to create that signature “twang” and “snap.” It is a very desirable guitar tone and is easy to recognise straight away.

Genre Bending

I also love the fact that when a Telecaster (or T-style) guitar is played by different guitarists, it covers so many music genres. It’s the secret weapon of Jimmy Page (the Stairway to Heaven solo was recorded on a Tele), Keith Richards, Prince, and Joe Strummer.

Modern players, including the aforementioned John 5, Richie Kotzen, and Brad Paisley, all take the guitar into completely different genres and make it their own.

John 5 Triple
John 5 Triple · Source: Jef Stone

Broad Range

We can bunch together lots of variations of the model, whether made by Fender with Esquires, Broadcasters, Deluxes, Thinlines, and Nashvilles, or variations by other guitar manufacturers, the Telecaster design remains true to the original 1951 Leo Fender design.

That bolt-on neck and utilitarian design pretty much permeates through the years and variations of teh guitar.

Rock Solid

Whether you opt for a traditional three-barrel brass saddle or a six-saddle bridge, string through body, or through the bridge (Jeff Buckley’s Tele is a prime example of this), they all have that familiar DNA. The design has weathered the 50s, all the way through to modern day, and has been in existence for 75 years!

I also love that you can buy a T-style guitar for very little money, new, or spend a fortune on Custom Shop or luthier-made one-offs, yet still achieve the same rock-solid performance. They are fantastic platforms for modifying and also the perfect guitar to start your first ‘home build’ or partscaster.

60s Lake Placid Blue
60s Lake Placid Blue · Source: Jef Stone

Is the Telecaster the Most Versatile Guitar Ever?

In my humble opinion, yes, the Telecaster is the most versatile electric guitar. I think Leo Fender struck gold with his original 1951 design, and many guitarists would agree he got it right with his ‘slab’ of wood with a bolt-on neck!

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Is the Telecaster the Most Versatile Guitar Ever?

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