They are pretty bright sounding compared to Nikle Silver. Thats pretty easy to tell.
I also have a Parker with steel frets. They're much brighter, a lot more present. You'll think regular frets are dark and muddy in comparison. It's almost like trying to put the genie back in the bottle, because once you've heard stainless steel frets, you might wish all your guitars were stainless steel fretted, but they're not even sold that way, and you're not about to have them refretted. Ignorance i bliss. La la la.
Are the frets brighter or is the guitar a brighter guitar? Have you ever tried your parker with normal nickle frets?
It's a Parker Nitefly SA, somewhat different from most Parkers, like the Parker version of an HSS Strat. It has carbon fiber on the neck but not the body, and the body is a lot thicker than classic Flies. I blame the frets because they feel so much harder and less forgiving than nickel. The strings contact with the frets very precisely to the point where the string slips around on the fret with ease. It sounds and feels very much like metal guitar slides. It's a very distinct, metallic sort of presence that you don't get with harder / heavier woods, maple fret boards or rigid necks and bodies alone.
So then the answer is No.. you cant say for certain if its the guitar is its the frets.
It's a Parker Nitefly SA, somewhat different from most Parkers, like the Parker version of an HSS Strat. It has carbon fiber on the neck but not the body, and the body is a lot thicker than classic Flies. I blame the frets because they feel so much harder and less forgiving than nickel. The strings contact with the frets very precisely to the point where the string slips around on the fret with ease. It sounds and feels very much like metal guitar slides. It's a very distinct, metallic sort of presence that you don't get with harder / heavier woods, maple fret boards or rigid necks and bodies alone.
I've got stainless 6115's on my Music Man. It made it a little brighter and crisper sounding, but nothing you couldn't take care of by rolling the treble or presence back a bit on the amp. It's a small difference in tone, but a big one in playability. Bends, vibrato, and slides are effortless and easier to put more nuance into now. I'd do it to all my guitars if I could afford it.