MikeS said:Fender Vintage Noiseless, as stated many times. They get negative reviews from the vintage nazis (kidding guys), but I tend to think they produce some very sweet tones. Much of Clapton's tone is in that boost circuit, a very intimidating circuit board stuffed into a rather large cavity under the pickgaurd. A buddy of mine has a Clapton signature and we were very surprised at what we saw when we had the guard off. Personally, I liked the tones of the Clapton strat a lot better with that boost circuit OFF.
Playability wise, the Clapton sigs are comfy. All the typical appointments of an American strat, with a deep V shaped neck despite its seemingly exotic profile, is very easy to play (in my hands atleast).
Lee_M. said:Clapton uses what Fender gives him - he really doesn't seem to care. They are the Fender Noiseless.
The Clapton Boost is a mid-range boost that goes up to 25decibals. It is a decent boost, but gives the guitar a voicing that can't be removed without taking out the circuit board and lace sensors.
IMO, Clapton should let me take over his rig and let me get him set-up. He has sounded so mediocre for years because of the Lace Sensors in his old Clapton model. If he spent a portion of the time that SRV did with achieving decent tone, he would reign as the king of the strat. He has phenomenal licks, chops, soul and feeling, but crappy tone...particularly during late 80's to mid/late '90's.
I think it would be great if he was just change guitars to a '62 rosewood Strat reissue with Antiquities or some pickup equivalent. He could ditch the Clapton boost and use a Tubescreamer (since there 80 of them on the market) and sound phenomenal. I just don't get it!
Lee_M. said:Clapton uses what Fender gives him - he really doesn't seem to care. They are the Fender Noiseless.
Lewguitar said:Isn't Clapton using the Fender Noiseless pickups?
Strats are the most popular guitars on the planet...that's why you see so many. :laugh2:
dr.barlo said:Well here is my favorite Clapton strat (brownie):
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And some info from http://www.fendereurope.com/news/sevensensationalstrats.asp
The highest price paid for a Stratocaster® that day (and still the highest price ever paid for a Fender® Stratocaster® at auction) was $497,500.00. This was for Clapton's 'Brownie' Strat®, the one famously used on Layla and other tracks.
The guitar in question was a Sunburst Stratocaster®, manufactured in September 1954 (first year of manufacture). The reserve price on the day was $20-30,000. The sale number was 9198. This hardtail Strat® with its serial number of 7431, is known as the "Slowhand Strat®" because of its use by Clapton in slide and rhythm work on such albums as Slowhand (1977) and Backless (1978) (Listen out for it on the final track of Backless, Tulsa Time). The Strat® was used consistently up to the Behind The Sun tour of 1985.
The guitar can also be seen on the 1979 Japan tour during the concert at Budokan, Tokyo, which was recorded and later released as Just One Night. The guitar was also used live on Tulsa Time during the ARMS concert at the Royal Albert Hall, London in 1983 and on Roger Waters' Pros And Cons Of Hitch-Hiking tour in June-July the following year.
The Slowhand Strat® has 'T-G-9-54' written in pencil on the back of the neck, where it meets the heel cavity. (This can only be seen when the neck is removed from the body). This was written by a Fender employee at the time of manufacture. Other specs include a maple neck with skunk stripe routing, 21-fret fingerboard, tailpiece with adjustable saddles, white single-ply pickguard and a tweed rectangular hardshell case with red plush lining. On the case is a sticker with '54 S/Burst Fender Strat #7431' written by Clapton's guitar tech Lee ****son. The case also contains a strap.
BTW his blackie also has to be mentioned here! And here is some information on blackie's auction when it was sold for $959,500 five years later than the brownie auction.
B
baba o'riley said:Yep, he sure does. A few of the songs, like "They're Red Hot" he uses a very old Gibson hollow body ( NO CLUE what it is) but when he uses his strats he always uses the circut to some extent. I own a Clapton Strat, and I must say it is a dream. It plays great and it is possible to achieve a variety of sweet tones from it. I can get pretty good vintage strat sounds to Les Paul type mids.
Guitar Toad said:I read elsewhere that Clapton always gets his strats with the tremolo but blocked from the factory. Is there ruth to this? Does he like the tone or the string spacing the trem provides?
Guitar Toad said:Are my observations correct, that the vintage strat players don't care for the tone or the look of this guitar?
It's kind of itonic/interesting that one of the mainstay benchmarks for vintage strat sound is now playing a non-vintage look with a non-vintage sound.
Is this an example of an artist continuing to define himself? Determined not to be limited by his tools? Or is this simply an example of being versatile with a verstile equipment? Is the strat the Leatherman multi-tool of guitars?
Guitar Toad said:I read elsewhere that Clapton always gets his strats with the tremolo but blocked from the factory. Is there ruth to this? Does he like the tone or the string spacing the trem provides?
Guitar Toad said:I read elsewhere that Clapton always gets his strats with the tremolo but blocked from the factory. Is there ruth to this? Does he like the tone or the string spacing the trem provides?
Lewguitar said:Not this vintage player. I like it!
I liked his painted SG too...the one he played with Cream.
Lew
rspst14 said:I remember reading that the hardtail Strats didn't have the sound he was after. I tend to agree, the tremolo is a part of the vintage Strat sound, even if you never use it.
If you want a silent Strat pickup that actually sounds like a vintage Strat, try the Lace 6k Hot Gold model. I like it better than the original Sensor series. Kinman and Bill Lawrence also make great noiseless singles. I agree that Clapton is just one of those guys who uses what Fender gives him. If they sent him a guitar with a Dimebucker/Distortion set, he probably wouldn't care. :smack:
Ryan
gripweed said:IMO, the two best tones Clapton ever had were the Bluesbreakers Beano album and Derek and the Dominoes. The Derek album had some of the sweetest tones ever. Just his brownie strat and a tweed champ! That tone made me want a strat! ...