jalguitarman
Junior Member
I posted a thread about 3 or 4 months ago that I was getting a used Hamer studio off of Reverb.com. And here is the outcome.
So the guitar got to me in almost brand new condition. It was a think neck, not unlike an Epiphone slim taper D shaped neck but more comfortable to play. Quite surprising for how think the neck was.
It came with a set of 59's which I am familiar with. So I plugged it into my practice amp and also compared it to my Carvin CS6 unplugged. The Carvin has an amazing tone. Very much Les Paul but with a cleaner top end, but not super bright. The Hamer actually sounded better than the Carvin. The tone of the Hamer was very warm, yet no where near muddy. It seemed very clear but yet still very warm. It is honestly the best sounding solid body I have ever played. To me this was the first guitar that I have had in my hands that I would describe the sound as "sweet".
So I took it to play for service the next day, which is modern contemporary type music. Sadly it got buried in a mix when the band would kick in. I tried to adjust my amp and my distortion Pedal (Fulltone Fulldrive Mosfet 2) also dug into the strings harder but to no avail. I felt like I had no choice but to send it back. I can only guess that the Hamer was simply not an instrument that you can put anything more than light gain on without in getting buried when a band is not playing with softer dynamics.
So the guitar got to me in almost brand new condition. It was a think neck, not unlike an Epiphone slim taper D shaped neck but more comfortable to play. Quite surprising for how think the neck was.
It came with a set of 59's which I am familiar with. So I plugged it into my practice amp and also compared it to my Carvin CS6 unplugged. The Carvin has an amazing tone. Very much Les Paul but with a cleaner top end, but not super bright. The Hamer actually sounded better than the Carvin. The tone of the Hamer was very warm, yet no where near muddy. It seemed very clear but yet still very warm. It is honestly the best sounding solid body I have ever played. To me this was the first guitar that I have had in my hands that I would describe the sound as "sweet".
So I took it to play for service the next day, which is modern contemporary type music. Sadly it got buried in a mix when the band would kick in. I tried to adjust my amp and my distortion Pedal (Fulltone Fulldrive Mosfet 2) also dug into the strings harder but to no avail. I felt like I had no choice but to send it back. I can only guess that the Hamer was simply not an instrument that you can put anything more than light gain on without in getting buried when a band is not playing with softer dynamics.