eclecticsynergy
Ambassador of Electric Synergy
This is Kinghawk, an '09 Starla. Nice workhorse guitar, good thick neck, solid sustain and really nice feel in the hand. The neck profile on these was supposed to be Wide-Fat but it doesn't feel the same as my other Wide-Fat; might be a slightly modified carve just for this model. Or maybe it's just the geometry of the guitar that makes it feel unique.
The unusual humbuckers have magpoles on one side as well as a screw bobbin on the other, so they split really well to true singlecoil voicing. There's a bit of Gretschiness in their series tone - great for blues and roots music but the guitar absolutely can rock too. Reminds me a little of a Les Paul Special. Yes, it's no-frills. But it's also solid, capable, and reliable.
I bought a Duesenburg Les Trem for this guitar, but that wound up going onto one of my Firebirds instead. Still might transfer it over to this one someday. I like the Les Trem much more than I like Bigsbys. It can do the subtle rockabilly warble but it also can behave like an actual vibrato bar. Maybe not quite as much range available as with a Strat trem, but there's enough to do real bends when you want them.

The unusual humbuckers have magpoles on one side as well as a screw bobbin on the other, so they split really well to true singlecoil voicing. There's a bit of Gretschiness in their series tone - great for blues and roots music but the guitar absolutely can rock too. Reminds me a little of a Les Paul Special. Yes, it's no-frills. But it's also solid, capable, and reliable.
I bought a Duesenburg Les Trem for this guitar, but that wound up going onto one of my Firebirds instead. Still might transfer it over to this one someday. I like the Les Trem much more than I like Bigsbys. It can do the subtle rockabilly warble but it also can behave like an actual vibrato bar. Maybe not quite as much range available as with a Strat trem, but there's enough to do real bends when you want them.

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