KennethC
New member
Fender is just holding on too much with recreating the past instead of embracing the futue and reinventing the wheel per se. I honestly feel that this is more of a corporate aim rather than the aims of the existing master builders.
I do think marketing has got to do with this - I think the company's strategy is to leverage on its heritage to heighten its market share. Retro always comes around. But that's fine by me, since I don't consider Fender as a superb modern strat maker.

And this is where folks like Suhr/Tyler/Anderson come in. Given the freedom that these guys enjoy, they can pretty much do whatever they want in terms of design. Just try ordering a Fender Custom Shop to your own specs...if your name isn't in guitar world you'll probably never succeed.
I never thought of it, but I think you're probably right. Or you just need to know someone in there.
With Suhrs/Tylers/Andersons, the whole consistency issue is more or less non existant. Literally perfect instruments, faultless in craftsmanship, playability and tone! It's just a matter of tuning one out to the specs which fit you the most.
Generally the case...'cept for some that we tried bro hehe
