Impressions on discovering a Rickenbacker 381.
Posted: Sat Feb 11, 2006 6:54 am
Warning! Long post.
I'm an experienced guitarist with many years gigging under my belt with Fenders and Gibsons. Never owned a Rickenbacker. I borrowed a Ric from a buddy for recording and fell in love with the thing. Amazing tone! Feel...finish...the history...all American!….I was hooked.
FYI - I've been a strat guy for over 20 years (the swiss army knife of guitars.) I've played jazz, rock, fusion, surf, funk, punk, prog....everything except rap and country.
Once I started looking at Rics, I discovered my favorite finish was Montezuma's Revenge Brown...er.. AutumnGlo....uh...tobacco sunburst. Whatever. FireGlo was too pink....MapleGlo too plain. Solid colors didn't do it for me. I like to see some wood.
I found a beautiful 381 in MB at PMBlues about a month ago and I was in love. Flamey back...a little flame on top. I bought it. Most money I've ever spent on a guitar. And FYI – PMBlues was great. Shipped when he said he would. Packed really well. Good service.
When UPS delivered the thing and I opened the case for the first time. Do I need to say anything here?
Ok on with the review.
Tone: GREAT! No complaints. Sweet jazz sounds from the neck pickup. Twangy surf and spy tones with the bridge. Funk galore with both pickups. Aggressive crunchy rock with the bridge + overdrive. Just not too much overdrive, the 381 just sounds wrong with too much dirt... I don't play with as much distortion as I used to anyway. I love soloing up the neck with a little OD using the neck pickup. Yes I’m playing lead guitar on a Rickenbacker! The guys in my band love it too. Also noticed I didn’t have to fiddle with amp settings going to the 381 from my Strat. You know how it is: When you get your amp dialled in to sound right with a Fender and then you pick up that humbucker Gibson and you have to readjust your amp’s volume and tone controls……a pain on stage.
Feel: Hangs in just the right place off the strap. Perfect playing position. Not neck heavy. Unlike my Gibson. Nice chunky neck profile. I've got big hands and prefer a fat neck. String spacing? Ok here goes:
I don't have a problem with the string spacing at the head end of the neck. I don't play a lot of cowboy chords. And my Fenders and Gibsons are not that different than the 381 at the nut. I play more jazzy chord voicings with extensions, single note lines (melodies), and a lot of improvising all over the neck.
My problem is the spacing at the bridge. Really tight. Narrower than my Gibson...and way, way narrower than a Fender. I do fingerpick and also play with a plectrum. I wish the Ric had more room at the bridge. I'm working on getting used to it, though I may have to stick to the plectrum.
It’s a shame because Rics sound amazing when fingerpicking.
Electronics:
Ric-O-Sound? Might have been cool and innovative in the late 50's, but these days? I'm not going to carry two amps around just so I can send the neck pickup to one amp and the bridge to another.
Blend knob. You know what I'm going to say don't you? Did some extensive testing of the "little" knob. All it does is add some bridge pickup to the neck. If I have the bridge pickup selected with the switch then the blend knob does nothing. That's why George Harrison was confused. He liked a brighter sound. He would leave the pickup selector switch in down position, and then discover that the blend knob was useless. Me too.
Also....no shielding. I mean zero shielding. The toaster-top pickups sound great, but they are single coils. On stage the thing buzzes like a hornet’s nest.
My solution:
I pulled the original wire harness out and put it in the closet. Ordered a mono, four knob harness from Rickenbacker. Soldered her in, capped the Ric-O-Sound hole and the "blend" knob hole. Shielded the electronics. I also put the volumes on top closer to my hand. DONE! Works better for me. I'm a player, not a collector. I can put the original harness back anytime.
Overall:
I love it. I'll never buy anything else. I'm a Rickenbacker Man now.
The only thing I miss sometimes is the strat whammy bar. How does the Accent vibrato compare? My old number one strat stayed in tune great during whammy abuse WITH a vintage tremelo bridge. Anybody experienced with the Ric Accent tailpiece? Would I need a roller bridge?
Scott
I'm an experienced guitarist with many years gigging under my belt with Fenders and Gibsons. Never owned a Rickenbacker. I borrowed a Ric from a buddy for recording and fell in love with the thing. Amazing tone! Feel...finish...the history...all American!….I was hooked.
FYI - I've been a strat guy for over 20 years (the swiss army knife of guitars.) I've played jazz, rock, fusion, surf, funk, punk, prog....everything except rap and country.
Once I started looking at Rics, I discovered my favorite finish was Montezuma's Revenge Brown...er.. AutumnGlo....uh...tobacco sunburst. Whatever. FireGlo was too pink....MapleGlo too plain. Solid colors didn't do it for me. I like to see some wood.
I found a beautiful 381 in MB at PMBlues about a month ago and I was in love. Flamey back...a little flame on top. I bought it. Most money I've ever spent on a guitar. And FYI – PMBlues was great. Shipped when he said he would. Packed really well. Good service.
When UPS delivered the thing and I opened the case for the first time. Do I need to say anything here?
Ok on with the review.
Tone: GREAT! No complaints. Sweet jazz sounds from the neck pickup. Twangy surf and spy tones with the bridge. Funk galore with both pickups. Aggressive crunchy rock with the bridge + overdrive. Just not too much overdrive, the 381 just sounds wrong with too much dirt... I don't play with as much distortion as I used to anyway. I love soloing up the neck with a little OD using the neck pickup. Yes I’m playing lead guitar on a Rickenbacker! The guys in my band love it too. Also noticed I didn’t have to fiddle with amp settings going to the 381 from my Strat. You know how it is: When you get your amp dialled in to sound right with a Fender and then you pick up that humbucker Gibson and you have to readjust your amp’s volume and tone controls……a pain on stage.
Feel: Hangs in just the right place off the strap. Perfect playing position. Not neck heavy. Unlike my Gibson. Nice chunky neck profile. I've got big hands and prefer a fat neck. String spacing? Ok here goes:
I don't have a problem with the string spacing at the head end of the neck. I don't play a lot of cowboy chords. And my Fenders and Gibsons are not that different than the 381 at the nut. I play more jazzy chord voicings with extensions, single note lines (melodies), and a lot of improvising all over the neck.
My problem is the spacing at the bridge. Really tight. Narrower than my Gibson...and way, way narrower than a Fender. I do fingerpick and also play with a plectrum. I wish the Ric had more room at the bridge. I'm working on getting used to it, though I may have to stick to the plectrum.
It’s a shame because Rics sound amazing when fingerpicking.
Electronics:
Ric-O-Sound? Might have been cool and innovative in the late 50's, but these days? I'm not going to carry two amps around just so I can send the neck pickup to one amp and the bridge to another.
Blend knob. You know what I'm going to say don't you? Did some extensive testing of the "little" knob. All it does is add some bridge pickup to the neck. If I have the bridge pickup selected with the switch then the blend knob does nothing. That's why George Harrison was confused. He liked a brighter sound. He would leave the pickup selector switch in down position, and then discover that the blend knob was useless. Me too.
Also....no shielding. I mean zero shielding. The toaster-top pickups sound great, but they are single coils. On stage the thing buzzes like a hornet’s nest.
My solution:
I pulled the original wire harness out and put it in the closet. Ordered a mono, four knob harness from Rickenbacker. Soldered her in, capped the Ric-O-Sound hole and the "blend" knob hole. Shielded the electronics. I also put the volumes on top closer to my hand. DONE! Works better for me. I'm a player, not a collector. I can put the original harness back anytime.
Overall:
I love it. I'll never buy anything else. I'm a Rickenbacker Man now.
The only thing I miss sometimes is the strat whammy bar. How does the Accent vibrato compare? My old number one strat stayed in tune great during whammy abuse WITH a vintage tremelo bridge. Anybody experienced with the Ric Accent tailpiece? Would I need a roller bridge?
Scott


