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Nashville Telecaster!

Fender Nasville Tele Electric Guitar!




Nashville Telecaster

You probably already know that Fender has a reputation for reusing names when it suits them, and that’s why you’ll find more than one guitar that can be accurately described as the Nashville Tele.

A currently available Fender Deluxe Nashville Tele is probably the model that brings you here in search of information, and you’re in luck.

The details you need are here.

Nashville Telecaster

First, however, let’s take a quick trip back in time and get to know this overused name.

Our journey starts in 1996 with the Fender Nashville B-Bender Telecaster, an American Standard series instrument with a factory-installed B-string bender.

The device raises the pitch of the B string by one tone -- or two frets -- to C-sharp. A one-inch downward pull on the neck makes the changes, allowing players to emulate a pedal steel.

In 1998, a Hot Rodded American model came on the market.

For this electric guitar, the two-pickups gave way to a three-pickup system like those on the Stratocaster.

A Texas Special single-coil like from the Stevie Ray Vaughn Stat joins two hot Delta Tone pickups. Otherwise, this model is just like the 1996 version.

A 2000 model came out with a new neck design and the Schaller staggered tuning machines.

Instead of alder, poplar was used, and only black and sunburst finishes were available.

This was part of the American series.




Now, the Nashville name lives on with the Deluxe Nashville Tele.

This Telecaster is “as down-home and sophisticated as the city it’s named for” -- or so Fender says -- and it has some its own special features.

A Tex-Mex Stratocaster pickup stands between two Tex-Mex Telecaster pickups.

When you combine this setup with Fender’s five-position Strat-o-Tone switch, this Tele becomes one of the most versatile the company makes.

Available for around $600 from a variety of online retailers, this model comes with either an ash or alder body.

Choose ash and get your choice of amber or honey blonde finishes.

Go with alder and then choose candy apple red or brown sunburst.

Other features include a maple or rosewood fingerboard with medium jumbo frets, a brown shell pickguard and both vintage-style tuners and a vintage-type six-saddle bridge.

As it turns out, the currently available Nashville Telecaster model may be named for the country music capital of the world, but it’s a versatile workhorse with amazing pickups that could front just about any band you put behind it.




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