If by "twang", you mean a tinny or high timbrel sound, any amp can do this by turning down the bass level, raising the midrange and treble a little. Turn the gain or distortion up just s fraction and pick the strings closer to the bridge, you will get the sound you are after. It would be like the classic sound of The Shadows.
Fender Strat or Tele, bridge pickup, through a tube amp pushed into distortion by cranking up the gain.
Telecasters have been used throughout the years for just about every music style. Country players like the twang because it's a traditional characteristic of country music. Telecasters are also great chording guitars so they are very much used in rock music. And when driven hard they have a great blues tone. The Tele's twang can be good for just about anything.
Some guitars that come to mind: Gretsch 6120, Rickenbacker 360, Brian May Guitars signature, Trussart Steelcaster and Steel Paul, Fender Jazzmaster, Fender Jaguar, Danelectro '59 DC Standard, Taylor T5...
The first Fender Stratocaster was designed in 1954 by Leo Fender, George Fullerton, and Freddie Tavares.
he uses a jagmaster special edition guitar basically its a signature guitar. same as josh's fender tele deluxe/ thinline is a sig.
Fender Strat or Tele, bridge pickup, through a tube amp pushed into distortion by cranking up the gain.
Its a Fender Tele bass. It looks like a Mike Dirnt Signature but its not the same thing. Its got a P bass pickup in it, a tele bass pickguard and controls, and a C profile Tele neck. You can get a normal P bass to sound the exact same way. Basically its a neck prefernce choice, but the P bass and Tele bass get the same sound.
The average cost for a Fender Tele guitar varies greatly depending on size, age, and style. The average cost for one of these can vary from $100-$1,500 depending on these conditions.
Telecasters have been used throughout the years for just about every music style. Country players like the twang because it's a traditional characteristic of country music. Telecasters are also great chording guitars so they are very much used in rock music. And when driven hard they have a great blues tone. The Tele's twang can be good for just about anything.
Some guitars that come to mind: Gretsch 6120, Rickenbacker 360, Brian May Guitars signature, Trussart Steelcaster and Steel Paul, Fender Jazzmaster, Fender Jaguar, Danelectro '59 DC Standard, Taylor T5...
Telephone is from the Greek tele meaning "far" and phone meaning "voice". There's Greek accents in the actual spelling, but I don't know how to do those on my laptop :-)
"Tele" is from the Greek word for "distant"; the prefix means "from a distance." "Phone" comes from the Greek for "sound." Therefore, "telephone" is "sound from a distance." Logical, no?
In my opinion, it is because of the bridge pickup being mounted directly to the tele-style bridge. The bridge pickup being a single coil and a maple neck and fingerboard (although some do have other materials) also contribute to maximum twang. To me. the neck pickup doesn't have the same twang and is very similar to some strats neck pickup tones.
The first Fender Stratocaster was designed in 1954 by Leo Fender, George Fullerton, and Freddie Tavares.
Fender makes the Stratocaster and Telecaster. There are many companies that base their guitars off of Strat- and Tele- designs, but Fender made the first Telecaster (then known as the Broadcaster) in 1950, and the first Stratocaster in 1954.
I do know and you are right...it is greek! It comes the greek prefixes, Tele- and phone Tele- means far away and phone means sound. So together that makes sound from far away
custom-built gold-top Telecaster and another Tele with a relic finish that Galuzka beat to hell to capture the essence of Rory Gallagher's famously worn 1961 Fender Strat.