I might even just get GAS for a Red Special.
I've had mine for over a year and I'm very happy with it. You can get close to Brian May tones with all manner of guitars, but you don't realise how far away that is until you play one of these.
Be warned though, although it's extremely versatile, it has the "ghost of Brian May" in it :lol:
If, like me, you're after "vintage tones" then, at a pinch, you can do a passable tele part on a Les Paul, and vice versa. You can do strat-work on an SG, you can play Andy Powell's (Wishbone Ash) Flying V stuff on an Explorer, or whatever you like. I've always found you can get close to the tone and feel, no matter what guitar you're playing... not so (for me) with the Red Special...
It does Brian May style, and that's it. Play a tele part and it sounds like you're trying to play a tele part on the wrong guitar!
Not for nothing did he always have to use tele live for the signature solo in Crazy :lol:
In fact - did this come out in the documentary? - they (the band and Mack)
really p1ssed him off while recording The Game. They were trying to get away from the bog-standard Queen sound at the time and explore new worlds. They found, because BM insisted on playing the Red Special all the time, that the only way to do this was record the basic track before BM came in or even knew a song existed.
On Crazy, they flatly refused to allow him to use the Red Special, the guitar that had recorded virtually everything for Queen up until then. Mack told him something along the lines of "it's a tele part, you need to play it on a tele or you'll write the wrong part...". Being a guitarist, I understand that BM wasn't too impressed at the time. Basically they were saying we don't want your guitar in Queen's sound at the moment. They meant
that guitar, we want your playing... but I imagine I'd have got the hump, and for the same reasons, in the same situation :lol:
Anyway, certainly for Crazy, I think they were right. Look at the stunning part he came up with... but you can't make it sound like that (or even play it with that feel) on a Red Special.
SO! Ian "man of fender" etc... my advice is this: Only lust after a Red Special and, even more important, only buy one for the reason that I did - "I know it's a bit self-indulgent, but I want a Brian May guitar so that I can pretend to be Brian May in the privacy of my own playing area..." :lol:
EDIT: Yeah, Brow, you're right - even with the few changes they made after setting up BM guitars - the scratchplate's the wrong shape, the knobs are wrong (but you can get replacements), the neck ain't an elephant trunk, and the trem is not his design, etc etc...
The only one that really bothered me was the trem. Where he (and I) rests his right hand puts the cheaper copy out of tune, just like it does a strat. I've got used to it now, but I really would like to have his trem system - would be a bit expensive though...
Nah, it's a lovely geetar, buy it for what it is and what it does for you. Love it as it is, and don't try to wish it was something else (the more expensive copy, the real one, or a tele, strat, SG, LP, etc, etc)