Maahantuoja: EM Nordic
Review: Jericho Guitars Fusion
Usually, we get the products we review from the Finnish distributors, or directly from Finnish guitar- or amp-makers.
This time, though, I was approached by guitarist Jaakko Rytsölä. Jaakko had ordered a guitar for himself, liked what he got, and is now thinking seriously about importing this brand, in partnership with Espoo-based company Guitarworx.
Jericho Guitars – who are based in Plano, Texas – are a brand specialising exclusively in long-scale baritone electric guitars. Jericho use what they call a ping-pong manufacturing process: The raw tonewood is hand-selected at a wood supplier in British Columbia (Canada), and then sent to a manufacturer in South Korea for all the basic neck and body work. The half-finished guitars are then shipped back to Texas, where they are assembled and set up. According to Jericho, this process results in high-quality instruments with a player-friendly price tag.
Jericho have already caused quite a few waves with their Avenger model, which is squarely aimed at the Hard ’n’ Heavy crowd. Now the company has introduced a new model, called the Jericho Fusion. We received a preproduction version of the Jericho Fusion Black And Gold-version for review.
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The Jericho Fusion (price in Finland approximately 999 €) is a sleek and elegant baritone guitar, with a body outline that is based on the venerable Fender Telecaster.
The Fusion has a three-piece mahogany set neck, as well as a mahogany body with a contoured front.
The Fusion has a scale length of 26.9″, which means 68.3 cm in the metric system.
The body’s back features a generous rib cage chamfer.
Jericho’s headstock design looks very nice, and offers almost straight string pull, which is a definite plus for tuning stability.
The Fusion comes with a self-lubricating black Graph Tech Tusq XL nut.
A set of golden Grover Rotomatics keeps the tuning solid.
The black ebony fretboard sports 22 medium-sized frets.
The bridge is a chunky Hipshot design, constructed from a machined brass base and stainless steel bridge saddles.
The Jericho Fusion comes equipped with a classic pair of Seymour Duncan humbuckers – a ’59-model in the neck position, and a Custom TB-5 at the bridge.
The guitar’s controls are configured in traditional Les Paul-style, giving you independent volume and tone controls for each pickup.
A look under the hood reveals quality components and clean workmanship. Our preproduction review guitar has regular Les Paul-style wiring, but production models will come with push/pull-pots for splitting the humbuckers.
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The Jericho Fusion is a great player. Actually – and this might come as a bit of a surprise – it is very easy for the guitarist to adjust to the longer-than-usual scale length. After a minute or two, you simply forget about the longer scale, and just get on with playing.
The guitar’s neck profile is a neither too slim, nor too fat, ”D”. Our review sample had a comfortable medium weight, and it came with a very low and slinky setup.
While Jericho’s Avenger was designed to be a balls-to-the-wall Metal-machine, the new Fusion model covers much more musical and tonal ground, thanks to its less powerful pickups. Don’t worry, the Jericho Fusion can do the head-banging stuff with aplomb, too, but this guitar also holds very lush clean tones in store, should you be so inclined.
Here’s a short clip of all three toggle switch settings (starting at the neck), played through a clean amplifier:
And here’s the audio track from the You Tube-video:
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Jericho Guitars’ Fusion is a great-playing, versatile modern baritone electric. This guitar is well-made, no-nonsense tone machine for the player who wants to go low or even lower. Let’s hope that Jericho’s instruments will soon become more widely available in Finland.
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Jericho Guitars Fusion
Price in Finland: c. 999 €
Tiedustelut: Guitarworx
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Pros:
+ elegant design
+ workmanship
+ playability
+ sound
NAMM 2015 – Yamaha Acoustic LS16R + A6R
Maahantuoja: F-Musiikki
NAMM 2015 – Roland Blues Cube + Eric Johnson
Eric Johnsonin legendaariset soundit voi nyt saada Roland Blues Cube -vahvistimiin.
Uusi EJ Tone Capsule -moduuli kiinnitetään yksinkertaisesti vahvistinputken lailla vahvistimeen. Tämän jälkeen teksasilaisen Blues-mestarin soundimaailma on myös toisten kitaristien ulottuvilla.
NAMM 2015 – Marshall Silver Jubilee 2555
Maahantuoja: EM Nordic
Review: Vuorensaku T-Style Custom
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Vuorensaku is a guitar maker from the Finnish town of Jyväskylä. Luthier-Artisan Saku Vuori repairs and builds all types of string instruments. Vuorensaku also winds his own brand of custom pickups.
When it comes to handcrafted instruments, Vuorensaku isn’t relying on any specific range of models, instead this is a true custom workshop which makes one-offs according to its customers’ wishes.
Saku Vuori is a member of The Guild of Finnish Luthiers.
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Saku sent us a recently finished solidbody electric for review – a very cool crossbreed of a Seventies Fender Telecaster Deluxe and a Fifties Gibson ES-5 Switchmaster. Vuorensaku’s guitars usually are designated by their serial number only, but for the sake of simplicity I will name this instrument the ”Vuorensaku T-Style Custom”.
The T-Style Custom has been crafted from quality tonewoods:
The bolt-on neck has been carved from a piece of lightly flamed Canadian hard rock maple, and it features an Indian rosewood fretboard. The bound-top body consists of two pieces of very lightweight African mahogany. The centre glue line is virtually impossible to make out, thanks to Vuorensaku’s extremely crisp workmanship.
The Vuorensaku’s nut is crafted from genuine moose bone.
The fretboard comes with a modern, bend-friendly radius (9.5″) and sports 21 medium-sized stainless steel frets.
The T-Style Custom’s updated Kluson Deluxe-tuners may have that famous vintage look, but they work much more smoothly than their forebears from the 1950s.
The neck joins the body in time-honoured fashion, using four wood screws and a rectangular steel plate.
Thanks to the T-Style Custom’s satin nitro-finish this instruments simply oozes with natural elegance, feeling very friendly to the touch.
Kluson’s fantastic Half-Size Tele-bridge is a clever way of bringing genuine Tele Twang to non-Tele guitars, as well as making it possible to use this type of bridge in combination with different bridge pickups.
Many guitarists still favour the (almost archaic) three-saddle Telecaster-bridge for its gorgeous tone, especially when it comes with three brass saddles (like this Kluson does). The threads for the intonation screws on the T-Style Custom’s bridge have been deliberately cut at an angle to improve the guitar’s intonation.
Vuorensaku’s customer specified three Dog Ear-pickups for his dream guitar, so a set of said pickups was sourced from another Finnish maker – Rautia Guitars from Joensuu.
Veijo Rautia’s Dog Ear-set comprises a pair of splittable humbuckers for the neck and bridge positions, as well as a P-90-type singlecoil in the middle.
The control panel has been turned the ”wrong” way around to facilitate easy master volume access.
Ingeniously, Saku Vuori has managed to fit all the necessary components into the guitar’s small traditional Tele control cavity:
The volume control comes equipped with a push/pull-switch for splitting the humbuckers. The five-way blade switch works like on a Fender Strat. As you can easily see from the photo the workmanship is very clean and the components are of top quality.
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The Vuorensaku T-Style Custom scores top marks for workmanship and playability! Handmade instruments of such high calibre always possess that little something extra, a special feel that is nigh on impossible to find in a mass-produced guitar.
The T-Style Custom is a lightweight instrument. With a slippery nylon strap you might even notice a hint of neck-heaviness, but nothing a nice leather strap couldn’t get to grips with easily.
The fat C-profile of this Vuorensaku’s neck is just what the doctor ordered. The combination of this profile with the modern fretboard radius and the gorgeous fretwork, makes for a fantastic playing feel that’s fast and easy to control. The setup was superb with a set of 010s and a low action (low-E: 2.1 mm/high-e: 1.5 mm).
Acoustically, the Vuorensaku sounds just like the prime exponent of a Fender-type guitar it is – open and ringing.
Played amplified, the T-Style Custom offers a broader, much more diverse picture, which isn’t really surprising, as the Vuorensaku comes equipped with a completely different set of pickups, compared to your run-of-the-mill Tele. The guitar’s three pickups, five-way switch, and humbucker split gives you a very cool selection of different Gibson- and Fender-style tones.
I love this Vuorensaku to bits, but I found a small point to moan about, too. The bridge pickup’s signal level is noticeably weaker than that of the neck pickup. This isn’t due to any shoddy workmanship, though, but rather down to the Dog Ear-type of pickup mounting, and a phenomenon many Gibson- and Epiphone-owners are well aware of. It’s very hard for a reviewer to criticise a custom-ordered guitar, because there’s always the possibility that the guitar was meant to perform in this way. Still, if this were my instrument, I’d ask Saku Vuori to add a small plastic shim (1.5-2 mm) beneath the bridge pickup to raise it closer to the strings.
The Rautia Guitars Dog Ear-set sounds fantastic. Thanks to the moderate output of the humbuckers, there’s never any danger of the sound getting mushy or ill-defined. The ’buckers also sound great in split-mode, and combining the two humbuckers with a rude-sounding P-90 in the middle position can only be described as a stroke of genius.
This clip gives you an idea of the guitar’s sounds with the humbuckers split (starting with the neck pickup):
Here we have a similar clip featuring the full humbuckers:
And to round it off, here’s the audio from the You Tube-video:
What a guitar! The Vuorensaku T-Style Custom is another excellent example of the fantastic quality of Finnish guitar-making. Too bad the owner wants his guitar back…
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Vuorensaku T-Style Custom
Price range for a similar guitar: 2,500 – 3,000 €
A big ”thank you” goes to the promoter of the Rockkaamo Festival, Mr Jani Savolainen, for the loan of his guitar!
Pros:
+ Made in Finland
+ handcrafted
+ workmanship
+ playability
+ sound
Cons:
– balance between neck and bridge pickup






























