These very different takes on Gibson’s strippeddown Junior and Special ‘student’ guitars are still valid some 60 years after they were introduced
Gibson first introduced its Les Paul Junior and Special models in 1954, aiming at players on a budget who aspired to trade up to the pricier Standard or Custom at a later date. The company certainly didn’t realise what lasting appeal these instruments would have beyond this ‘student’ market, particularly the start-up Junior, which found its way into the hands of Johnny Thunders, Mick Ralphs, Bob Marley, John Lennon and Leslie West to name a few.
Our two review guitars call to mind differing aspects of the Junior and Special’s legacy. Both are styled after the single-cut version (rather than the post-’58 double-cut ‘revamp’) with simple controls and traditional passive electronics. Interestingly, both also address the traditional ‘single-cut’ issue of limited-upper fret access with similar offset, contoured neck-to-body joints (glued-in, of course), with 22-fret bound-edge rosewood ’boards and medium jumbo frets.
The similarity between the two models ends there. Schecter’s Solo II Special has a highly sculpted body with a slim C profile three-piece mahogany neck, which all looks very smart but functional in its matt Vintage White Pearl finish. Even the black headstock face is finished in matt. The AXL is a different story with its double-bound mahogany slab body resplendent in glossy Orange Sparkle; its one-piece mahogany neck is chunkier and features a kitsch 50s-style headstock logo. In the way that Fano has created a hybrid of Gibson and Fender styles with its SP6, for example, this AXL mixes in Gretsch twists to the hallowed Gibson formula, with a Bigsby vibrato and Power’Tron pickup. This is going to be interesting…
Feel & Sounds
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