Jackson Adrian Smith San Dimas DK

June 24, 2009 · Print This Article

We’ve been itching to get our hands on that for many months now and the timing couldn’t be better: we’re writing that review on official Iron Maiden Day!

As a band, Maiden were honoured with a Fender Strat back in 2001but these new axes mark the first occasion that any specific member of the six-string fusillade has been given a signature model.

This Adrian Smith Signature Dinky has been released by Jackson, who are now part of the Fender family of course. The other two instruments in that series are a Fender Dave Murray Strat and a Fender Steve Harris Precision bass.

In effect, all three guitars hark back to the instruments used by the respective members on 1987’s Somewhere In date tour and, although none of them are intended as a strict replica model, the spec, look and, most importantly, vibe and tone is designed to be close to the guitars on which some great rock music was played.

Development

We managed to grab a couple of minutes with Adrian on the eve of the final day of the band’s recent tour to ask him what sort of input he had with that new Jackson model?

"When I heard they were going to build one, I said ‘Okay but send me one to try out’. They did that and I really liked it straight away: that was the ebony fingerboard model. Later I tried the maple neck model, but the neck was too fat so they modified that

to my liking."

And how did the original model come into being? "Grover Jackson came to a lot of the shows with different prototype guitars for me to try. I had a fifties Fender Strat that I liked, so he took measurements from that and it formed the basis for the [signature] model."

The example we have here is slightly different from Smith’s original, but only in that it features an ebony, rather than maple, fingerboard and a white instead of black pickguard. The remainder of the spec and feel is the same as its virtual opposite.

Pickups

One crucial difference in spec concerns the pickups. The configuration of Smith’s original was h/s/h, while the 2009 model comes loaded with two Fender Samarium-Cobalt-Noiseless (SCN) single-coils to work with a now-classic DiMarzio Super Distortion in the bridge.

"I’m always experimenting tonally," continues Smith. "For example, with different tunings, guitar synths and various guitars. Lately I’ve been trying out the classic Fender neck pickup sound. That really sounds different to what the other guitarists [in the band] are doing."

An original Floyd Rose is the obvious choice of bridge, as Smith is adept at incorporating subtle vibrato as well as precise dive-bombs into his playing, while the maple and ebony neck – with 22 huge frets and a conical radius – is a rock-player’s dream.

Sounds

Check it out in action alongside its siblings here:

(2 pages; go to page: 2)

[Source] Simon Bradley

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