Review: Novo Mirus J

Review: Novo Mirus J

Our first encounter with Dennis Fano’s Novo brand was in early 2016 and his achingly cool offsets have been the subject of much gear-lust in these parts ever since. The Mirus is the new kid on the block and is essentially a semi-hollow version of the solidbody Serus model. Although all Novos share the same basic outline, there’s a huge level of aesthetic variation on offer thanks to a choice of pickups and hardware, a rainbow of finishes in various levels of distress and plenty more custom options besides.
Whether they’ve had Fano, Novo or Rivolta stamped on the headstock, Dennis’ electric guitar designs have long betrayed a love for both Fender offsets and Rossmeisl-era Rickenbackers. The Mirus J is a wonderful collision of some of those styling cues, and as such we have an offset-body outline that’s Jazzmaster-like below the waist, while the pointed horns have their Ricky DNA accentuated by authentically irregular checkerboard binding. The vibe is not a million miles away from a Fano RB6 Thinline that we encountered in another life and really should have bought.

The tempered-pine body’s raised grain looks fabulous under the thin nitrocellulose Cat’s Eye Burst, and the Novo workshop’s ageing job is impressively detailed, as always. The wear isn’t just skin deep, either – it has major implications for playability.
Around the back of the medium-C maple neck (also heat treated, like the body), the burnished timber is a dead ringer for a heavily played and oxidised mid-60s Fender, both in look and feel. With the addition of a generous rollover at the edges of its purplish rosewood slab fingerboard and nicely rounded fret ends, the Mirus has the immediate familiarity of a vintage favourite and the playing experience is smooth and drag-free.
Back at the body end, things get a little less Fender and a lot more Gibson, thanks to a pair of Lollar mini-humbuckers mounted in Les Paul Deluxe-style rings and a Schroeder wrapover bridge, which incorporates six individually adjustable brass saddles. With just a master volume and tone and a three-way toggle pickup selector switch, the controls are simple.
The rosewood ’board has comfortable rolled edgesWhen it comes to the build, proceedings are less straightforward. Aside from the aforementioned checkerboard binding that sits inside an additional plain outer strip (both somewhat nicotine-stained in appearance, complete with dents, scratches and dirt) the body features a centre-block running all the way to the tail, while a subtle contour is created where the body thins out from around 45mm to 35mm deep in the forearm area. A more time-consuming and intricate manufacturing process always equates to extra cost, but the quality of the work exhibited here is exemplary.
The inevitable result of making an already lightweight guitar even lighter at the body end is that you’ll need to choose your strap carefully to help prevent neck dive. Alternatively, simply order a Mirus with a Bigsby to balance things out a little. Regular readers won’t be surprised that the second option gets our vote.
The light weight and resonance of the timbers used by Novo help give even the company’s solidbody electrics an almost semi-like acoustic tone. Strike a chord when unplugged and the thinline Mirus positively throbs from headstock tip to tail; the shifting harmonics as it sustains are quite something to behold. It even smells good. Time to plug in…
Faux forearm wear around the bound ‘S-hole’In use
Having owned a few old mini-humbucker guitars in the past, we always loved the tones but found that excessive microphony could be a deal-breaker at stage volumes, even with moderate gain. Jason Lollar’s take on the mini-humbucker theme avoids squeal by wax-potting the coils but happily, plenty of upper-harmonic interest is still retained.
With stated DC resistance levels of 7.2K (bridge) and 6.6K (neck), we’re definitely still in vintage rather than hot-rod territory. The Mirus J’s acoustic air and resonance working in unison with the clarity of mini ’buckers is a golden combination and there’s touch-response here in spades.
Lollar mini-humbuckers handle volume and gain better than vintage unitsBefore we even think about navigating away from the neck pickup, with a small US-voiced valve combo on the point of breakup you can explore lush, sparkling clean voices by playing softly with fingers, dig a little harder for gritty blues or attack the strings down near the bridge with a pick for nasal lead tones evocative of the early Stones singles.
Flip to the middle position and the tone hollows out in a jangle-friendly manner. This is where you get your Beatles and Petty-type tones with a little Gretsch and Rickenbacker in their DNA, but it’s equally good for soulful funk and those Meters or James Brown moments.
In contrast, the bridge pickup is like a Telecaster that’s had too many Smarties – it’s tight, punchy and wiry without sounding thin or scratchy and provides a killer platform for power-pop rhythms and muscular country twang. Versatile and impressive.
Although plenty of ‘boutique’ builders have jumped on the bandwagon, Dennis Fano is still in the driving seat. The design elements he borrows from the past hang together with a cohesive elegance that’s rarely seen elsewhere and, most importantly, his instruments sound and feel every bit as spectacular as they look.

Key Features
PRICE £4,199 (inc Mono Classic hybrid case)
DESCRIPTION Semi-hollow double-cutaway offset-body electric guitar. Made in USA
BUILD Tempered pine semi-hollow body with centre-block, bolt-on tempered maple neck with medium-C profile, 9.5-inch radius East Indian rosewood fingerboard with unbleached bone nut, clay dots and 22 Jescar 6125 frets
HARDWARE Schroeder wrapover bridge with individual brass saddles, Kluson vintage-style tuners
ELECTRICS 2x Lollar mini-humbuckers, 3-way toggle pickup selector, volume, tone
SCALE LENGTH 25.5″/648mm
NECK WIDTH 41.3mm at nut, 51.2mm at 12th fret
NECK DEPTH 21.6mm at first fret, 23.8mm at 12th fret
STRING SPACING 33.7mm at nut, 51.8mm at bridge
WEIGHT 2.7kg/6.1lb
FINISH Cat’s Eye Burst nitrocellulose with medium distress
CONTACT Coda Music coda-music.com novoguitars.com
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Jennings Voyager Deluxe £2,999, Asher Marc Ford £3,899, Shelton Timeflite GTX Special £2,999
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