Yamaha Pacifica SC Standard Plus review – serious class on a sensible budget

Yamaha Pacifica SC Standard Plus review – serious class on a sensible budget

$999/£992, yamaha.com
Perhaps you saw that Yamaha had brought back its single-cutaway Pacifica design and were overjoyed; perhaps you then saw the price of the SC Professional and were immediately underjoyed. Well, the SC Standard Plus – a similar guitar at a much lower price point – might just pull you back to a state of… medium-joyedness?

READ MORE: Yamaha Pacifica SC Professional review – the ultimate in solidbody sophistication?

Yes, this new model is still a lot more expensive than the average Pacifica, but building it in Indonesia – with just a few minor spec compromises – has enabled the company to bring it in at less than half the price of the supremely sophisticated Japanese flagship. In theory at least, that might just make it this year’s canniest six-string bargain.
Image: Adam Gasson
Yamaha Pacifica SC Standard Plus – what is it?
There are people living under actual rocks who are familiar with Yamaha’s double-cutaway Pacifica – loosely based on the Stratocaster template, with (usually) three pickups and a vibrato bridge, it almost qualifies as a design classic in its own right. The long-overdue return of the single-cut version is a move into more Telecaster-influenced territory, with two pickups and a fixed bridge.
Beyond that, many of the details of this guitar are exactly as they are on the SC Professional. In fact, here’s a list of shared specs: solid alder body with bolt-on maple neck, 25.5-inch scale length and maple or rosewood fretboard; Gotoh locking tuners, TUSQ nut and Gotoh T-style bridge with compensated brass saddles; Reflectone HT7b single-coil bridge pickup and EH7n neck humbucker with master volume and tone controls, plus three-way selector and pull-up ‘focus switch’ for the single coil.
Now here’s a list of things that aren’t the same, and you’ll notice that it’s a lot shorter: the Standard Plus has a simple 12-inch fretboard radius rather than a compound one, doesn’t have Yamaha’s Initial Response Acceleration (IRA) wood treatment, and… um, that’s about it. The only other point to note is that the cheaper model comes in a well-padded gigbag rather than a hard case – which some people might prefer anyway.
Image: Adam Gasson
Yamaha Pacifica SC Standard Plus – is it easy to play?
Gone are the days when being manufactured in any Asian country other than Japan meant an electric guitar was doomed to be slightly (or more than slightly) crap. Where build, finish and playability are concerned, there’s nothing about the SC Standard Plus that feels cheap or compromised.
It sits nicely on the strap or the lap, and the smooth, nicely rounded neck welcomes your hand like memory foam and simply invites you to start playing – all the way up to the top, thanks to the smartly carved heel. The factory setup on my review instrument was sound, with supernaturally frictionless frets that vanished under the fingertips; and if you do need to make any tweaks to the neck relief, the adjustment wheel at the top of the ’board should make that extra-easy.
Image: Adam Gasson
Yamaha Pacifica SC Standard Plus – what does it sound like?
On the one hand, this guitar deserves to be judged on its own merits. On the other hand, meh: I’ve already reviewed the Pacifica SC Professional and it sounds basically the same, so what do you want, a copy-and-paste job with some of the words shuffled around a bit? Better if I start this section with a brief summary, and let you refer back to that other review if you need more detail before we move on to the minor differences between the two.
With the focus switch you’ve got a total of five pickup settings, and they’re all quite distinct but share an emphasis on smoothness and shimmery top-end clarity. You might well want to use the tone knob to tame the treble, and you might also want to stomp on something gainy because these pickups are a lot more fun when they’re rocking out. Here endeth the summary.
Now, did someone mention minor differences? The first of those is apparent before you even plug in: acoustically the Standard Plus is not quite as resonant, with a brighter voice despite the rosewood board, and less bloomy depth. This might be down to the absence of that vibration-based IRA treatment, or it might simply be about timber selection – after all, who could blame Yamaha for saving the best stuff for the top of the line?
Unsurprisingly, given the identical electrics, that pattern is repeated with the amplified tones. The sound on the neck pickup of the Standard Plus is very similar but not so mellow, with a touch more midrange, and the bridge pickup is fractionally cooler in the lower frequencies – so while it has the same clucky brightness, it can sound a little skinny with single notes.
Ultimately though, the underlying story is no different: it’s all about refinement and control. The pickups are pretty high-output (despite relatively low DC resistance readings) and have an elastic sheen that lifts them away from any danger of getting raw, ragged or vulnerable. If you like proper old-school Telecasters, you might well hate this; if you crave something more grown-up and businesslike, it could be just what you’ve been waiting for.
Image: Adam Gasson
Yamaha Pacifica SC Standard Plus – should I buy it?
This is certainly a guitar that does its own thing. It has a clear and snappy voice that can sound almost piezo-like at times, and that will be the reddest of red flags to some players… but if you’re not one of them, the SC Standard Plus has a lot going for it – not least the broad tonal range covered by its five pickup settings.
Like the SC Professional, it’s at its best when you give it some overdrive to play with – and while it’s probably fair to say this is technically the lesser of the two guitars, the difference is surprisingly small bearing in mind how much cash you’re saving by going Indonesian. It’s also considerably cheaper than the double-cutaway Pacifica Standard Plus – so if you’re happy to buy an outsourced guitar rather than insisting on the ‘real thing’, and you prefer T-types to S-types anyway, then it looks like a win-win.
Image: Adam Gasson
Yamaha Pacifica SC Standard Plus alternatives
For marginally better specs plus an extra sprinkle of ‘made in Japan’ prestige, go for the Yamaha Pacifica SC Professional ($2,199.99/£2,150). Other T-types with a neck humbucker that are in the same price range as the SC Standard Plus include the Fender Player II Modified Telecaster SH ($1,079.99/£939) and Schecter Nick Johnston PT Signature ($899/£899).
The post Yamaha Pacifica SC Standard Plus review – serious class on a sensible budget appeared first on Guitar.com | All Things Guitar.

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