1965 Fender Telecaster and 1959 Fender Super
Photographed with the help of @michaelsegui at @dlott65 & @chriswstringer8 's Union Sound '23 event.

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1965 Fender Telecaster and 1959 Fender Super
Photographed with the help of @michaelsegui at @dlott65 & @chriswstringer8 's Union Sound '23 event.

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Throwback to @dlott65 & @chriswstringer8 's annual Union Sound shindig back in 2023:
1960 Epiphone Coronet, photographed with the assistance of @michaelsegui.
Perhaps not the most expensive vintage guitar I've ever photographed, but it's the one I would choose. The late 50s Tweed Super ain't too shabby neither!
What setup (head, amp, guitar, pedals) would give me the cleanest sound possible?
I think the simplest, shortest path from transducer to transducer will yield the cleanest, least "colored" sound. The best way to ensure this is to avoid cutting corners in quality for each part of your signal path.
- Regularly replace your strings.- Nice, low-noise pickups.- Regular setups for clean electronics and potentiometers.- High-quality cables: instrument cables, speaker cables, power cables, all of the above).- As few pedals as possible. If you do need to use pedals, make sure they offer true bypass.- Regularly replace caps, fuses and, if applicable, tubes in your amp.- If you use a head and cabinet instead of a combo, make sure impedance is matched.- High-efficiency speakers - more wattage than your amp will need - in a solidly-built enclosure.- Make sure you're plugging all this into a "clean" power source.
If you're looking for specifics, I suppose Fender amps are often renowned for their clean tones - Deluxes, Twins, Supers, etc. On the higher-end/harder-to-find tip, Ampeg's vintage Gemini series were originally intended for jazz guitarists looking for pristine, round cleans, and Victoria boutique amps are supposedly very faithful to vintage Fender models. You could also look toward some good-quality solid state amps (maybe Sunns or Acoustics), if only because they don't really "break up" with volume like tube amps do - even a Fender Twin pushed to the limit will start to scream...which in all honesty is pretty fucking rad.