The Stevie Ray Vaughan Stratocaster is the signature model electric guitar of AmericanguitaristStevie Ray Vaughan, based on his favorite guitar, Number One. The guitar debuted at the NAMM Show in January 1992 and began selling at various music stores.[1]
Number One, also called First Wife, was the nickname given by Stevie Ray Vaughan to his favorite Fender Stratocaster, built c. 1963.[2] In 1974, he acquired the guitar as a trade at a music store in Austin, Texas.[2] In 1990, it was retired due to many replacements of frets, though he continued to play it occasionally. In 1992, the Stevie Ray Vaughan Stratocaster was released, based on the specifications of Number One.[3] Vaughan used Number One on almost every recording with Double Trouble.[2]
Background
In the late 1980s, Fender had informally planned to release a standard Stevie Ray Vaughan Stratocaster, with 500 limited edition tribute guitars being produced by the Fender Custom Shop. The project was delayed until 1990, when Fender presented Vaughan with three prototypes of his signature guitar on June 7, 1990, backstage at the taping of The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson. With the notable "SRV" stickers on the pickguard being completely worn off, Vaughan requested for replacement stickers to the staff of The Tonight Show, giving him Letraset script-style lettering.[1] Vaughan liked the lettering so much that he proposed that the lettering be engraved into the pickguard, as it appears today.
The signature model didn't go into production until 1991 at the direction of Vaughan's brother Jimmie.[1] The Stevie Ray Vaughan Stratocaster made its debut at the NAMM Show in January 1992, with Double Troubledrummer Chris Layton, Jimmie, Buddy Guy, Albert Collins, and Eric Gales attending the event.[4]
A team from Fender visited Jimmie Vaughan in Austin to examine the original Number One. They recorded every aspect, recording the output of each pickup, weighing the wood and hardware, measuring the shape of the neck, and using calipers to reproduce every scratch, dent, or wear on the guitar.[5]
In November 2003, the Fender Custom Shop announced a limited run of 100 Number One tribute Stratocasters. They debuted at the NAMM Show on January 15, 2004. The original Number One was thoroughly examined and measured for the reproduction. The Number One tribute Strats were constructed by master builder John Cruz, who made all of the 100 replicas. Each guitar was priced at $10,000.[1]