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Arched
mahogany body w/maple cap
Set-in mahogany w/rosewood fingerboard
Full body, neck and headstock
Logo - 12th fret
22 medium-jumbo
24.75"
2V, 2T, 3-way switch
2 covered alnico V humbuckers
Nickel
Natural
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Instant Karma’s Gonna Get You!
"...there’s a whole lot of music waiting to be played out of this
guitar.”
Malden may be a new name among guitar brands, but their initial
offerings are certainly causing a stir. They’ve designed some
classy-looking axes with real attention to playability and tone, and
by capitalizing on overseas labor, they bring the goods home at very
comfy prices. The Malden Karma, their latest design, is a perfect
case in point.
NO MERE KARMA CHAMELEON
Rather than hide behind a cookie-cutter design, the Karma boasts a
fifties-cool approach to the classic single-cut body design. It’s a
somewhat ovoid elongation of the traditional outline paired with a
slightly thinner body depth and a comfy ‘belly route” around back,
adding up to a set of curves that no photo can do adequate justice
to (sorry, art department!). A classic headstock design and minimal
inlay – an understated yet perfectly executed Maltese cross on the
headstock, repeated on the fretboard – guarantees that this axe will
give the most jaded guitar-watchers stiff necks from the numerous
double-takes it will elicit. The reviewed Vintage Burst finish
handsomely complimented the satiny three-dimensional flames of the
arched maple top, and the creamy binding matched the pickup mounting
rings perfectly.
REBORN TO BE WILD
The immediate challenge to any single-cut humbucker-equipped guitar
is how well it stands up to its classic predecessors. While some
dodge this bullet altogether with exotic pickup wiring or longer
scale lengths, the Karma meets this challenge head on. The neck is
on the modern side of a “sixties C” contour and, with a set of
perfectly finished medium frets, feels both fast and friendly. The
hardware begs comparison to any two-grand axe, and the pickup
selector switch was rattle-free. The setup was delightful straight
out of the box, just begging to be plugged in and played.
With a bright and clean amp, riffs like the one below demonstrate
that the Karma can easily handle a whole lot of classic single-cut humbucker chores. There’s loads of detail in the highs and a nice
kerrang to the mids, especially in the dual pickup setting.
The neck pickup can chime with the best of them and the tone
controls (which take about a half-turn to kick in) dish out all
manner of dusky shadings without sounding muffled or |
damp. Add some gain to the signal and the Karma’s
cutting edge comes forward with a toothy high end and a bit of a
high midrange hump. With just a shade less girth than the very
best single-cut axes, the Karma sounds like it would nestle in
beautifully with a multi-instrument combo or handle lead chores with
aplomb. Simply put, there’s a whole lot of music waiting to be
played out of this guitar. The Malden Karma is a must-try (and
a recommended buy) if you’re in the market for a great instrument in
the under-$1,000 range.
Guitar One
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