The Art Of Shreddin'

Ibanez RG550

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Players of a certain age will remember the double-page adverts in mags like TG, crammed full of tiny images of the electric guitars that made up our imaginary wish lists. 

 
 

For many, Ibanez was the aspirational brand of choice. Fender and Gibson were very grown-up, a bit too much like what your dad would play. Ibanez, on the other hand, projected a vision of futuristic precision and technicality that pressed all the right adolescent buttons. 

Consequently, the Ibanez RG550 became the default aspirational guitar of choice for an entire generation of player. Expensive enough to make it lust-worthy, but not so expensive that we’d never get to own one, the RG550 hit that rare sweet spot of quality and other-worldly attraction. 

After so many years, it’s brought the old stallion out of retirement. Wise decision? You bet. Ibanez has skillfully managed to extract the very essence of what was so popular about the original RG550 and piece it back together in a way that enhances its legacy. 

The Japanese-made 2018 vintage is, essentially, a masterclass in everything that is good about shred and metal guitars. The neck feels lithe – your hand glides, rather than simply moving – while the Edge vibrato is rock solid and the overall craftsmanship is exemplary. It’s actually better than our 15-year-old selves could have expected when we stared at those adverts. 

Introduced in 1987 and discontinued in 1994, the Ibanez RG550 remains the childhood sweetheart of many players. Designed as a mass-appeal version of Steve Vai’s famous JEM777 model, it had character in abundance. We loved its pointy horns and headstock. We marvelled at the thought of the ultra-thin Wizard necks and their promises of unrivalled speed. And we were unreserved in our love for the garish, frankly bonkers colour options. But tastes change as we grow up – or do they? 

After so many years, it’s brought the old stallion out of retirement. Wise decision? You bet. Ibanez has skillfully managed to extract the very essence of what was so popular about the original RG550 and piece it back together in a way that enhances its legacy. 

The Japanese-made 2018 vintage is, essentially, a masterclass in everything that is good about shred and metal guitars. The neck feels lithe – your hand glides, rather than simply moving – while the Edge vibrato is rock solid and the overall craftsmanship is exemplary. It’s actually better than our 15-year-old selves could have expected when we stared at those adverts. 

“I just want to be able to play and make people feel good with what I do. When you’re thinking that way, anything can happen. And usually what happens is good.”   …  Mark Knopfler

After so many years, it’s brought the old stallion out of retirement. Wise decision? You bet. Ibanez has skillfully managed to extract the very essence of what was so popular about the original RG550 and piece it back together in a way that enhances its legacy. 

The Japanese-made 2018 vintage is, essentially, a masterclass in everything that is good about shred and metal guitars. The neck feels lithe – your hand glides, rather than simply moving – while the Edge vibrato is rock solid and the overall craftsmanship is exemplary. It’s actually better than our 15-year-old selves could have expected when we stared at those adverts. 

Tonally, the RG550 covers a lot of bases. It always did, despite its pointy appearance, meaning you could comfortably stray into all kinds of genres without too much fuss. The US-designed V7 bridge humbucker delivers the razor-sharp riff platform you’d hope it would, while the V8 neck ’pup offers a hint of compression at higher gain settings, which levels lead lines nicely. It is, in the best way possible, everything you remembered from the original. 

Ibanez RG550 Genesis
Ibanez RG421AHM RG
Ibanez RG450DX RG

Competition is strong – Schecter, ESP and Jackson all produce superb-quality shredders. But the RG’s pedigree is powerful. The entire SuperStrat niche of guitars owes the RG550 a huge debt of gratitude. With this reissue, Ibanez is casually reminding everyone who’s boss. 

Since its introduction in the late ‘80s, the RG550 has become a cult classic in the world of Ibanez, and rightfully so. This guitar and its crazy finish options took the late ‘80s by storm, and it continues to do so in this new and updated version.

This Ibanez – thanks to the V7 and V8 humbuckers and S1 single coil pickup onboard – stands out for its tone too. The HSH configuration offers some fairly impressive levels of tonal versatility, and with a mostly Maple neck and Basswood body supplying the bright sounding, punchy tone that’ll catapult you through any mix, the RG550 Genesis could just be exactly what you need in your life.

Ibanez RG421MSP
Ibanez RG421
Ibanez Standard RG421MSP