Gretsch guitars: G1255 Synchromatic Electric Baritone/Bass

Gretsch 
G1255 Synchromatic Electric Baritone/Bass

The mere existence Synchromatic line may be one of the more baffling Gretsch mysteries of recent years — maybe decades. They're the duck-billed platypus of guitars — you know they're real, but you rarely see them, and can't quite figure out what that's all about anyway.

The revered Synchromatic name, traditionally reserved for high-end acoustic archtops, was plastered across a dizzying array of Korean-made guitars which were themselves near-clones of the Electromatic line offered at the same time.

Like the Electromatics and Historics, they debuted in 1999. Nobody could keep track of all the models, not even Gretsch, and all three lines of budget guitars were merged into a single (and much-improved) Electromatic line-up in 2003.

The Synchromatic Junior Jets all used bolt-on maple necks and one or two small chrome-covered humbuckers.

Single pickup G112x models included the tobacco-burst G1121 from 1999-2003 and, for 2003, the G1122 (Black), G1125 (Red), G1125 (Blue) and G1128 (Purple).

The G1212 Junior Jet Bass and G1222 Junior Jet Bass II (with two pickups) were also offered from 1999-2003, and an unusual Bigsby-equipped six-string G1255 Jet Baritone Bass was offered from mid-2002 through 2003.

The two-pickup G1315 Junior Jet was also offered from 1990 through 2003.

See Also:

Comments

  1. Bassman wrote:
    An unusual and rarely seen Gretsch, I bought one new in 2004 (G5265) and gigged it a few times, used as an alternative bass. Good range of tones but you can come unstuck with too much use of the bigsby, it doesn't hold it's tuning well. But how often do you get the chance to dive-bomb with a bass! Great fun and I still like to take it to gigs as a backup.

    Feb 6, 2007 2:27 a.m.

  2. sonik wrote:
    Fairly well built for the price, and I love the pickups. I use it as a bass, and it holds it down well through an Eden WT-405. It's very playable and sturdy, but not the most diverse tonewise in my opinion. The pickups are too muddy to play chords, but it works well for what I do

    Jun 3, 2007 6:11 p.m.

User Ratings:

Overall rating:
4 (out of 5), 2 ratings
Playability rating:
4 (out of 5), 2 ratings
Collectibility rating:
4 (out of 5), 2 ratings

Basic Synchromatic Electric Baritone/Bass specs:

Body Material
Unknown
Scale
29¾"

2002:

G1255 Synchromatic Baritone Bass introduced in February 2002. Like the other Junior Jets, it uses a bolt-on maple neck.

Body Width
12¾"
Body Depth
1½"
Body Style
Single Cutaway Solidbody
Top Colors
  • Black Sparkle
Side and Back Colors
  • Black Sparkle
Fretboard Wood
Rosewood
Fretboard Markers
Dot
Nut
Bone
Tuners
Unknown
Neck Pickup
Humbucker
Bridge Pickup
Humbucker
Controls
  • Master Volume
  • Master Tone (knob)
  • Pickup selector switch
Bridge
Adjustamatic
Tailpiece
Bigsby B-5 "Horseshoe Bigsby"

2003:

G1255 Jet Baritone with Bigsby production ends.

Body Width
12¾"
Body Depth
1½"
Body Style
Single Cutaway Solidbody
Colors
  • Black Sparkle
Fretboard Wood
Rosewood
Fretboard Markers
Dot
Nut
Bone
Tuners
Unknown
Neck Pickup
Humbucker
Bridge Pickup
Humbucker
Controls
  • Master Volume
  • Master Tone (knob)
  • Pickup selector switch
Bridge
Adjustamatic
Tailpiece
Bigsby B-5 "Horseshoe Bigsby"