“A less idiosyncratic, more intuitive but still distinctly handsome machine. It plays and feels like a much more modern proposition”: Gretsch Professional Series Hollow Body Tennessean review

The working musician’s hollowbody designed to handle most popular styles but retaining that unmistakably cool Gretsch vibe

Gretsch Professional Collection Hollow Body Tennessean
(Image: © Future / Olly Curtis)

Guitar World Verdict

The Tennessean of 2024 is an altogether less idiosyncratic, more intuitive but still distinctly handsome machine. That it’s beautifully built, plays and feels like a much more modern proposition, and supplies all manner of brilliant sounds from shimmering cleans to snarling driven tones is testament to the work that Gretsch has put in.

Pros

  • +

    Beautifully built, with sensible modern twists.

  • +

    Great-feeling neck

  • +

    Inspiring range of wonderful tones.

Cons

  • -

    Some players might rue the lack of upper‑fret access here.

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What is it?

Debuting in 1958, the 6119 Tennessean was the least fancy of the four Chet Atkins models available from Gretsch.

Eschewing the Western bling of the other instruments – including the 6120 beloved of Eddie Cochran, the 6122 Country Gentleman favoured by Atkins himself, and the Les Paul-sized 6121 chambered ‘solidbody’ Round-Up – it featured just one Filter’Tron humbucker at the bridge and was played most notably by The Beatles’ George Harrison, albeit in later form.

Although nominally a 406mm (16-inch) wide single-cutaway hollowbody, the Tennessean’s depth wavered during its first few years until settling on the 64mm (2.5-inch) we see today.

However, the most notable change came when Gretsch added a neck pickup, significantly enhancing the guitar’s versatility. The Tennessean’s colour choice of Deep Cherry Stain or Walnut further separated it from the other Chet Atkins models, which usually came in the more familiar Gretsch orange. Harrison’s was a 1963 model in red with dual Filter’Tron pickups.

Shift forward six decades and the Tennessean is back. Looking much like its Brooklyn-built forbear – with arched laminated maple body, bound all-round in white, a two-piece maple neck with dark centre stripe and white heel cap, a bound rosewood fingerboard, bound f-holes and twin Filter’Tron pickups – the Japanese-made model, however, aims to bring a more modern edge to this journeyman guitar. Hence on the B6CP Bigsby vibrato the strings feed through a hole in the rocker bar, rather than having to awkwardly locate the ball-end onto a steel peg.

Gretsch Professional Collection Hollow Body Tennessean

(Image credit: Future / Olly Curtis)

The top’s ‘trestle’ bracing has been updated to Gretsch’s new Arc-Tone system that company literature describes as “torrefied maple tone bars with arc-shaped spruce support braces located underneath the bridge area”.

Said to promise “enhanced sustain, crisp note attack and excellent feedback control”, it should allow the Tennessean to handle powerful overdrive without the inherent issues associated with all-hollow instruments.

Gretsch Professional Collection Hollow Body Tennessean

(Image credit: Future / Olly Curtis)

Other nods to the modern age include Gotoh locking tuners to aid tuning stability, Grover strap locks, and an Adjusto-Matic bridge that’s perched atop a pinned rosewood foot.

The Tennessean’s U-shaped neck carries a 305mm (12-inch) radius bound rosewood fingerboard with 22 medium jumbo frets. The ’board’s edges have been rolled for playing comfort, while the beautifully profiled frets invite eager hands to play. Nickel hardware with grey pickguard and pickup rings work well against the flawless Deep Cherry gloss, the whole thing looks crisp and smart and, as we’d expect from Japan, expertly put together.

Playability and sounds

Gretsch Professional Collection Hollow Body Tennessean

(Image credit: Future / Olly Curtis)

Although Gretsch describes the Tennessean’s neck as Standard U shape, it feels like a regular C profile with a depth of 20mm at the 1st fret and 23mm by the 10th before it fattens into the heel.

It’s very comfy and not tiring to play over long stints. Indeed, so well are the fingerboard edges rolled and the frets so expertly finished that it’s a pleasure to simply sit and noodle. And with its classic radius, slightly shorter-than-usual 625mm (24.6‑inch) scale length and medium jumbo frets, it welcomes all manner of fretboard antics, with bends and vibrato beautifully served on the 11-gauge strings.

Like Gibson’s ES-330, ultra high-end forays are off the agenda, but blues-rock soloing at the 12th position is perfectly doable. And although said Gibbo is lighter than our Gretsch due to the latter’s deeper body and significant metalware, it’s still an easy instrument to wield on a strap.

Gretsch Professional Collection Hollow Body Tennessean

(Image credit: Future / Olly Curtis)

Electrics-wise, today’s Tennessean is a simpler beast than the model of times past, with a master volume mounted on the cutaway’s horn, individual pickup volumes, master tone, and three-way pickup selector. It’s quite intuitive, and through our test rig of a Mark I Reissue Boogie combo amp, plus Hudson Broadcast, Lovepedal Hermida Zendrive, Providence chorus and Echoplex delay pedals, it delivers a wonderful array of tones.

With the bridge pickup set clean and a dash of almost slap-back echo, we’re treated to a glistening, musical tone. Bright and chiming, it’s perfect for rock ’n’ roll lead, fingerpicked chords and clean riffs.

Similarly, the neck Filter’Tron – both on its own and in tandem with the bridge – oozes warmth, clarity and class. You can see why the rockabilly players loved it. But in the hands of a total musician like Chet Atkins, the sonic landscape is all but boundless.

Gretsch Professional Collection Hollow Body Tennessean

(Image credit: Future / Olly Curtis)

Players such as Neil Young, Stephen Stills and, of course, the great Malcolm Young have made wonderful distorted noises on Gretsch guitars. And stepping on the Zendrive and off the Echoplex, leaving only a dribble of Boogie reverb, we’re treated to the kind of tones a Gibson doesn’t quite do.

On the bridge, it’s strident, articulate and almost sweet, while flipping to the neck things become warm and, yes, the old clichés ‘woody and flutey’, somewhere between Les Paul light and Strat heavy. With both pickups on things become thinner, a tad more vowelly and definitely funkier.

Ray Butts’ Filter’Tron is a markedly different animal from Seth Lover’s humbucker. Is it clearer? More focused? Sharper? Possibly all three, but we’d hesitate to say better.

Verdict

Gretsch Professional Collection Hollow Body Tennessean

(Image credit: Future / Olly Curtis)

It’s great to see the return of guitars like the Gibson ES-330 and this delightful Gretsch Tennessean. A simpler offering than many guitars in the stable on its release, the model found favour with players who loved ‘that great Gretsch tone’ but were less enamoured by cowboys, cacti and steer horns, simply wanting a purposeful guitar that looked fabulous, played well and sounded right.

Guitar World verdict: The Tennessean of 2024 is an altogether less idiosyncratic, more intuitive but still distinctly handsome machine. That it’s beautifully built, plays and feels like a much more modern proposition, and supplies all manner of brilliant sounds from shimmering cleans to snarling driven tones is testament to the work that Gretsch has put in.

Specs

Gretsch Professional Collection Hollow Body Tennessean

(Image credit: Future / Olly Curtis)

PRICE: $2,499/£2,399 (inc case)
ORIGIN: Japan
TYPE: Single-cutaway hollow body electric
BODY: ‘Tennessee Rose’ shape, laminated maple with Arc-Tone bracing and bound f-holes
NECK: Maple with standard U-shape profile
SCALE LENGTH: 625mm (24.6”)
NUT/WIDTH: Graph Tech Tusq XL/42.86 mm
FINGERBOARD: Rosewood, white bound, with neo-classical thumbnail markers
FRETS: 22, medium jumbo
HARDWARE: Gretsch-branded B6CP String-Thru Bigsby, Gotoh locking tuners, G arrow knobs, Grover strap locks, all nickel plated; grey plexi pickguard, grey pickup rings
STRING SPACING, BRIDGE: 51.5mm
ELECTRICS: 2x Gretsch Pro-FT Filter’Tron humbucking pickups, 3-way pickup selector, master volume control, volumes for each pickup, master tone
WEIGHT (kg/lb): 3.175/7
RANGE OPTIONS: Hollow Body Falcon (£3,549) with larger body, in White and Cerulean Smoke with gold sparkle binding, or Black with silver sparkle binding; and the Hollow Body Nashville (£2,799), with finishes including Orange Stain, Cadillac Green and Midnight Sapphire, each featuring a gold plexi pickguard and gold hardware
LEFT-HANDERS: No
FINISH: Deep Cherry Stain (as reviewed), Havana Burst, Walnut Stain
CONTACT: Gretsch Guitars

Hands-on videos

Gretsch

New for 2024 Professional Collection Hollow Bodies: Falcon, Nashville, Tennessean | Gretsch Guitars - YouTube New for 2024 Professional Collection Hollow Bodies: Falcon, Nashville, Tennessean | Gretsch Guitars - YouTube
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Neville Marten

In the late '70s and early '80s Neville worked for Selmer/Norlin as one of Gibson's UK guitar repairers, before joining CBS/Fender in the same role. He then moved to the fledgling Guitarist magazine as staff writer, rising to editor in 1986. He remained editor for 14 years before launching and editing Guitar Techniques magazine. Although now semi-retired he still works for both magazines. Neville has been a member of Marty Wilde's 'Wildcats' since 1983, and recorded his own album, The Blues Headlines, in 2019.

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