I would purchase many more guitars from the 1970s onwards, but the Aria always stuck in my mind. It was made by the Matsumoku company, which produced some of the finest guitars of that era. The Japanese "Yairi" line also produced some exceptional crafted acoustic and classical guitars.
As luck would have it, I recently acquired a vintage 1974 Aria strat body from the Deep South. The body is solid and made of Sen Ash (ash thick cap over hardwood) and weighs in at 3.7 lbs. Full size 1 3/4" thick. Much to my surprise, a vintage Fender bridge and trem assembly dropped in perfectly to the existing routing and bridge holes, providing for a perfect 25.5 scale. The main difference I noticed is instead of a center channel for the pickup wiring, the channel sits below the single coil, because the Japanese Maxon pickups had the wires on the end and not center hump og the bottom bobbin like the American coils. So, I gently notched out each separate cavity to accommodate American bobbins and hand wound three AlNiCo 5 pickups.
I then fitted a non-Fender neck on it with a radius of 12 inches. A nice medium fat C profile that I finished in French polish. There is nothing quite like the sound of old tonewood that aged well. This is one of those times.
I have attached some pics and a blues track I recorded featuring the Aria strat on lead guitar and my Legacy Tribute on rhythm.
Best - CS




