PRS Silver Sky

Last updated
PRS Silver Sky
2022 PRS SE John Mayer Silver Sky Moon White.jpg
Manufacturer PRS
Period2018–present (Core)
2022-present (SE)
Construction
Body type Solid
Neck joint Bolt-on
Scale 25.5 inches (647.7 mm)
Woods
Body Alder (Core)
Poplar (SE)
Neck Maple
Fretboard Rosewood
Maple
Hardware
BridgeTwo-point steel vibrato
Pickup(s) Three 635JM single-coils
Colors available
Various

The PRS Silver Sky is an electric guitar model produced by PRS Guitars and co-designed with John Mayer as his signature model with the brand. The Silver Sky's basic design combines a Fender Stratocaster-style body with PRS's headstock and signature birds-in-flight fretboard inlays. Mayer had previously been an endorser of Fender guitars with his own signature model Stratocaster, but Mayer ended the partnership in 2014 to pursue new guitar designs with Paul Reed Smith. Upon release, the Silver Sky quickly became one of the industry's best-selling guitars, while simultaneously facing backlash among many guitarists over its similarities to the Strat—a combination that led Guitar World to dub the Silver Sky a "phenomenon... the guitar that 'broke' the internet." [1]

Contents

Production

History

Mayer performing with a Silver Sky in 2019. JohnMayerin2019.jpg
Mayer performing with a Silver Sky in 2019.

While a Fender-endorsed artist, Mayer sought to design a guitar with greater consistency in production quality while having room to develop and build on his own ideas, but he found Fender unreceptive. [2] In approaching PRS, Mayer valued being able to collaborate with Paul Reed Smith himself as the company owner. [3] In 2016, PRS released their first guitar designed with Mayer, the "Super Eagle," and then in 2017 the "Super Eagle II"—both exotic, high-end guitars produced in limited numbers. [4] But Mayer sought to look "deeper into the genetic code of things" and produce a series of guitars for the mass market that represented his point of view. Mayer rejected the notion of the Silver Sky as a conventional signature model, opting not to use his name on the front of the headstock or to brand it as such. He instead chose to use the name "Silver Sky," which he said might have been a fragment of a forgotten song lyric but liked it because it sounded mysterious and felt consistent with PRS's bird nomenclature. [2]

On social media, Mayer teased the upcoming release of the guitar, while leaked photos of prototypes being used at gigs led to significant public anticipation. Upon its official release in March 2018, the Silver Sky made, as Guitar wrote, "the kind of waves that went beyond the wildest dreams of even the most ambitious marketing department." [4] The first 500 models shipped with a commemorative hard-shell case. [4]

Design

Close-up of the "reverse" PRS headstock design. 2022 PRS SE Silver Sky Headstock.jpg
Close-up of the "reverse" PRS headstock design.

In its first review of the Silver Sky, Guitar wrote that it "takes many cues from the Stratocaster, but also includes nods to modernity and several features that are synonymous with PRS." [4] The Silver Sky features an overall design similar to a Strat, including its three single-coil pickups, alder body, 25.5" scale length, and bolt-on maple neck, but departs from Fender's guitar with a reverse PRS-style headstock with three tuners per side, birds-in-flight fretboard inlays, and a carved treble horn to aid access to the upper frets. The neck profile, which has a 7.5" fretboard radius, is modeled on a 1964 Strat of Mayer's. All color options initially had rosewood fretboards with later editions offering maple. In designing the guitar's custom 635JM pickups, Mayer sought to replicate his '64 Strat pickups while improving clarity and reducing the inherent out-of-phase "quack" of the two and four pickup selector positions. [2] Mayer has described the Silver Sky as "sort of a higher-definition Strat." [3]

SE model

Two years after the introduction of the USA-made Silver Sky, PRS and Mayer began developing a version for the brand's affordable, foreign-made "SE" line of guitars. PRS initially began manufacturing the SE Silver Sky in Indonesia in partnership with Cor-Tek, using the same facility as Cort Guitars. In 2022, the SE models moved to a new building dedicated to PRS's SE line-ups. [1] Changes to the SE model include using a cheaper wood—poplar instead of alder—for the body, an altered neck profile, and Cor-Tek produced pickups. [1]

The SE Silver Sky was Reverb.com's best-selling electric guitar model for both 2022 and 2023. [5]

Reception

With photos having leaked ahead of the Silver Sky's announcement in March 2018, many guitarists took to online message boards and social media to express disapproval over the Silver Sky's similarities to the Stratocaster, with commentators dismissing the guitar as a Strat copy with a PRS headstock and claiming the guitar is a "betrayal" of both Fender and PRS. [2] PRS's chief operating officer, Jack Higginbotham, later acknowledged the similarities to the Strat as the elephant in the room, but argued the Silver Sky was not simply a copy but instead represented a re-examining of every facet of the Strat's design while adding "PRS-isms" such as the bird inlays and three-tuners-to-a-side headstock. [1] Mayer was not surprised by the backlash: "The initial response to the Silver Sky was pretty negative because people tend to resist anything new... Truth is, I don't think guitarists are really saying they don't like the Silver Sky. They're just reacting. I've seen the lifespan of people's negative reactions enough to understand what it means. What most people are really asking is, 'What is this? What are you trying to do?' You just need to get through the period that people register their confusion and dissent." [2] Company founder Paul Reed Smith noted that the public perception of the Silver Sky changed dramatically for the positive when Mayer live-streamed its first demo. [2]

In a 2018 review, Guitar World acknowledged the Silver Sky's similarities to the Stratocaster, but approvingly noted its design changes and unique mid-range clarity compared to Fender's guitars. Guitar World dismissed any controversy, writing, "For aficionados of the classic three single-coil pickup solidbody guitar design, this is truly one of the finest examples ever produced." [2]

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References

  1. 1 2 3 4 Burrluck, Dave. "The making of the PRS SE Silver Sky: how Paul Reed Smith and John Mayer created the best SE model yet". guitarworld.com. Guitar World. Retrieved 22 August 2024.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Tolinski, Brad. "John Mayer Explains the Heat Around His Cool New PRS Silver Sky Guitar". guitarworld.com. Guitar World. Retrieved 22 August 2024.
  3. 1 2 Astley-Brown, Michael. "John Mayer: I made the Silver Sky with PRS because Fender couldn't "bring the vision that I had to life"". musicradar.com. Music Radar. Retrieved 22 August 2024.
  4. 1 2 3 4 Vinnicombe, Chris. "PRS Silver Sky Review". guitar.com. Guitar Magazine. Retrieved 23 August 2024.
  5. Roberts, Rachel. "The PRS SE Silver Sky "reigns supreme" as Reverb's best-selling electric guitar for second year in a row". guitar.com. Guitar Magazine. Retrieved 22 August 2024.