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Guitar World
Guitar World
Entertainment
Dave Burrluck

“It ain’t hip, but it’s fairly priced for a North American-made guitar – and an instrument this writer would happily gig with, no hesitation”: Godin Radium review

Godin Radium in green finish on a yellow background.

What is it?

It’s never been easy to pigeonhole Godin, the long-running Canadian maker, which turns its expansive hands to everything from affordable steel- and nylon-string acoustics to $/£5k-plus signature electric models. If there is a theme, it’s practicality: good, solid craft that’s always very fit for purpose.

This Radium is case in point. It was actually introduced at the start of 2020, in Carbon Black and Winchester Brown, just before Covid caused its havoc, while the Matte Green version you see here was announced in 2021.

A change in distribution meant reviews were on hold, and while we managed to get our hands on the higher-end Radium-X with its LR Baggs X-Bridge, this base model slipped through the net.

“Presenting a new breed of single-cut guitars, which combines all the best elements of the Radiator and the Stadium into one: the Radium!” said Godin at its launch.

It’s a pretty close cousin to that same-shaped Godin Stadium (T-style bridge, two single coils, long scale and six-in-a-line headstock) and the Radiator (wrapover bridge, two humbuckers, short scale and three-a-side headstock).

(Image credit: Future / Phil Barker)

This is a straightforward design centring on a Gibson ‘short’-scale mahogany neck glued into a solid Canadian Laurentian basswood body, and is available in a trio of demure finishes. The apparent slab-body elongated T-style design actually has a rear ribcage cutaway and rounding to the back of that bass-side horn – but little truck with any other comfort contours.

The trio of HSH pickups is direct-mounted, although the middle Tele-neck-style covered single coil and the bridge humbucker sit quite high out of the body as the bridge is a chunky wrapover type with stepped intonation ridge and overall intonation adjustment.

Also top-mounted are the controls and output jack. These both sit on a lightly aged and similarly elongated T-style control plate, with the angled five-way lever pickup selector at the front, the output at the base, and wide‑spaced volume and tone controls placed in between – the latter with a pull switch to simultaneously split those outer zebra ’buckers.

Playability and sounds

(Image credit: Future / Phil Barker)

Strapped on or seated, the Radium certainly feels familiar and fairly Tele-like. Overall weight is trim at 3.24kg (7.13lb) and the satin-finish neck feels special: a medium-depth C with quite sloping shoulders – 21.4mm in depth at the 1st fret and 23.5mm by the 12th.

The classic feel is enhanced by well-installed medium-gauge frets on the 305mm (12-inch) radiused unbound rosewood fingerboard with a nice classic incurve to the edges.

There’s a very appealing smooth, sustaining acoustic response that’s married to that classic feel, making the Radium feel like an old friend, rather than a new guitar you’re taking on a first date.

(Image credit: Future / Phil Barker)

Sound-wise, there’s nothing that’s going to upset, either, with a big, thick, overwound voice at the bridge and a more vintage-y sound at the neck. Thanks to the five-way lever switch, we drop into more Strat-like voicings in positions 2 and 4 and a slightly muted centre single coil.

With that tone control switch pulled up (which voices only the screw coils of the humbuckers), it’s a very usable hardtail S-style, while both humbuckers are cleaner and brighter – but not overly so.

We might be tempted to add a treble bleed to the volume control just to maximise the clarity with reduced settings, especially if you use a less gained amp voice. But, overall, it does exactly what it says on the tin.

Verdict

(Image credit: Future / Phil Barker)

If the Radium displays quite a mash-up of style with an almost T-style vibe married to its ‘Gibson’ scale-length set neck and wrapover bridge, it certainly covers some ground, sound-wise. There’s the beefy rock-aimed ’buckers that split well, and with that middle single coil in play it dips into a Strat’s sonic palette.

Our sample was ready for action from the off with a great-feeling neck, good setup and no tuning issues

Our sample was ready for action from the off with a great-feeling neck, good setup and no tuning issues, and it really exemplifies that fit-for-purpose Godin proposition.

Now, it ain’t hip, but it’s pretty fairly priced for a North American-made guitar, not least compared to Gibson USA’s start-up models. It’s an instrument this writer would happily head off to a gig with, no hesitation.

Guitar World's verdict: Godin isn’t every player’s first choice, but for anyone looking for that slightly different vibe, you’ll find it here in spades with excellent quality to match.

Specs

PRICE: $1,049/£1,299 (inc gigbag)
ORIGIN: Canada
TYPE: Double-cutaway, solidbody electric
BODY: Canadian Laurentian basswood
NECK: Mahogany, glued-in
SCALE LENGTH: 629mm (24.75”)
NUT/WIDTH: Graph Tech Tusq/43.45mm
FINGERBOARD: Rosewood, white dot inlays, 305mm (12”) radius
FRETS: 22, medium
HARDWARE: Adjustable wraparound bridge, Graph Tech Ratio tuners (18:1 on bass side, 26:1 on treble side) – nickel/chrome-plated
STRING SPACING/BRIDGE: 52mm
ELECTRICS: Godin Custom zebra humbucker (bridge and neck), Custom Cajun (covered, middle), 5-way lever pickup selector switch, master volume and tone (with pull switch coil-split for both humbuckers)
WEIGHT (kg/lb): 3.24/7.13
RANGE OPTIONS: The Radium-X (£2,599) has a longer 648mm (25.5”) scale length with dual Bare Knuckle/Seymour Duncan humbuckers and LR Baggs X-Bridge vibrato
LEFT-HANDERS: No
FINISHES: Matte Green (as reviewed), Carbon Black, Winchester Brown – matt body finish and satin neck back
CONTACT: Godin Guitars

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