Did someone say Led Zeppelin lll turned up to 11? Fender today
unveiled two new instruments which blur the lines between folk and
rock. The Reso-Tele and the Mando-Strat feature an alder body
and a bridge made on the same machine that produced the parts on
Fender's electric mandolins from the late '50s

PRESS RELEASE - The classic Fender electric
mandolin returns as the new Mando-Strat. This highly
distinctive and charmingly diminutive instrument evokes the Fender
electric four-string mandolins of the 1950s and '60s, with an
updated and improved design for modern players.
The distinctive shape and chiming tone of Fender's late-'50s
electric mandolin are back, with features including a solid alder
body, 13.78" scale, "C"-shaped maple neck with 24-fret rosewood
fingerboard, and specially designed pickup with volume and tone
controls. Other features include a vintage-style bridge with chrome
plate made on the actual machine used to produce the original parts
half a century ago, three-ply tortoise shell pickguard,
vintage-style tuners, and chrome hardware.

Fender Acoustics now offers you a truly remarkable instrument in
the distinctive form of the Reso-Tele, which
is exactly what the name suggests-a resonator version of a
Telecaster. This unusual design, combined with the Telecaster
pickup and under-saddle pickup and electronics, makes for a
one-of-a-kind playing experience with an appealingly traditional
vibe.
The Reso-Tele has a maple Telecaster body with a stylish
Two-color Sunburst finish, stylized Fender "F" sound hole and
hand-spun cone crafted in Eastern Europe for rich resonator tone.
Its standard Telecaster neck pickup and Fishman® Powerchip
under-saddle pickup can be blended together to taste, along with a
master volume control. Other features include a "C"-shaped maple
Telecaster neck with a 15.7"-radius rosewood fretboard, maple
"biscuit" bridge with bell-brass nickel-plated tailpiece, and
chrome hardware.
For more information:
Fender