Gretsch Releases Baritone Electromatic CVT

A 27-inch scale and coil-split humbuckers bring the CVT closer to its visual promise, though only one finish is on offer.

After the Electromatic CVT Double-Cut arrived last year—boosted by the Jack Antonoff Princess signature—its retro-meets-rock silhouette seemed to demand a baritone version. The short 24.6-inch scale on the standard model ran counter to the down-tuned look. Gretsch has now addressed that with the Electromatic CVT Baritone, a 27-inch scale instrument that stretches the same outline into lower registers.

Spec-wise, it’s not just a neck swap. The mahogany body stays, but the fingerboard is rosewood with Neo-Classical thumbnail inlays, and the Twin Six humbuckers are wired for coil-splitting via the push-pull pots. The wraparound bridge is replaced by an Adjusto-O-Matic and tailpiece. Build quality is high—no surprise there—and the guitar leans naturally into rock and higher-gain settings, though clean tones come across as dull, according to early test notes.

The catch is the finish. Bristol Fog, a translucent brown burst, is the only color. No Havana Burst, no Wychwood. For a guitar whose visual identity was a selling point, the single option feels like a missed step. Still, at a price that’s becoming the new median for accessible electrics, the CVT Baritone offers a viable entry into extended-scale playing without asking for a steep commitment.

Join the Club

Like this story? You’ll love our monthly newsletter.

Thank you for subscribing to the newsletter.

Oops. Something went wrong. Please try again later.

ROMBO Editorial Staff

ROMBO Editorial Staff

The collective voice behind ROMBO Magazine’s news, reviews, features, and cultural coverage.