Airline 7215 Stratotone by Harmony
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G L Wilson
Guitarz - The Original Guitar Blog - now in its 10th year!
6:35 AM | Labels: Airline, cool guitars, Harmony, hollow body, vintage guitars
Nick Rhodes' Pixelator Fender Stratocaster
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The brainchild of Duran Duran's keys player Nick Rhodes, this Mexican-made Fender Stratocaster has been customised by Sims Custom Shop with 100s of LEDs beneath a plexiglass top, which when controlled from a laptop (also included in the sale) allows video-streaming straight to the guitar's top, as seen in the YouTube clip below.
Currently being offered for sale on eBay with a Buy It Now price of £5,000.
I'm reminded of Visionary Instruments' video guitars but think I prefer Nick Rhodes' system which uses a regular (albeit modified) guitar.
G L Wilson
Guitarz - The Original Guitar Blog - now in its 10th year!
8:58 AM | Labels: cool guitars, customised, Fender, one-offs, Stratocaster, weird customisations
Could the Norwegians have been the first to mass produce a solidbody electric guitar?
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However, most everyone would point to America as being the birthplace of the solidbody electric guitar. Who would have thought that, say Norway, could have been a contender?
But check out this auction for a "Nilsen Gitar". The text translates as:
Nilsen guitar, world's first mass-produced electric guitar?Although it is a through-neck instrument, construction looks to be very simple. The body and neck is plank-like with electrics housed in an external box at the bridge. Check out the bar behind the nut under which the strings pass. I so wanted to call this the World's First Locking Nut, but I suspect it is just there to allow the strings to feed into the machine heads at the correct angle as the headstock is not angled but is instead flat (no doubt to simplify mass production).
Nils Robert Nilsson (born 10/11/1904) is without doubt one of the greatest pioneers in the development and manufacture of the electric guitar. The Nilsen guitar system was designed for Greåker at Fredrikstad. This guitar is from 1945-1950. It is one of 500 items made of this model.
For more see: www.rockemuseet.no/Nilsengitaren.htm (in Norwegian).
Thanks to our friend Christian Blandhoel for bringing this guitar to my attention.
G L Wilson
Guitarz - The Original Guitar Blog - now in its 10th year!
3:31 AM | Labels: Nilsen, Norwegian guitars, vintage guitars
RKS Ruby Red
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The only time I personally ever saw one, was at a Bauhaus gig several years ago when Daniel Ash was playing a Chrome Molly model (fitted, I believe, with a Fernandes Sustainer). It sounded - and looked - fantastic.
It's such a shame that the company seemed to cease activity in 2007, a mere four years after they went into production. These were boutique instruments with prices to match, so weren't affordable to your average player. Still, it's a pity that more of those with the cash to flash couldn't have been more imaginative instead of running to the likes of the Fender Custom Shop, who - let's face it - build high-end versions of guitars designed to be cheaply produced on a production line. That's an oxymoron if I ever heard one.
Anyway, the above-pictured beautiful RKS in ruby red acrylic is currently being offered for sale on eBay with a Buy It Now price of $2,499. No, it's not in my price bracket either; I wish it was, although if I ever come into the big bucks in a lottery win or whatever, I have an XOX Audio Tools "The Handle" on my wish list first.
Thanks to Vince for bringing the RKS Ruby Red auction to my attention.
G L Wilson
Guitarz - The Original Guitar Blog - now in its 10th year!
4:02 AM | Labels: acrylic, cool guitars, guitar design, innovations, RKS
Egmond and Dutch pronounciation
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This was my today's contribution to the Great History of Electric Guitar !
Bertram
Guitarz - The Original Guitar Blog - now in its 10th year!
4:01 PM | Labels: Egmond, vintage guitars
1968 Vox Bossman V265
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You can find anything you want to know about vintage Vox guitars here so I won't say more...
Bertram
Guitarz - The Original Guitar Blog - now in its 10th year!
4:26 AM | Labels: cool guitars, Eko, semi-hollow body, vintage guitars, Vox
Klira 'Lady' jazz guitar
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Bertram
Guitarz - The Original Guitar Blog - now in its 10th year!
2:00 AM | Labels: cool guitars, gear, German guitars, Jazz guitar, Klira, semi-hollow body, vintage guitars
...and don't forget the Norma electric XII
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Thanks, Greg!
G L Wilson
Guitarz - The Original Guitar Blog - now in its 10th year!
12:35 PM | Labels: 12-string, cool guitars, Norma, vintage guitars
Norma bass from the 1960s
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G L Wilson
Guitarz - The Original Guitar Blog - now in its 10th year!
3:12 AM | Labels: bass, cool guitars, Japanese guitar, Norma, vintage guitars
Vintage Mini Beat Kids Guitar
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Bertram
Guitarz - The Original Guitar Blog - now in its 10th year!
1:00 AM | Labels: Italian guitars, kids guitars, vintage guitars, What's that guitar?
1960s Japanese Barclay Bison
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G L Wilson
Edit: I thought it seemed familiar; we've already looked at a very similar Hy-Lo branded guitar with two pickups and a different headstock shape, but undeniably the same guitar!
Guitarz - The Original Guitar Blog - now in its 10th year!
12:40 PM | Labels: Barclay, cool guitars, Japanese guitar
Ovation Ultra GP
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G L Wilson
Guitarz - The Original Guitar Blog - now in its 10th year!
3:30 AM | Labels: 80s guitars, cool guitars, Ovation
Fender Toronado Koa(?)
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The Fender Toronado was a relatively short-lived series of guitars produced between 1998 and 2007. The body design is Fender-ish in that it looks like a slightly chubbier version of the Jazzmaster/Jaguar, and in common with the latter model it sported a
This Fender Toronado in Koa (according to the seller), currently being offered for sale with a Buy It Now of £300, is a more unusual model. It has two Seymour Duncan P90s instead of the Toronado's usual pair of Fender Atomic humbuckers. Possibly this is a US Special or Highway One USA-made variant. Is anyone out there able to more positively indentify it for us?
G L Wilson
Edit: OK, so it has a Made in Korea sticker on the back of the headstock. I missed that before. As Martin says in the comments, it could be Korean Custom Shop.
Guitarz - The Original Guitar Blog - now in its 10th year!
1:50 PM | Labels: Fender, What's that guitar?
Mosrite Celebrity Bass, ultra-short-scale
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As you can see in this photo with two Fender Starcasters behind it, this Mosrite Celebrity Bass from 1967 isn't just a short-scale bass, it's an ultra-short-scale. In fact with a scale length of 24.5" it's a shorter scale than many guitars. You can just imagine how it sounds!
Personally I'd quite like to have an instrument like this and set it up and string it for DGBE tuning, i.e. an octave lower than the TOP four strings of a guitar rather than the bottom four... or octave baritone ukulele tuning if you prefer. That's an instrument I can imagine having a real use for.
Anyway, concerning this particular instrument, the seller tells us that:
According to the orange Mosrite label inside the f-hole this is style #221, the Celebrity CE III Mark X, which was offered from 1966-69. It is 1 7/8" deep at the rims and has a single-bound top and back. The serial number, Z 0362, is written on the label and stamped at the end of the rosewood fingerboard between the 21st and 22nd frets. Other features include bound f-holes, metal zero-fret, Mosrite logo-embossed machines with metal tuner buttons, adjustable bridge with non-roller string saddles, raised white plastic pickguard, short trapeze tailpiece, bridge cover/hand rest, dual pickups, and white plastic control plate with mounted jack and selector switch.If I was in a position to be buying guitars right now, I'd be so tempted to snap this one up. It has a Buy It Now price of $795, which is about £488 to people like me. Sometimes it's hard compiling a guitar blog with all this temptation on daily basis!
Thanks to Jeremiah Cornelius for bringing this bass to my attention.
G L Wilson
Guitarz - The Original Guitar Blog - now in its 10th year!
3:50 AM | Labels: bass, cool guitars, Mosrite, semi-hollow body, vintage guitars
1950s very vintage Hagström
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This one also has one of these special vintage tremelo I like so much, and you can notice that it has no knobs at all, just switches and rolls.
Bertram
Guitarz - The Original Guitar Blog - now in its 10th year!
3:28 AM | Labels: cool guitars, Hagstrom, vintage guitars, wacky finishes
Electric harp guitar, handmade in Hastings, UK
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Hand carved from a single piece of Obeche with Bubinga fingerboard and headstock veneer.G L Wilson
Guitar scale length-25.5". Zero radius(flat)fingerboard. Medium frets.
Grover guitar tuners.
Kent Armstrong PAF and PAF+ guitar pickups.
Humbucking Bass pickup.
Stacked volume and tone controls with Sprague orange drop capacitors.
Separate jack outputs. Seperate bass and guitar amps are recommended for the best sound.
Handpainted Hummingbird scene by american artist Cynthia McGinnis.
Gold hardware.
Custom pickup wiring with 5way rotary switch for humbucking/single coil selection.
Guitarz - The Original Guitar Blog - now in its 10th year!
6:37 AM | Labels: British guitars, harp guitar, one-offs, wacky finishes, Weird guitars
Michael Spalt Totem
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More than the ornate bodies, I like what Spalt does with pickups, some guitars have unique combinations like a Filtertron, a P90 and a minibucker, or two P90s side by side in bridge position; and there are some cool custom pickups like the ones you can see here, with colored bone tops. This, some nice body designs and some highly experimental models make it worth visiting the Michael Spalt website if you never did (no I don't feel that this is advertisement, these handmade guitars are anyway unaffordable).
A funny thing is that these colorful tops are supposed to be arty, but I have more a constructivist idea of art, and for me the highest aesthetic emotion comes from form and ergonomics, not from ornaments, so I show you the back of the guitar, a nice piece of functional sculpture...
5:01 PM | Labels: Art, cool guitars, Luthiers, one-offs, Spalt Instruments, Telecaster, wacky finishes
1960s Egmond in spangled vinyl finish
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Also, can you see now why I thought Wednesday's mystery guitar might be an Egmond?
G L Wilson
Guitarz - The Original Guitar Blog - now in its 10th year!
11:12 AM | Labels: Egmond, vintage guitars, wacky finishes
Teisco / Kay upgrade
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At least with this example, currently being offered with a starting price of £150 and a Buy It Now of £250, the guitar has seen some serious upgrades. If I were being uncharitable, I might say something along the lines of "polishing a turd", but the seller claims that this was always a nice player and deserved an upgrade to get the best out of it. Here's what he says about it:
The old, worn pickups have since been replaced with Rickenbacker-style "toaster" pickups, which produce a beautifully warm and unique sound (the scratchplate was carefully re-cut to accommodate them). The old vibrato/tremolo has also been replaced with a Fender Jaguar-style tremolo system, which works perfectly (some of the body was skilfully hollowed-out to accommodate this larger tremolo system).
Furthermore, a tune-o-matic bridge has been added; the tuners/machineheads have been replaced with Wilkinson Deluxe "Kluson-style" tuners; the volume/tone knobs have been replaced with Jaguar-style knobs; and, the input jack has been replaced. [Why do people insist on saying "input jack" when it is an OUTPUT jack? - GLW] The pots, switches and electronics have also been thoroughly cleaned. The cost of parts and labour exceeded £200.No doubt the guitar has been improved - I'd say the pickups, trem system, bridge, etc are worth more than the original instrument itself. Whether it'll appeal to anyone other than the guy that put it together remains to be seen.The overall result is a revitalised, utterly unique and beautiful-sounding guitar. You simply won't find another one like it; the pictures alone demonstrate this. I also believe that the guitar has not so much been modified as improved.
G L Wilson
Guitarz - The Original Guitar Blog - now in its 10th year!
5:36 AM | Labels: Japanese guitar, Kay, Teisco, vintage guitars
DiPinto Galaxie 4 lefty
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As played by surf rock act Los Straitjackets.
See also DiPinto Guitars.
G L Wilson
Guitarz - The Original Guitar Blog - now in its 10th year!
2:46 PM | Labels: cool guitars, DiPinto, left-handed
K. Yairi tenor guitar
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Here's an intriguing 4-string, possibly tenor, guitar from K. Yairi.
K. Yairi, a company overseen by Mr. Kazuo Yairi in Kani, a small community in the mountainside area of Honshu, Japan, are renowned for their high quality acoustic guitars. However, their guitars usually are more conservative in appearance than this one. This particular instrument's scale length of 24.8" puts it into regular guitar scale territory, rather than the usual 23" scale of a tenor guitar. It's an odd one, for sure. Alas, the eBay listing tells us very little about it.
G L Wilson
Guitarz - The Original Guitar Blog - now in its 10th year!
6:49 AM | Labels: acoustic, K. Yairi, Tenor guitar
Cry Baby: The Pedal That Rocks The World
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Cry Baby: The Pedal That Rocks The World from Joey Tosi on Vimeo.
A film by by Joey Tosi.Thanks to Tsahi Lazan for bringing this to my attention.
Unknown Teardrop guitar - not a Vox as far as we know
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Hi Gavin,Hey Bobby, any chance of a look at the headstock? Also, is there any indication of where it was made, like a stamped neckplate saying "Made in Japan"?
I bought a lovely vintage teardrop guitar off of ebay, but am struggling to find the manufacturer of it... It's likely Kawai or Teisco, but I can't find a similar/same one online in Google searches. Usually the selector switches/plate are what doesn't match. Any ideas?
Cheers,
Bobby
My guess would be it was made in Japan, and I think I'd incline more towards Kawai than Teisco, but I have to confess that I really don't know. Perhaps other readers may have some better ideas.
G L Wilson
Guitarz - The Original Guitar Blog - now in its 10th year!
10:37 AM | Labels: Japanese guitar, Kawai, Teisco, vintage guitars, Vox, What's that guitar?
Here's another to identify... Any ideas?
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Hi, my name is Kalle Mattsson, for me the internet pretty much is gmail, facebook and Guitarz these days.
Today I came across this add on the Dutch version of ebay:
http://link.marktplaats.nl/425168240
The ad only says that the seller wants to know wether or not this is a valuable guitar, and that he doesn´t trust that is says Höfner on the headstock.
It does have some nice features, and I thought you might like to see it.Wow! That guitar certainly has a very interesting finish. I think the "seller" is right to be suspicious of the Höfner name on the headstock - it's not like any Höfner I've seen before. It looks more like an Egmond, which - given the location - would be quite feasible. Maybe an Egmond fitted with a Höfner neck?
All the best
Kalle
Does anyone else out there have any better information to offer?
G L Wilson
Edit: Several people have suggested that it might be an Isana, a relation of this guitar perhaps.
Guitarz - The Original Guitar Blog - now in its 10th year!
1:39 PM | Labels: Egmond, German guitars, Hofner, vintage guitars, What's that guitar?
What's that guitar?
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Bertram
Edit: check the comments, no answer yet but serious leads point to either Cimar or Teisco.
Guitarz - The Original Guitar Blog - now in its 10th year!
3:42 AM | Labels: semi-hollow body, vintage guitars, What's that guitar?
Hayman thinline 2020
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1:49 PM | Labels: cool guitars, Hayman, thinline, UK guitars
1970s Yamaha SG45
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The body is solid mahogany and it has a set neck with rosewood fingerboard. It's quite obviously a Les Paul inspired design, but the body shape has been softened with a much smoother lower cutaway. Note also the bizarre back cover plate stretching all the way from the volume and tone controls on the lower bout to the pickup selector on the bass side of the neck. It makes you wonder why they didn't use separate covers for each area, but thinking about it, I'd wager that the routing for the wiring between these areas is directly beneath the plate rather than inside the body. After all, on most Les Pauls the wiring channel would be beneath the maple top of the guitar, but the Yamaha doesn't have a separate top, just a mahogany slab body. This would be a cheaper, more efficient construction method, even if it does lack elegance.
One other minor detail, I notice that the pickup selector moves from side to side rather than up and down as on a Les Paul. This is much more logical. I play a LP style guitar (actually a cheapy Vintage brand V100) and I'm always accidentally knocking the selector switch and changing pickups when I don't want to. I don't really like selector switches in this position, I'd rather they were well out of the way, but if you've got to have one here then side to side operation makes perfect sense. I had been considering turning the selector in my LP-alike through 90 degrees to get the same effect.
Anyway... I'm so glad to have found out what this guitar was. Back in the tail-end of the 1970s I saw a punk band called Case whose guitarist had one of these and I have often wondered what it was.
G L Wilson
Guitarz - The Original Guitar Blog - now in its 10th year!
6:45 AM | Labels: cool guitars, Les Paul, vintage guitars, Yamaha
1970s Kay LP-type guitar with on-board FX
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What nearly everyone seems to forget, however, is that the guitar isn't an Les Paul copy per se, but is modelled after the Roland GS500 controller for Roland's very first guitar synthesizer, the GR500, which was introduced in 1978. This was back in the day when any new and exciting guitar spawned Japanese-made imitations - in this instance the guitar that was being "copied" was also Japanese. Obviously, it would have been prohibitive to make it a guitar synth, hence the on-board effects as a suitably high-tech alternative.
G L Wilson
2:57 PM | Labels: Japanese guitar, Kay, Les Paul, optimistic sellers, vintage guitars
Wessen X-shaped guitar
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Another one for your comedy HM band.
G L Wilson
Guitarz - The Original Guitar Blog - now in its 10th year!
6:04 AM | Labels: Hideous guitars, pointy guitar, Wessen
AEB-2 scroll bass - Ampeg tribute by Bruce Johnson
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I finally saw something on eBay that breaks my heart not to have, and thought might be shared with the blog. eBay has a Bruce Johnston AEB-2 - new and direct from Bruce, himself. The serial is 073, and build date is this last Feb, 2011.Fantastic stuff. Thanks for sharing!
Johnston's scroll bass is a direct continuation of the classic Ampeg scroll bass, and was initially produced under a license. Bruce has steadily improved and modernised his builds, while remaining true to the original appeal and characteristics of the vintage Ampeg models.
G L Wilson
Guitarz - The Original Guitar Blog - now in its 10th year!
1:58 PM | Labels: Ampeg, bass, Bruce Johnson, cool guitars, Luthiers, replicas
1960s Italian Gemelli "Twins" guitar
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More here (if you can read or translate Italian).
G L Wilson
Guitarz - The Original Guitar Blog - now in its 10th year!
4:38 AM | Labels: cool guitars, Gemelli, Italian guitars, vintage guitars
Jolana RK120 - the Czech answer to the Stratocaster
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This Jolana with the low production number of 0063, being an 80s guitar, has the obligatory locking trem (by Schaller in this case) and locking nut. The all-red finish on body and neck reminds me of my own DiMarzio cellophane Strat, but in this instance we have an ebony fingerboard.
G L Wilson
Guitarz - The Original Guitar Blog - now in its 10th year!
8:34 AM | Labels: 80s guitars, cool guitars, Czechoslovakian guitar, Jolana, Stratocaster
OCG Freestyle - extreme offset body prototype guitar
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For more, see the Oren Clark Guitars YouTube channel.
G L Wilson
Guitarz - The Original Guitar Blog - now in its 10th year!
1:05 PM | Labels: ergonomic guitars, innovations, Oren Clark Guitars, prototypes, Zion
Res-O-Glas Nick Page Strich-2
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Bertram
Guitarz - The Original Guitar Blog - now in its 10th year!
5:23 AM | Labels: elegant guitars, German guitars, Luthiers, Nick Page, Res-O-Glas
Exclusive: Tantra electric guitars brochure
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guitarz.blogspot.com:
Hervé Le Garsmeur, one of the founders of French guitar manufacturers Tantra, has kindly shared with us this Tantra catalogue, the original of which is apparently disintegrating and, he suspects, may be the last one on the planet. So, here it is for prosperity:
G L Wilson
Guitarz - The Original Guitar Blog - now in its 10th year!
12:16 PM | Labels: catalogues, cool guitars, French guitar, Tantra, vintage guitars
Guild X-100 Blade Runner (again)
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The last time we looked at a Guild X-1000 Blade Runner (as used by Joe Perry in the "Walk This Way" video), it generated quite a lot of discussion in the comments.
Back then I was astounded that someone would ask £7000 for such a guitar (i.e. over $11,300 in US dollars), so in comparison this example, which has been on eBay for the last few weeks, seems to be more conservatively priced with a starting bid of $2,995.
Also, since that last post, I have learned that the Schecter Genesis was indeed copied from this Blade Runner.
G L Wilson
Guitarz - The Original Guitar Blog - now in its 10th year!
8:23 AM | Labels: 80s guitars, Guild, holey guitars, pointy guitar, wacky finishes
1960s Melody Guitar
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And indeed it is. It's a Melody, which for a while, operated as a subsiduary to Eko. For the full story, check this article on the always brilliant Fetish Guitars website. This particular example (pictured above) sold on eBay just recently for what seems like a very fair price of €412.
G L Wilson
Guitarz - The Original Guitar Blog - now in its 10th year!
1:10 PM | Labels: cool guitars, Eko, Italian guitars, Melody, vintage guitars, wacky finishes
Kay semi-hollow
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Bertram
Guitarz - The Original Guitar Blog - now in its 10th year!
1:45 PM | Labels: double florentine cutaways, Kay, semi-hollow body, vintage guitars
1960s Fenton Weill Twistmaster (we think)
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There's something awfully "homemade" looking about these vintage British guitars from Fenton Weill. This model, which the seller suspects is a Fenton Weill Twistmaster (I don't know enough about the brand to contradict that claim) is typical in that it looks as if it was assembled in someone's garden shed. Note the interesting double pickguard. Another odd feature is that although the guitar is finished in blonde, the back of the neck is inexplicably picked out in black.
There must surely have been some connection with Vox and/or Jennings Musical Industries of Dartford, Kent. The headstock is exactly the same as that I had on my old Vox Clubman II. The Fenton Weill neck looks to be glued in, by the way; it's not a simple bolt-on job.
G L Wilson
Guitarz - The Original Guitar Blog - now in its 10th year!
12:45 PM | Labels: British guitars, Fenton Weill, vintage guitars
1980s mirrored Erlewine Lazer travel guitar
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Guitarz - The Original Guitar Blog - now in its 10th year!
12:26 AM | Labels: 80s guitars, customised, Erlewine, headless, travel guitars
Hamer Miller beer promotional guitar
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This USA-made Miller beer promotional guitar by Hamer with a quilted maple top has quite an attractive shape - obviously derived from the Miller logo - but I wonder if there would be any way of removing the lettering?...
G L Wilson
Guitarz - The Original Guitar Blog - now in its 10th year!
12:15 PM | Labels: Hamer, one-offs, Promotional guitars, wacky finishes
Fender Mustang bass and guitar in Competition burgundy
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G L Wilson
Guitarz - The Original Guitar Blog - now in its 10th year!
2:33 AM | Labels: bass, cool guitars, Fender, vintage guitars
Vega console guitar from the 1930s
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The five bakelite-topped tone controls are labelled "Contra", "Bass", "Normal", "Treble" and "High".
A fascinating instrument; I'm sure you could make a whole blog on the subject of slide guitars alone. Unfortunately I know precious little about them.
G L Wilson
Guitarz - The Original Guitar Blog - now in its 10th year!
7:10 AM | Labels: 8-string, console guitar, cool guitars, lap steel, slide guitar, vintage guitars
Goldentone from 1964
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Here's another Japanese-made Burns-influenced guitar, this one carrying the Goldentone brandname. You might want to compare and contrast with the Ibanez/Montclair guitar in the previous post. They are not identical, but very very similar.
Currently being offered for sale on eBay in the UK with a possibly optimistic Buy It Now price of £889.
G L Wilson
Guitarz - The Original Guitar Blog - now in its 10th year!
11:37 AM | Labels: Burns, cool guitars, Goldentone, Japanese guitar, vintage guitars
1960s Ibanez 3904 Montclair
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This rather wild looking guitar with four pickups, a bank of selector switches, multi-pickguards, metal control and output panel, and original vibrato carries the Montclair brandname but is - apparently - a 1960s-era Ibanez 3904 made at the Hoshino/Tama factory in Japan.
It's obviously heavily influenced by Burns, although I don't think it's a direct copy of any one Burns guitar. If anything, it's taken the Burns design and gone even wilder with it. It's a pity they resorted to using such a generic looking headstock on this - it's probably a stock Ibanez neck from that era - but it rather lets the side down.
Currently for sale on eBay with a Buy It Now price of $849.50.
G L Wilson
Guitarz - The Original Guitar Blog - now in its 10th year!
2:50 AM | Labels: Burns, cool guitars, Ibanez, Japanese guitar, Montclair, vintage guitars
Gordon Smith GS1 doubleneck
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But if you have to have one, how about this beautiful Gordon Smith GS1 12+6 doubleneck with set necks and an understated natural satin finish on mahogany, and with two pairs of coil-tappable humbuckers for a wide range of tones? This auction is finishing in two days time; it has a starting price of £550 and no-one has bid yet.
Gordon Smith guitars, handcrafted in the UK, have a solid reputation for producing high quality instruments at very reasonable prices. The designs are, in the main, reminiscent of those of Gibson with the GS series having a LP Jr influence. They have the feel of bespoke handmade guitars, whilst also making excellent workhorse instuments.
G L Wilson
Edit: Looks like it sold for the starting price of £550. Someone got a bargain!
Guitarz - The Original Guitar Blog - now in its 10th year!
3:03 AM | Labels: 12-string, cool guitars, doubleneck, Gordon Smith