Selasa, 30 Januari 2007

Gibson ES 369:
TONE to the BONE
Right now my guitar collection consists of an very limited run Black "Gibson ES-369."



I searched the web and found there really wasn't much out there in the way of information on the ES-369, the following is what I could find.

Toward the end of the 1970s, Gibson was looking for a viable adaptation of the popular ES-335 model guitar that would capture players imagination. Gibson brought out the ES-335 Pro (Dirty Finger pickups with exposed coils, 1979-1982), ES-335 CRS/CRR (Country Rock Models, stereo, coil tap switch, brass nut, 1979 only), ES-347 (coil tap switch, TP-6 tailpiece, ebony fingerboard, large block inlay, 1978-1992) and the ES-369. These models were made at a time when variations of popular models were created by the major guitar manufacturers to build sales. A few short years later the reissue period would begin that has engulfed the marketplace. By 1982, Gibson introduced the ES-335 DOT. A reasonable, but not exact replica of the early dot-neck models. Fender was also bringing out their '57 and '62 reissue Stratocasters.

By the early 1980's, the guitar market was faltering and both Gibson and Fender was having a tough time earning the level of profitability that their large conglomerate parent firms demanded. It was an era of electronic music. Keyboards, as well as cheaper instruments were in demand. The quality of guitars built in this period suffered. Within a few years, both Gibson and Fender would be sold.

The ES-369 is classified as a thinline, double-cutaway, semi-hollowbody instrument. A maple block extends end-to-end down the middle of the body with F-holes cut into the laminated maple top. Perhaps the most striking feature of the ES-369 is the double-bound (red binding) snakehead headstock with embossed truss rod cover engraved with the model designation. This shape is reminiscent of the snakehead peghead styles of the 1920s and 1930s. It's interesting to note that Paul Reed Smith (PRS) guitar headstocks somewhat resemble this styling. Also, Gibson's Mark series acoustic flat-top guitars built from 1975-1979 used a similar snakehead headstock. Gibson used a slant script logo inlay on the ES-369 like those used in the late 1920s. Chrome tulip button tuners were installed along with a brass nut.

The 369's scale length is the same as a Les Paul or ES-335 at 24.75 inches with 22 frets. A rosewood fingerboard with creme binding complements the front and back creme body binding. At the back of the headstock where it meets the neck, a large volute was added for additional strength. Stamped on back of headstock is the serial number and 'Made in U.S.A.' .
Gibson designated zebra (black/creme pickup coils) exposed coil Dirty Finger pickups for the 369 that are hotter than their regular issue humbuckers. A coil tap switch was included to emulate single coil Fender type sounds. This coil tap option for humbucker pickups was popular at the time this guitar was introduced. The typical Gibson three way toggle switch and input jack on the face of the guitar is the same as a ES-335.

A Nashville tune-o-matic bridge along with Gibson's TP-6 tailpiece was chosen for better intonation and control. The tailpiece is built with individual string tension adjusters. The idea is good theory, however players have not supported this idea and stop tailpiece Gibson guitars are the configuration of choice these days.



By the time the ES-369 was introduced, the ES-335 and ES-347 both had coil tap switch configurations. Gibson moved the coil tap switch on the ES-369 from the upper cutaway bout location of the other two models to just beyond the end of the pickguard and replaced the regular toggle switch with a mini-microswitch. Essentially, the most outstanding difference between those two models and the ES-369 are cosmetic. The ES-369's headstock design and trapezoid fingerboard inlay differentiate it from the others.

Gibson's original factory in Kalamazoo built the ES-369 as well as the highly sought after original ES-335 guitars which were first made in 1958. The ES-369 has a stamped serial number with 8 impressed digits. Digits 6-8 less than 500 (and produced before July of 1984 for all Gibson guitars) indicates it was made in the Kalamazoo plant. The company eventually moved all guitar production from Kalamazoo to Nashville.

Gibson produced ES-369 guitars with finishes commonly associated with ES-335 instruments, sunburst and cherry. In addition, a solid black finish was available. A rectangular label with white background and orange and black triangles can be viewed through the upper F-hole. The model pictured was equipped with black speed knobs and single-ply creme pickguard. There are no production figures available for these instruments.

These instruments were probably not built in large quantities and were not considered a market success. The 369 guitars are an eclectic mix of a few faddish features of the 1980's with old world styling appointments. In the end, a decent guitar that is mostly an ES-335. Guitar enthusiasts looking for something different will find it appealing due to it's one-of-a-kind looks and limited availability. by Larry Meiners


Selasa, 23 Januari 2007

Tony Iommi Custom SG By Jaydee:

This is a nice guitar! What can I say it is Beautiful.... I have to add this to the list.

The SG has been around for forty years or more. During this period it has undergone a few design changes that have not always been in its favour. Yet, it has still become a favourite with many guitarists who have kept the interest in this instrument alive.

One such musician is Tony Iommi of "Black Sabbath" I met Tony Iommi in the early 70's while working with John Birch.
Tony had a left handed SG special which had the most amazing body contours that were so pronounced, I must admit, I did copy them, and have done ever since. I believe this is what an SG should look like.


Special features
  • Double octave ebony fret board. Joins body at 22nd fret
  • Mother of pearl crucifix inlays
  • Three or five piece laminated neck for strength and rigidity
  • Solid Brazilian mahogany body
  • Spertzel /Schaller machine heads
  • Fully bound neck and headstock
  • Slim fast low action neck
  • Two Custom made "Jaydee" High performance pick-ups
  • Combination Bridge and tailstock with micro tune or Standard Tune o, matic and stop bar tail piece
  • Standard control arrangement: Two-volume, two tone controls and pick-up selector
  • Power boost optional
  • Finished in Cherry Red or Black


Minggu, 21 Januari 2007

Ibanez HRG2007 RNS: Shred Heaven

IKEBE ORIGINAL MODELj-custom HRG2007

This is one very nice guitar, if you want a fast neck, great looks and shred style guitar then this is one of my top picks.

More details on the following link: Click here for details ( I took the liberty of translating it into english)

Specification:

Top:
Selected Flame Maple
Body: S.A.Mahogany
Neck: 5pcs. Maple/Walnut
Fingerboard: Selected Rosewood ~ 430mm
Front Pickup: DiMarzio Air Norton (H)
Center Pickup: DiMarzio Blue Velvet (S)
Rear Pickup: DiMarzio Tone Zone (H)
PUHardware: Cosmo Black
Bridge: Edge Pro
Finish: RNS (lac varnish)






6 Strings or 7 Strings? Which AXE to slay the BEAST

I have been playing guitar now for about 10 years, all my guitars have been the 6 string variety. I have just recently been looking at the 7 string guitars and I am very tempted to give it a try?

From all the different types of necks out there I prefer the flat thin profile. Although I have not tried it, I would think the wizard neck on the Ibanez is what I am looking for. I used to own a Godin Multiac it had a very nice shaped neck that also had the unfinished wood feel. I crave this type of neck, thin, wide, and fast no glossy/sticky finish.

I was looking at the Stephan Forte Signature LAG model, this is an awesome guitar. I love the low profile body on this guitar with a wicked fast shredding neck. I was up last night surfing guitars and made an interesting discovery, the Ibanez Frank Gambale's S series from 1987. Take a look at the features and you will see that the LAG guitar is like a twin brother, judge for yourself... pictures below.

Stephan Forte Signature LAG: Shredders Dream Guitar


The "Stéphan Forté Signature" guitar represents the top of LAG craftsmanship and achieved innovating guitar concept. The most particular features of this guitar are the 27 easy-accessible frets, combined with a totally profiled and sculpted body.

10 last frets are scalloped for bend-easy-access, and neck contour is perfectly adapted to high-speedy-playing ! ( thickness: 19 - 21 mm )

Configuration Details:


Scale: 648 mm

Neck / Body Junction: Sculpted for high-notes easy-access

Headstock: Reversed and uses 7-high-precision Lag machine-heads

Woods: Neck comes from a tight-grained Rock maple piece from Quebec

Fingerboard: Selected African deep-black Ebony

Body: Fine-Flamed-Maple top on a light Basswood body base ( 50 / 50% )
Wood-binding enhances the slim body-shape with the natural flamed-grain of the maple-top.

Tremolo: Original US Floyd Rose built in 7-strings version, loud and deep sustain guaranteed

Electronics: DiMarzio Evolution-7 and Blaze pickups for extraordinary power and tone, intense overdriven response, but with deep clarity and string definition. 1 master volume, close to finger-touch, 1 master tone with push-pull split-control, leads from deep fast sounds to clearest tones.

The pickup-5-way switch is positioned at the last end of the index-finger, with circle-action, following perfectly finger movement !This switch allows all pickups combinations, including single-coil sounds with push-pull humbuckers-splits. All electronics routings are protected by Lag Exclusive Graphite painting, all hum and noises are totally eliminated.

Finish: Exclusive Black shadow varnish, with deep see-through black nuances, front and rear. Rear electronics and tremolo panels are made in solid-profiled maple, black-satin varnished.




Below: Ibanez FGM Frank Gambale Series:



Above: The Frank Gambale Series - FGM 400QM






Above: The FGM 300 in Metallic Green and Desert Yellow Sun



Above: The FGM 200 in Black and White


Configuration Details:

FGM 100 (1991~1994)
Body:
Sculpted Ultra thin offset double cutaway Mahogany 
Neck: One piece maple, 22 fret Rosewood fingerboard Color matched "Shark tooth" inlay  
Hardware: Black Hardware, 6 in line tuners and double locking vibrato.
 
Pickup:
DiMarzio Super Distortion /Ibanez Single Coil / Ibanez Humbucker 

Control: Volume, tone, 5 way selector switch 
Color: Desert Sun Yellow, Pink Salmon & Sky Blue

FGM 200 (1994~1996) 
Neck:
Clay dot inlay 
Pickup:DiMarzio Super Distortion x2 /DiMarzio HS-3
 
Hardware:
Gotoh fixed bridge 
Color: Black & White

FGM 300 (1994~1996)  
Neck:
Pearl "Shark tooth" inlay
 
Hardware:
Double locking vibrato
 
Color:
Desert Yellow Sun & Metallic Green

FGM 400 (1997~1999)  
Neck:
Pearl block "Frank Gambale Signature" at 12th fret  
Pickup: DiMarzio Super Distortion /DiMarzio Fast Truck x2
 
Color:
Blazer Blue & Quilted Top Maple



Sabtu, 20 Januari 2007