T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
84.1 | Still reading FRETS | COMET::LEVETT | They're all a bunch of Baggums! | Tue Dec 13 1988 17:49 | 4 |
| I guess Guild has filed for Chapter 11. They say it shouldn't
affect things though.
_stew-
|
84.2 | Another Sign Of The Weak US Guitar Industry | AQUA::ROST | Marshall rules but Fender controls | Tue Dec 20 1988 11:06 | 11 |
|
The new GP says that talks with Gibson for them to buy Guild fell
through. Supposedly the company went chapter 11 so they could stay
in business (protects them from their creditors shutting them down)
but they obviously are in deep trouble. Except for the Pilot bass,
their electric line is not selling, and the acoustic market apparently
isn't enough to keep them afloat.
Buy those strings for your Ashbory bass right away 8^) 8^) 8^)
|
84.3 | pre-ch11 | RAINBO::WEBER | | Wed Jan 04 1989 16:58 | 15 |
| I wonder if Guild guitars will start being attractive to collectors
now.
Unlike the other major US guitars, "vintage" Guilds are usually
less expensive than new ones, and I have never seen a "Pre-Avnet
Duane Eddy" advertised. Guilds are generally bargains on the used
market, and are difficult to sell even at bargain prices.
I don't know of any Guild that is considered a collector's item.
It will be interesting to see if their financial difficulties changes
anything.
Danny W
|
84.4 | Sold again | MOSAIC::WEBER | | Mon Jan 30 1989 09:04 | 8 |
| In an article in the Lowell Sun concerning the recent sale of Guild
to Randall, the headline referred to Guild as Elvis Presley's guitar
maker.
Sure, the classic Elvis picture with a D-55. Maybe they have him
confused with Tommy Smothers.
Danny W
|
84.5 | | DECWIN::KMCDONOUGH | Set Kids/Nosick | Wed Apr 29 1992 08:50 | 19 |
|
As a Guild story....
A friend of mine just took his 15-year old Guild acoustic to the Guild
factory to have them check a hairline crack in the bridge. He got to
talk to the repair guy in person!
Guild agreed to put on a new bridge and do a complete fret job (needed)
for $90.
My friend said that everyone he talked to was very friendly and glad to
see a well-treated old guitar come back to them.
Says a lot about Guild!
Kevin
|
84.6 | Now it can be told.... | SMURF::BENNETT | What goes down the stairs alone or in pairs? | Wed Apr 29 1992 15:59 | 9 |
|
Those of you that remember my tangle with the BOZO (still
nameless) guitar dealer will understand why I have the utmost
respect and admiration for Guild. They stepped into a pretty
ugly situation and fixed things up real nice. I would not
hesitate to recommend a Guild to anybody. I beleive that they
stand by the work that comes out of their shop.
ccb
|
84.7 | But a Real BOZO is a gem! | TOOK::SCHUCHARD | Lights on, but nobody home | Thu Apr 30 1992 11:39 | 4 |
|
ah careful - there was a gentleman whose last name was Bozo in NYC
that made gorgeous handcrafted acoustic's. I got luck and was able
to strum Leo Kottke's for a minute, and it was tres beautiful guitar.
|
84.8 | | ELWOOD::CARLIN | Balance | Thu Apr 30 1992 13:05 | 4 |
| Just to verify-- a music store I taught in back in the 70s got some in for
sale. They were very nice - but a bit more $$$ than I could manage.
leo
|
84.9 | | SOLVIT::OLOUGHLIN | The fun begins at 80! | Tue May 05 1992 09:59 | 10 |
|
Leo Kottke was mentioned a coupe of notes back. He'll be
on channel 2 or 11 on a Monday night within the next week
or so.
Thought I'd mention it.
Rick.
|
84.10 | | BRUMMY::LAWTON | Tell Carter his lizard is here.. | Wed May 06 1992 04:44 | 5 |
| I was always convinced that Kottke over-dubbed like crazy until I heard
him live. Does anyone know how he managed to grow that third hand that
has fifteen fingers?
Phil
|
84.11 | New Guild in the family | MILKWY::JACQUES | Vintage taste, reissue budget | Wed May 06 1992 11:27 | 32 |
|
For the last several years, I have considered selling my trusty
Guild F48 acoustic for a Takamine acoustic/electric. My main motivation
was that I've never gotten satisfactory results from any add-on pickup
I've tried with the Guild. Takamine's pickup and preamp system is one
of the best systems available.
Two weeks ago, I sold my Guild, and bought a Takamine EF350MC
which is a maple-bodied dreadnought with a cutaway and pickup system.
During the 5 day period that I had the Takamine I developed a love/hate
relationship with it. Acoustically, it was okay, but did not have the
sweet tone I've gotten used to with my Guild. I began regretting the
fact that I sold my Guild. Yesterday, I returned the Takamine to the
store and exchanged it for another Guild. The new Guild is a D30 which
is a Dreadnought (no cutaway), with Curly maple sides, back and neck.
The fingerboard is rosewood, the top is solid spruce, and the headstock
has a black cap with the Guild logo and flower-pot inlay. The guitar
has a tortoise-shell pickgaurd and gold-plated Grover tuners. A black
Guild hardshell was included.
The curly maple on this guitar is extremely stunning, and although
the guitar was used, it really is immaculate. The case is also mint.
This guitar has an even better tone than my F48 had, probably because
of the maple body. The neck has essentially the same dimensions as my
old Guild which is on the heavy side but comfortable for my large hands.
After all these years, I still think Guild offers the best value
in acoustic guitars.
Mark (Happy Guild owner once again). :^)
|
84.12 | Curious | GOES11::G_HOUSE | Under my wheels | Wed May 06 1992 12:30 | 4 |
| So does the new Guild have a decent pickup system, or did you decide
that wasn't important?
Greg
|
84.13 | big man, big hands | TOOK::SCHUCHARD | Lights on, but nobody home | Wed May 06 1992 12:42 | 8 |
|
Kottke does have massive, thick hands. In 1971, his 12-string had the
highest action i've ever seen, let alone try to play. Basically, he
was a student of sorts of John Fahey. The fact that he admitted to
be an old friend to a certain friend of mine, certified he was stone
cold crazy. Seems like a good recipe to me.
bob
|
84.14 | good customer service too.... | ROYALT::BUSENBARK | | Wed May 06 1992 13:23 | 10 |
| re Mark,
Is this Guild an all blond guitar? I remember playing one of their
newer models which meets you description which had a pickup installed
at the factory which had great tone and sound,but had a cutaway....
A knob for volume and tone as I remember...
another satisfied Guild owner
Rick
|
84.15 | No pickup yet. | MILKWY::JACQUES | Vintage taste, reissue budget | Wed May 06 1992 13:30 | 13 |
| The Guild I bought does not have a pickup. I believe Guild uses
a Fishman transducer with a preamp. The knobs are concentric.
One pot controls bass and treble and the other controls volume
(and maybe midrange).
I'll have a system installed in this guitar by a luthier once
I decide what is the best system to use. For now, I'll use my
Dean Markely soundhole pickup.
The Guitar is all blonde, but does not have a cutaway. It's a
honey !!
Mark
|
84.16 | | HEDRON::DAVE | dneast::bottom_david in another life | Thu May 07 1992 10:52 | 5 |
| FWIW Tak's don't sound good unless you get the solid spruce tops, the 350
is a laminate, I doubt that could compete with the Guild which I believe
also is a solid top.
dbii
|
84.17 | General Info on Guild guitars | MILKWY::JACQUES | Vintage taste, reissue budget | Fri May 22 1992 10:43 | 124 |
| I just recieved some literature from Guild including their
catalogs and price list. Here is a basic rundown of their line.
Dreadnought Series
This includes models ranging from the low-end D15 to
their top-of-the-line D100C. Many models are available
with Fishman transducers, and some have active preamp.
Traditional Series
The G series was designed by George Gruhn, and is sort
of shaped like a mini jumbo. This series includes the D25
(mahogany back/sides), the G30 (curly maple) and the G50
(Rosewood back/sides, dot inlays), and the top of the line
G55 with fancy inlays and binding.
Jumbo Series
This includes two models, the JF30 which is curly maple,
and the JF55 which is rosewood.
12-String Series
They apparently only offer about three 12-string models
including the JF65-12, JF30-12 and D25-12. The first two have
jumbo bodies and the third is a dreadnought. All 12-string
models have dual truss rods and are heavily braced so they can
be tuned to concert pitch.
B-30 Acoustic Bass
Jumbo-sized flat-top bass with solid spruce top, mahogany
sides, and back, rosewood fingerboard with dots, inlayed logo,
Schaller tuners, 30.5" scale length, split bridge saddle with
Fishman transducer.
Full-Size Acoustic/Electrics
These include the F15-CE, F35-CE, and F45-CE. All have
Fishman transducers, active preamps, cutaways, and oval sound
holes.
Slimline Acoustic/Electrics
Also known as the "Prestige" series. These have a thin
dreadnought shape with rounded cutaway. All have curly maple
sides and backs. This series includes:
Excellance - Multi-binding, gold tuners, deluxe inlays. Blonde
or sunburst finishes.
Standard - Available in black only
Classic - blonde only
GX Series
Guilds answer to the Ferrington. Electric guitar feel with
acoustic tone. Available in Black, red, blue, or white. Single
rounded cutaway, and pointy headstock.
Songbird Series
This thin acoustic/electric has been around for several years
and is known to be far superior to competitive models. Sort of
shaped like a Les Paul. Available in Natural, black, or white.
Nightbird Series
This is a semi-acoustic with "sound-chambers" built into
the body. Looks a lot like a Les Paul. Three models including
the Standard, Deluxe, and Custom (do these model names sound
at all familiar?).
Jazz Guitar Series
I wasn't sure if Guild was still making archtops. All
instruments in this series are limited edition.
X-160 Savoy - Low-end with pressed top, chrome hw, 2 humbucks.
X-170 Manhattan - Curly maple top, sides, and back. I'm
guessing it's a pressed-top, two humbucks.
X500 Stuart - Guild is not specific but they seem to imply it
has a carved spruce top.
Artist Award - Top of the line, looks a lot like a D'Angelico
New Yorker. Carved-graduated spruce top, carved german maple
back, german maple sides, multi-binding, ebony fingerboard with
MOP blocks and abalone wedges, multi-bound headstocks, single
D'Armond floating pickup, deluxe headstock inlays. List price
on this beauty is $4995 not including case.
Pilot Bass Series - Modern styling with no pickgaurd and
pointy headstock.
602 - Solid poplar body, EMG P-J pickup configuration.
602M - Solid maple body , EMG P-J pickup configuration,
605 - Fretless, maple body, 5-string bass. 2 J-style EMG pickups
605M - Fretted, maple body, 5-string bass. 2 J-style EMG pickups
I've been told that all Guild acoustics have solid spruce tops,
but it appears that some of the low-end models have laminated tops.
The D15 has a mahogany top which I assume is laminated. Based on my
experience with Guild and their extensive product offering, I believe
Guild is highly under-rated and does not get the attention they deserve,
although I'll admit their strength is mainly in acoustics. I've heard
very good reviews on the Pilot bass and songbird. I've played the
F45-CE and they are great guitars, but the styling is not my cup of
tea. I recently played a 1954 X500 which was gorgeous for $1200.00.
I currently own a D30 (curly maple flat-top) and I'm hoping to
add a 12-sting to my collection in the near future. I'll probably go
for the D25-12 in sunburst, since I really do not want another jumbo.
I'm planning to add Fishman transducers to my D30 and the 12-string
if I buy one. I'm debating whether I want built-in preamps, or an
outboard unit.
|
84.18 | Looking for info - small Guild accoustics | WHELIN::ALAN | | Fri Aug 07 1992 10:00 | 15 |
| I'm in the market for a smaller body accoustic (I already have a Taylor
810 Dreadnought) to be used when finger picking. I can't afford another
Taylor (812) right now so have been considering Guild since I've heard
good things about them.
Does anyone know the model numbers for the smaller bodied Guild's. Does
an F30 sound right? Is there a Guild expert on the net that can tell me
about models, woods, construction, price etc. for small body Guilds?
How would a small Guild compare to say a Taylor 412 in terms of
construction quality and price?
Thanks in advance for any help!
-Rob
|
84.19 | | USPMLO::DESROCHERS | | Fri Aug 07 1992 10:05 | 9 |
|
the last 2 or 3 Guitar Players have nice ads that show about
6 different acoustics and say what they're made of, etc...
that little acoustic/electric up front with the cutaway makes
me almost want one of those thingy's with the hole in the
middle ;^)
|
84.20 | Mark B. Guild & Company? | SOLVIT::SNORAT::OLOUGHLIN | The fun begins at 80! | Fri Aug 07 1992 11:51 | 21 |
|
Kinda on track here...
Does anyone know about, heard about, a piano company
that was loacted in Boston called;
"Mark B. Guild & Company"
I am selling one for a friend. A 1987 Box Grand Piano.
Any clues?
Rick.
|
84.21 | Small body Guild = Songbird | MILKWY::JACQUES | Vintage taste, reissue budget | Wed Sep 02 1992 11:21 | 10 |
| I'm not sure exactly what size and style you are looking for. The
small thin electric/acoustic with cutaway that has been popular for
about 10 years is called the Songbird. Guilds current list price
is $1295 for the Songbird. They also make a S4-CE which is basically
the same guitar, but has a satin finish and lists for $995.
Significant discounts are available on Guild guitars (as much as
40% off list) if you shop around.
|
84.22 | Yet another Guild in the family | MILKWY::JACQUES | Vintage taste, reissue budget | Wed Sep 16 1992 14:11 | 26 |
| I just added another Guild to my collection. I bought a (slightly
used) Guild D25-12 12 string acoustic Monday night. The D25-12 is
a Dreadnought with mahagony back, sides, and neck, solid spruce top
(natural finish), rosewood fingerboard, and pearl dot inlays. I would
have prefered a more high-end model, but this guitar is dead mint, and
the price was so good I couldn't resist. This guitar plays and sounds
great. I cleaned it up as soon as I got it home and put on a new set
of strings. After stretching out the strings I found it stays in tune
very well and has very good intonation and tone.
This guitar was listed in the Want Advertiser and I was able to
talk the price down to $350. The person selling it did not have a case
for it, but included a rugged guitar stand, strap, cord, and new set
of strings (don't ask me what he used the cord for). I consider this to
be a great deal considering the D25-12 lists for $1095, and the ones
I've seen in stores have been in the $600 - $700 range. The accessories
he included are worth about $60. I'm planning to buy a Tweed hardshell
case. I've called a few stores but so far everyone has to order it with
a 3 week delivery. Does anyone have a better source for hardshell cases ?
My acoustic requirements are well taken care of for now between
the D30 and D25-12. My GTS shouldn't bother me at least until the
weekend. Then again, the new want-advertiser just came in. hmmmmm !!
Mark
|
84.23 | "Guild electric-natural curly maple" | SALEM::STIG | | Tue Sep 22 1992 09:07 | 7 |
| I have a Guild electric. Don't know what model but it has a curly maple
natural body with an EMG pickup. Only has one pickup. Can anyone help
on the model it is?? I paid around $600 used for it off a friend of
mine. It is a very solid guitar. It looks, feels and plays great. It's
the most reliable guitar I've ever had. It also has a Kahler tremelo
system that hardly ever goes out of tune even though I play with .008
reinforced strings...
|
84.24 | Nut-case | MILKWY::JACQUES | Vintage taste, reissue budget | Thu Oct 29 1992 12:55 | 28 |
|
I bought a Guild D25-12 a few months ago which did not include
a case. After shopping around local stores, and mail order catalogs,
I decided to order a case through the Mandolin Bros. in Staten Isle,
New York. I had my mind set on getting a Tweed hardshell case, and
no one else seemed to carry them.
Mandolin Bros. carries hardshell cases from two companies...
Everest Case company, and Harptone. The Everest cases are good
quality cases made of 3-ply wood and covered with vinyl. They
are available in black, brown, and tweed. Harptone has a couple
of differant lines, including 3-ply as well as 5-ply wooden cases.
Their tweed cases have real luggage linen covering, as apposed to
vinyl. The bottom line is a 5-ply Harptone case with real tweed
would have set me back about $250.00. I just couldn't see spending
that much money on a guitar case, so I ordered the Everest case.
It took about 4 weeks to arrive, and I recieved it yesterday.
The Everest case I recieved is really nice. It has 5 large
brass plated closures (one on the back edge), brown velour lining,
a large accessory compartmet, and two brass clips that allow you to
connect a shoulder strap. This case fits either of my Guild guitars
like a glove. Including shipping, the total cost was about $140.00
Now I'm debating if I want to buy a case for the custom P-bass
I built last summer. If I do, it will be a Fender Tweed hardshell.
Mark
|
84.25 | "Mom always liked you best!" | STRATA::PHILLIPS | Music of the spheres. | Thu Jun 08 1995 09:28 | 6 |
| A question for you Guild-ologists....
Exactly which Guild guitar model is that lovely sunburst dreadnaught
that Tommy Smothers plays?
--Eric--
|
84.26 | Guild's top of the line | MILKWY::JACQUES | Vintage taste, reissue budget | Thu Jun 08 1995 10:40 | 4 |
| Tommy has always played the top-line models. I believe they are
D50 or D55.
Mark
|
84.27 | Tommy's guitar | RANGER::WEBER | | Fri Jun 09 1995 10:07 | 3 |
| D-55 it is.
Danny W.
|
84.28 | Guild more collectable than before? | MILKWY::JACQUES | Vintage taste, reissue budget | Fri Jun 09 1995 11:52 | 12 |
|
Danny, I have an interesting question you. Since you wrote reply
.3 (1989) would you say that things have changed at all for Guild
Guitars? I've noticed that over the last 5 years, the vintage
market has exploded with such force that instruments that were
not collectable or in demand, are suddenly becoming much more
desirable. I'm seeing pictures of Guild Artist Awards and other
fancy models in vintage guitar magazines, calendars, etc. Prices
are on the rise. A few select Guild models seem to be in high
demand such as Blues Birds, Starfires, and Brian May models.
What's your' take on this?
|
84.29 | still not investment grade | RANGER::WEBER | | Fri Jun 09 1995 13:33 | 9 |
| Except for an occasional historic piece (early DE-500, A-600, Merle
Travis, Johnny Smith), Guilds still have little collector's value. AA's
have become more expensive, but not in relation to same period L-5's or
S400's. Most of the others you mentioned are priced as player's
instruments. Guilds are still slow sellers with a limited group of
potential buyers. The used market would have improved if they had
folded ;-)
Danny W.
|
84.30 | Maybe a "Guildocaster" (I hope not) | GANTRY::ALLBERY | Jim | Tue Jan 30 1996 12:02 | 8 |
| I read in Acoustic Guitar last night that Fender has purchased
Guild. The short-term plan is to continue normal production
of Guild's current models. I have no idea what the long-term
plan might be. There is certainly some overlap between the
upper end of Fender's current acoustic line, and the low end
of Guild's.
Jim
|
84.31 | Change in the wind. | MILKWY::JACQUES | Vintage taste, reissue budget | Tue Jan 30 1996 13:15 | 16 |
| That's interesting and the first I've heard of it. The last time I
got in touch with Guild to request catalogs, they were owned by US
Music company, and the sales office was in the mid-west. Manufacturing
has remained in R.I. With Fender as owner, there is a good chance
the factory will move out of New England. Sad, but probably inevitable.
Guild has always had a hard time keeping market share, despite an
excellant product offering (IMHO, especially in the acoustic space).
Their pilot basses were very popular for quite a while but seem to
be losing ground. With Fender advertising the line, hopefully things
will improve. Guild has never done a very good job of marketing.
Guild should jump on the retro bandwagon and reissue some of their
most popular models from yesteryear, such as the Star-fires.
Mark
|