T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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2560.1 | Heritage | GJO001::REITER | | Fri Jul 31 1992 14:12 | 3 |
| There's also Heritage, made at 225 Parsons in Kalamazoo, the old Gibson
factory. Can't tell ya much else, but they are pretty-looking guitars.
\Gary
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2560.2 | | RAVEN1::BLAIR | You sick little monkey! | Fri Jul 31 1992 14:17 | 4 |
|
Steve Dandrea can elaborate on the Washburn ES model (HB-something)
which seemed like a real nice axe, but flexed a bit at the neck
joint under Steve's tasteful yet rowdy bends.
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2560.3 | | GOES11::G_HOUSE | I wish I was ocean size | Fri Jul 31 1992 14:47 | 8 |
| A good friend of mine used to have an old Aria copy of a 335. It was
the most beastly looking green-burst color, but played pretty nice.
The pickups sucked (IMVHO) though.
I could have killed him when I found out he'd gotten rid of it, I
wanted it!
Greg
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2560.4 | nice, but flimsy...... | NAVY5::SDANDREA | Ya lop eared varmint! | Fri Jul 31 1992 15:00 | 13 |
| Back in spring of 1989, I bought (and kept for one day) a Washburn copy
of the Gibson ES335. The price was $400 and the quality was "ok". I
bought a new Am Std strat after returning the Washburn. When I played
the Washburn, it actually flexed from the weight of my right elbow
resting on the "top/rear" section of the body! You could hear the axe
going out of tune as I moved up the fretboard.....I could pull the neck
back and get a nice tremelo....double ack! I had looked at the axe and
tested it several times in the store while sitting and resting the axe
on my leg....I got it home, put on the strap, stood up, played it for a
few minutes, took it back....the bulldawg needs solid body
guitars...strats...Les Pauls....durable stuff!
Steve
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2560.5 | Heritage looked/felt/sounded good to me anyway. | HYDRA::BURGESS | Water dependent | Fri Jul 31 1992 17:56 | 14 |
|
re Heritage...
I saw one a week or so ago at the Minor Chord ("minor chord" ? (-: )
in Acton., looked nice, around $700....hmmmmmm The sales guy even
told me the Gibson/Heritage story, complete with the Fender/G&L parallel.
Anyway, nice axe - typical ~1/2 price its blueprint.... though
arguably its more a "Real Gibson" than a real gibson is (-:
R
PS Let's not start a "Real Strats" vs "G&L Strats" rathole
{not here anyway :-) }
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2560.6 | $50-00 Gibsons!! | CHEFS::BRIGGSR | Four Flat Tyres on a Muddy Road | Mon Aug 03 1992 05:36 | 16 |
|
Well, having just got back from the Philippines, I can tell you that
the cheapest Gibsons are available in vast quantities there for about
$50.00!! Also, racks full of Ovations at similar 'savings'. The catch?
Well they are all home grown guitars complete with Gibson (or Ovation)
names. From a distance they look like the real thing. Up close though
the finish is abysmal and they play like nothing you've ever tried.
There is NO chance that anyone who can even play 3 chords would be
lulled into thinking these are genuine because they are so bad. Perhaps
that's why Gibson turn a blind eye? You can get these in REPUTABLE
stores in Manila!
Richard
Reading, UK
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2560.7 | other semi's | RANGER::WEBER | | Mon Aug 03 1992 08:19 | 51 |
| If you're considering buying a semi, keep in mind that building one of
these is much more complex than building a solid. Many companies either
haven't quite figured out how to assemble a body with the right amount
and type of wood in the right places, or believe that if it looks okay
from the outside, no one will notice what it sounds like. Consider too
that if it is done right, it will be more expensive than an equivalent
quality solid.
Original Epi semi's from between 1958 and 1969 were made by Gibson and
are equivalent in quality to similar Gibson models (Sheraton=ES-355,
Riviera=ES 335). These don't tend to be much cheaper than Gibsons
these days.
In 1970, Gibson turned to a variety of foreign factories to build
Epiphone guitars, with mostly poor results. Sometime in the '80's
(I'll admit I wasn't paying attention) they started improving the
quality .
Recent Epi's are Korean made. The one's I've seen have cheaper hardware
and are not as well-finished as current Gibsons, but they appear to
represent good value.
I've never been a Guild fan, but I know lots of players who are. Guild
has probably made the best ES copies in the Starfire series. The SF-IV
is similar to an ES-335, the SF-VI matches a 355. Original models of
these are cheaper than similar Gibsons. I don't know what their current
production is like; quality of original ones varied from okay to very
high.
Ibanez semi's are reasonable quality. I owned a 2630 for several years
and thought it was okay, but not in the same class as a 355, especially
in tone. The current version is the AS200 (I think), which is used by
John Scofield
I've had a couple of Heritage H-555's, which looked pretty but didn't
work for me. Wimpy tone (a common Heritage problem) and neck joints
that weren't as solid as I'd like. Not all that cheap, either. Good
points were nice wood and good workmanship.
Aria, Hohner and Yamaha semi's that I've tried didn't impress me at
all.
Gibson invented the semi and still does it best. Except for some
custom-made guitars, I have never played a non-Gibson semi that sounded
right. Gretsch even made a virtue of this. Most others have a honky
sound with too much mid-range and too many uncontrolled resonances.
If you want a new guitar and can't afford a Gibson,
try the Ibanez or Epiphone.
Danny W.
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2560.9 | I'm starting to like the Sheratons and their price (re- write of .8) | HYDRA::BURGESS | Water dependent | Tue Aug 04 1992 07:25 | 8 |
| e .7 Thanks Danny, I appreciate that.
I'm finding new re-issue Sheratons to be around $350, used around $250
they're probably adequate instruments {for ME, at this point in time, etc}
I havn't yet found any Rivieras, but expect to be in Alston some time this
week...... errr, just browsing, I'm broke, so its safe (-:
R
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