T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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3198.1 | Not Much Help | MSBCS::KALINOWSKI | | Wed May 15 1996 10:01 | 8 |
| I don't know much about them. Larry Carlton plays Valley Arts.
What I do know is that Musicians Friend was blowing out Valley Arts
guitars for $499 brand new with HardShell Case.
Seemed like a good deal to me.
Brian
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3198.2 | What I know in 10 words or less. | MILKWY::JACQUES | Vintage taste, reissue budget | Wed May 15 1996 10:43 | 12 |
| The guy from Rush (Alex Leifson?) has been endorsing these guitars
for years, before Larry Carlton began using them.
They are very similar to Strats except that they are neck-through.
Most people that buy Valley Arts guitars have them custom made
to their own specific specs. The one that Carlton uses has EMG
active pickups, but I'm sure you can get them with whatever
pu you want.
BTW, it's Valley Arts, not Valley Artist. They are based in California.
Mark
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3198.3 | | SUBPAC::GOLDIE | Resident Alien | Wed May 15 1996 11:14 | 6 |
|
actually,I think Alex Leifson endorses PRS guitars.
ian
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3198.4 | now vs then | MILKWY::JACQUES | Vintage taste, reissue budget | Wed May 15 1996 11:19 | 4 |
| Maybe he does now, but years ago he was playing Valley Arts. He
appeared in several ads for VA.
Mark
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3198.5 | Valle Arts ?? Samick | MOSCOW::BERGMANS | | Thu May 16 1996 03:03 | 5 |
| Perhaps I am wrong but I think that Valley Arts has been going through
very rough times. I think I remeber that their factory has been
destroyed by a fire, and that they got taken over by Samick....
Jean-Pul
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3198.6 | P.S. I changed the topic title as co-mod | SSDEVO::LAMBERT | We ':-)' for the humor impaired | Thu May 16 1996 03:11 | 40 |
| A guy I used to work with, who has since left the company, got one.
It was expensive for a solid body, about $1500 if I remember correctly,
but he bought it direct from the factory, and it had some level of
"custom-made-ness" to it. Though these days things have gotten so screwy
with distribution channels that it can actually be more expensive to go
directly to the factory than it is to buy the same thing from a dealer
(ala Microsnot.)
It was a real nice guitar, and very solid. The neck mounting style I
saw wasn't a neck-through, but a bolt-on with a special steel tongue-and-
slot "tang" at the neck/body joint. The owner is a pretty hot guitarist
and he said it was the only thing he'd ever played on which he could bend
a whole chord and not have it detune, even microphonically (he was also
pretty picky.) Real pretty yellow/orange sunburst, with nice grain
underneath. I don't know if the have a seperate "top" ala Les Pauls,
etc. I think you can custom order just about any changes you want, ala
Carvin. At $1500 you should!
Now that I've finally admitted to myself that solid bodies are the way to
go for my "style" I'd love to get one of these. Whilst composing this I
ran off and checked, and Musicians' Friend did indeed have them in the
'96 winter catalog, but they're not in the spring one. Just in case,
anyone want to buy a Gibson Firebrand 335-S or a Jasmine (Tak) Electric/
Acoustic, either for $200?
-- Sam
really is blowing 'em out at that price I'll grab one in a heartbeat.
I'll have to check my catalogs. If the person a couple of notes back who
mentioned this still has their catalog handy, please photocopy that page
and send it to me! Thanks in advance.
-- Sam
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3198.7 | Samicks are okay, but... | SSDEVO::LAMBERT | We ':-)' for the humor impaired | Thu May 16 1996 03:15 | 6 |
| re: .5 Ugh. If that's the case, I'm not interested...
-- Sam
P.S. You can still make an offer on my guitars though! :-)
|
3198.8 | Kind of like Ford buying Jaguar | CUSTOM::ALLBERY | Jim | Thu May 16 1996 08:49 | 8 |
| re .5 Samick buying Valley Arts
I wondered exactly what the connection was-- I'd noticed a few adds of
a Valley Arts model with a corresponding Samick model. The most recent
was an electric archtop.
Jim
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3198.9 | | SSDEVO::LAMBERT | We ':-)' for the humor impaired | Thu May 16 1996 10:21 | 14 |
| I called M.F. anyway, to see what was up. They're all gone anyway,
so speculation doesn't matter anymore. :-( They do have some V.A.
basses left, the salesdude said, but I didn't know they even made basses.
On closer inspection M.F.'s ad stated that these were "US Made" and they
made a big deal of "owning a real V.A. guitar without breaking the bank"
so maybe these were "real", pre-Samick models. Who knows, now?
Samick's aren't *bad* guitars, and are probably the cream of the crop of
Korean stuff, but they are indeed more in the $200-$500 range than the
"real" V.A. I was hoping for.
-- Sam
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3198.10 | Another VA endorsee | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | The moment is a masterpiece | Thu May 16 1996 10:30 | 6 |
| Larry Carlton is very big on Valley Arts guitars as well. I think they
even created a signature model for him.
Of course, I *still* wish he'd go back to just playing a 335. ;-)
db
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3198.11 | RJ signature series acoustic | POLAR::KFICZERE | | Fri May 17 1996 06:35 | 8 |
| I recently picked up a Guitar Player (I think it was GT) and on
the inside had an ad for VA gits. There was a small Samick sign on a
headstock shown. THe ad was for a Robert Johnson signature series
acoustic that looked beautiful. They also claimed to be the "original"
custom shop. Any one see one of these around? I'm curious of the price.
-kev
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3198.12 | | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | The moment is a masterpiece | Fri May 17 1996 08:34 | 5 |
| Geez... a signature series for a long-demised artist?
Doesn't that seem like an abuse/assumption of the artist's name?
db
|
3198.13 | | E::EVANS | | Fri May 17 1996 08:55 | 5 |
| Yeah, I'm not sure that Robert Johnson could write his name?
If he couldn't, how could he have a signature model? ;-)
Jim
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3198.14 | Dead guitarists are busy these days... | CUSTOM::ALLBERY | Jim | Fri May 17 1996 09:01 | 20 |
| re: .12,
>Geez... a signature series for a long-demised artist?
>Doesn't that seem like an abuse/assumption of the artist's name?
Or at the very least, bad taste...
I believe the guitar referenced is endorsed/approved by his estate.
But I guess your question stands...
It's not unique. I think Samick/VA also have a Charlie Christian
model, and the RJ estate has blessed a whole line of RJ items (picks,
slides, etc.) Another example is Collings, with its Clarence White
model (which is at least a bit less tacky, IMO: CW's most famous
instrument was a pre-war D-28 with an enlarged soundhole. The Collings
guitar plays appropriate homage to this instrument (with the exception
of not using a traditional neck joint), and Roland White (Clarence's
brother and frequent musical partner) approved the design.)
Jim
|
3198.15 | Well I bought the quitar.... | HETHR::BLAKELY | | Fri May 17 1996 09:26 | 12 |
| I want to thank everyone for their info. I went ahead and bought the guitar.
This guitar was last years model but never used. All of the decals say
"Custom Made by Valley Arts, San diego", and there are "made in the USA"
decals, stickers, stamps, etc. all over the place. So I hope Samick was
suppling money not ideas, or workers. After playing the quitar for a few hours
last night I think I made a good choice.
Thanks again for all of the info.
dan
|
3198.16 | | POLAR::KFICZERE | | Fri May 17 1996 09:54 | 12 |
| You say Collings made a CW signature guitar? I know that Fender
just issued a Tele/B-bender CW signature model. It looks pretty
awesome. Who is Collings? I've never heard that name before.
Re Bobby Johnson, I think he was amazing. I'm a very big blues
enthusiast so IMO, He Da man! I've been listening to that box
set,non-stop, for about 5 months now. It keeps getting better and
better. The fact that damn near every blues standard out there is a
variation of one of his is quite a statement itself. I think he was a
great songwriter and an even better guitar player.....Ilovemthankyou!
-kev [ I don't know if it was mentioned but CW helped design that now
famous B-bender. cool!]
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3198.17 | Overview of Collings | CUSTOM::ALLBERY | Jim | Fri May 17 1996 10:13 | 22 |
| Re: Who is Collings
Collings is one of the top "boutique" shops-- a small shop making
top-quality products (Santa Cruz Guitar Company is another example).
Anyway, Collings makes great acoustics, most of which are based on
Martin designs. In addition to the CW guitar, Collings makes a few D
models, a couple of OMs, and a reportedly phenomenal 12-fret 000.
Great stuff, but priced accordingly (my Martin OM-28 seemed affordable
in comparison). Last time I visted Elderly Instruments, they had a
gorgeous custom Collings OM in Brazilian rosewood with pearl inlay.
The *discount* price was about $7,000. I didn't have the nerve to ask
to play it (it was one of the few instruments that was kept out of
public reach) for fear that I might find myself overwrought with the
desire to purchase it.
Although Mr. Collings' major inspiration seems to be vintage Martins, he
does depart in one major area-- he uses a bolt-on neck design, similar
to Taylor.
Collings also has an archtop model that is supposed to be excellent.
Jim
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3198.18 | where is my cut??:) | AIMTEC::JOHNSON_R | | Wed May 22 1996 08:34 | 9 |
| If anyone gets a Robert Johnson signature guitar I'll be happy to sign
it for you.:):):)
I wonder what my commission will be on those things:):):)
"Come on in my kitchen"....
Later,
Robert Johnson
|