nice idea :)
McIlroy ASP10-T
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Printable View
nice idea :)
McIlroy ASP10-T
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1980s Hugh Manson Kestrel
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57 Gibson ETG150
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I would post them all in one but the forum software is really playing up lately
59 Martin 0-18t - yes it is that beat up but the sound...
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also
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my first electric that - the Eastwood Classic. Have a Warren Ellis but no decent pics and they are fairly common for a tenor anyway!
1951 Epiphone Triumph Regent (cutaway) in original case!
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1954 Gretsch Electromatic "Spanish" Tenor
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1983 Carlo Greco LP-type solid body
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Odd, the pic rotated 90 degrees counterclockwise...
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Douglas-fir, Oregon myrtle, and black walnut. Just about the favorite thing I've made.
All the way from New Zealand:
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Bob ... It was your youtube playing that great guitar that got me to purchase a '37 Epi-Triumph. Wonderful guitar. Thank you.
Ryk
My tenor was built by David Newton on a Size 2 frame:
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It has a Carpathian Spruce top:
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East Indian Rosewood back and sides:
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Curly Maple binding:
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With a banjo headstock and planetary tuners:
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All finished in a thin coat of varnish.
Mine are Herb Taylor archtop tenors. I love his archtops, they have a unique, beautiful, powerful tone, and play great. His neck attachment is smart. I took the neck off just to see how to do it, and it’s simple and quick to do. I could reset the neck myself in thirty or so minutes if it ever needs it. It has a flat back and the top is pressed. I own two, #174 and #205. 174 is western red cedar and juniper. It’s very lightweight, plays loudly with a light touch and growls on the low notes. A video of it is on Herb’s site. #205 is sitka spruce and shedua. It’s much heavier, and requires one to dig in harder to get a loud sound, compared to 174. It’s a rounder tone than 174, perhaps a more trad guitar tone. I switch back and forth as far as which one I prefer. They sound a lot different. Herb is always making something different, construction wise and tone wise. I’d love to get one of his stick through tenors.
http://www.herbtaylor.com/instruments/tenorguitar/i174/
Here's a peek at my three jumbos. Jumbo Mandolin 17" scale, jumbo Tenor Guitar 23" to 24" scale GDAE & jumbo (Tenor) Fiddle 400mm stop length. Attachment 190776
Yes myLord it’s an Emerald carbon fiber x30 tenor & it is delish!!! It comes up on their August 7th 2020 Shipping video. A very well balanced and rich sounding guitar. The brief to Emerald was to make me a guitar to compete in the Fleadh & it doesn’t disappoint. I eager to hit the local sessions with it, all in good time. Interestingly it came in €2000 under what I had budgeted for.
Yes they are...and the back is nicely carved arched-style. The 80-something gentleman who sold it to me runs a multi-generation plating business in Brooklyn. They were downstairs in the same building at that time and did the plating work for Epiphone. This beauty was his (late) brother's and he himself has a tenor which they each received as gifts from Orphie.
Fanner Thinline Tenor Tele - Double P90 pickups, 22.8" scale length, Maple neck, Alder body with white top binding, Fender locking tuners and a translucent duck egg finish.
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Soundcloud sample: https://soundcloud.com/user-97295595...orks-pixelator
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Hope I can learn to play it.
Yes, it is a little gimmicky - but it is fun to play.
I got this last Spring - I don't see these up for sale very often. Has wide Warren Ellis neck, but I changed out the bridge to a more standard ~11mm spacing. Not perfect but it works. Shout out to Vig Guitars in St. Paul Minnesota USA wonderful to deal with.
Eastwood Flying Tenor V (TV)
Body: Basswood, Color: Natural, Pickups: Mini Humbucker & Single Coil Blade, Neck: Bolt-on Maple, Finger Board: Rosewood, Scale Length: 23", Width at the Nut: 1 5/16" (33mm) and gig bag.
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It also came in black. Attachment 211736
If I ever find a black one for sale, I am going to try and paint it like Jimi Hendrix's Gibson Flying V.
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Joe Bonamassa influenced my purchase a little. (I am nowhere near his playing.)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=br-6ZX3Zdy0
Show & Tell with Joe Bonamassa's 1958 Gibson Flying V at Norman's Rare Guitars