Friday, September 6, 2013

Joe Vitale's Visit

Joe Vitale came by the shop. He always makes me feel inspired when he visits. He is doing a lot of music as well as writing, check it out - http://www.healingmojomusic.com/. I decided to let him take my '59 sunburst replica, I think he well take good care. Look at the smiles on 2 grown men... Guitars. 

Wednesday, August 21, 2013

'59 Sunburst Replica

The original Les Paul Standards are legendary. All the guitar heros had one, I want one too! They are so collectible and expensive it is not possible for me to own a real one. Fortunately, unlike most people, I have the guitar building chops to make myself a really accurate copy. It was a labor of love and now I am enjoying the results.

I have built a few of these guitars in the past. For this project I decided I wanted to be super authentic in the execution. I started by reading "Beauty of the Burst" which is a book that thoroughly documents '58 through '60 sunbursts. I also read a 300 page build thread by Gil Yaron in the Tele forum that inspired me. I decided to copy all the details as closely as possible and not to make any "improvements" to the iconic design. 
Fortunately I have been saving the appropriate wood for quite some time. The neck and body are made from Genuine Mahogany that I have seasoned at least 10 years. The top is flamed hard maple that I bookmatched. The fingerboard is chocolate colored Brazilian Rosewood that I had put away for something special. The wood is all lightweight and the guitar weighs in at 7.5 lbs. I love light guitars. The inlays are cut from vintage celluloid and the headstock has a thin holly veneer as per the original.

I used a no wire ABR-1 bridge and a light weight tailpiece. They are required if you really want a vintage sound. I used modern Gibson PAF copies for pickups; a PAF pro at the bridge and a Burstbucker 1 for the neck position. I aged the nickel plated parts to a light patina. 

 I copied the original binding style, showing the maple in the cutaway. You can see the hide glue between the neck and body binding. The fingerboard uses the exact 50's scale and fret placement. 
The logo was silk screened over the lacquer.
The extended dovetail extends under the neck pickup. Maple was used for the truss rod filler. 
I found some vintage bumblebee capacitors that really sound great.
So now you are asking "How is it? Did it pay off?"
Absolutely! The combination of materials and  construction techniques really pays off. The sound is very loud acoustically and sings with a mid peak. The the sound of the bridge and tailpiece combine with the Brazilian Rosewood and hide glue to really resonate. It is very open and resonant and responsive. It's light weight, really balances well yet retains that solid feel we associate with a Les Paul. The sound electrically is unbelievable. It is fat and flutey. The tone controls really sound great, when you roll a little treble off, it really starts sounding like all the best woman tones you could never quite find. Full on it sounds rock and roll, even with the amp set clean. I hope I can afford to keep it.


Thursday, September 27, 2012

Snakehead Esquire


Status: Sold

I have been looking at all the prototype Esquires a while. The pine bodies and the Cabronitas with a Dearmond pickup both got me interested. I decided to do my own take on the prototype Esquire. I wanted to build something really cool that is lightweight and awesome sounding. I wanted to apply what I have learned from 30 years of building to the most simple of guitars. It’s not a complicated guitar but one where every single detail counts, a lot. Simplicity can be beautiful, crude, and perfect all at the same time.



As I said, it is a simple guitar but simple machines are often the best. One volume control, a pickup, a bridge, tuners, some hardware… not much else. The body and neck represent all the wooden parts. Each and every part was carefully chosen to enhance not only the aesthetic value but also the performance of the guitar.



I decided to make the body from a single piece of western red cedar. I chose it because it is super light weight and very resonant. It is used often for acoustic guitar tops and is known as a dark, resonant tonewood. The neck is one piece hard maple with a walnut skunk stripe, three on a side. I used the new Waverley tuners that look closest to the Fender 3 on-a-plank I could find. The pickguard is made from thin phenolic capturing the appearance of the old bakelite Fenders. I finished them in nitrocellulose lacquer, leaving as thin a film as possible.



The bridge is the most important piece of hardware on this guitar. I chose a heavy stainless steel string-through plate and 3 brass saddles. I also used a heavy stainless steel neck plate, important due to the softness of the cedar body. The stiff plate allows for much more tension to be used without crushing the body. I chose a Dearmond Hershey Bar pickup from a Silvertone. It looks cool and sounds terrific. It is cleaner and more acoustic sounding than a Broadcaster or Tele, but with a little bark if you hit it hard. Assembled it weighs a very comfortable 5 lbs 8 oz. The guitar is very resonant, you feel it vibrate when you play it, like a great acoustic guitar.








Monday, October 31, 2011

Alejandro Escovedo's Les Paul

Alejandro asked me to build him a guitar like a Les Paul Custom only lighter and better to play on stage. This guitar would be traveling a lot and needed to be rugged. I built him a guitar basically off my jigs for making a late 50's Les Paul Standard. It is slightly thinner and the Maple top is only 1/2" thick over the mahogany back. The neck is stiffened with carbon fiber to give it added stability and a more articulate tone.  He played it a lot and decided the humbuckers didn't really work with his rig. He brought me some records with the tone he was after on them. We listened and eventually we found some Dearmond Pickups from the 60's that have all the aggressive tone we were looking for. I fabricated some plates to mount them in the humbucker rings and wired them up. It looks like this:



The headstock inlay art is a representation of Al's tattoo, he uses this art a lot as his mark.




Monday, October 24, 2011

More Photos of Joe Walsh's Esquire

 The Callaham bridge chosen has 3 brass saddles, machined for proper intonation.
 The height of the Dearmond suits the string height of the standard Fender geometry, It mounts flat against the body. I used low profile metal knobs.
 I like using large dots. Dim lights and aging eyes make it a necessity.
 I had some new decals made, Lincoln Durham did the art. The tuners are Schaller locking as per Joe's request.
A simple, no-nonsense guitar. Simplicity has its place in design and functionality. This guitar used only a few parts which makes it look rudimentary. Closer inspection shows that each one was chosen carefully and the end product is suitably refined.

Joe Walsh's Esquire

I met Joe Walsh working as guitar tech for him. He flew in to do Ray Wylie Hubbard's Grit and Groove fest and I helped get the guitar related gear in order. At the end of that week Joe Asked me to buid him an Esquire with a P-90 instead of the standard Fender style pickup. We talked and ended up using a vintage Dearmond pickup instead. He liked it enough to use it for photos promoting his current tour. Here are some photos of the results

This is the Callaham bridge I hacked to make room for the Dearmond Pickup. It was designed to be a soundhole acoustic guitar pickup. It is very shallow and requires no routing of the body.



I chose a highly flamed piece of maple for the neck. It is reinforced with carbon fiber truss rods.





It ended up looking like this. I front mounted the controls and made a thin pickguard from phenolic resin, it looks like bakelite.








The back has a control cover, recessed string ferrules and a thick stainless steel neck-plate.









Monday, February 28, 2011

Alejandro's New Ebony Bridge




I built Al the Les Paul Style and he has been playing it a lot. I had carved an aluminum bridge that sounded great but was breaking strings. The Metal was too soft and aluminum can be sticky. I decided to make a bridge using saddles made of bar fret I had left over from refretting old Martins. I made a split saddle for improved intonation and pinned the bridge to the top under the feet. The new bridge sounds better than before, less ringing a little more precise in articulation.