Tiesco lap steel???
Moderator: Brad Bechtel
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Tiesco lap steel???
My very 1st guitar was a Tiesco,it was a terrible piece of crap, but of course I loved it at the time, I mean heck, it had a faux bigsby,(pull up on it the slightest bit and the spring falls out and rolls under the couch) . . .So I stumbled across this on ebay http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&category=621&item=7313552092&rd=1
I was rather shocked at the price,why would you spend. . .I mean who would ask for. ..??? Is there something I'm missing here? Could it possibly be the missing link of laps?
I was rather shocked at the price,why would you spend. . .I mean who would ask for. ..??? Is there something I'm missing here? Could it possibly be the missing link of laps?
- Blake Hawkins
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Ah, Joel, Teisco is very dear to my heart!
I own two of them from the early '50's.
The e bay guitar is grossly over priced.
I don't believe any of their models are worth that.
The workmanship on Teisco steel guitars is mediocre. Still, they don't sound bad.
In fact I really like the tone of my 1953 Double Neck.
My first guitar was also a Teisco and recently I purchased a beater of the same model on e bay.
It took a rebuild to get it going but it plays fine now.
However, it is only a 19" scale. Pretty small guitar and not much sustain in the upper registers.
There are some floating around the states.
I think most were brought back by the military.
Have never seen any evidence that the steel guitars were actually imported to the states.
Blake
I own two of them from the early '50's.
The e bay guitar is grossly over priced.
I don't believe any of their models are worth that.
The workmanship on Teisco steel guitars is mediocre. Still, they don't sound bad.
In fact I really like the tone of my 1953 Double Neck.
My first guitar was also a Teisco and recently I purchased a beater of the same model on e bay.
It took a rebuild to get it going but it plays fine now.
However, it is only a 19" scale. Pretty small guitar and not much sustain in the upper registers.
There are some floating around the states.
I think most were brought back by the military.
Have never seen any evidence that the steel guitars were actually imported to the states.
Blake
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- Blake Hawkins
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Here is a Teisco that I played in Korea in 1959!
www.genejones.com <font size="1" color="#8e236b"><p align="center">[This message was edited by Gene Jones on 07 April 2005 at 10:08 AM.]</p></FONT>
www.genejones.com <font size="1" color="#8e236b"><p align="center">[This message was edited by Gene Jones on 07 April 2005 at 10:08 AM.]</p></FONT>
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LONG LIVE BOTTOM FEEDERS
Merle Kekuku made great music with his teeny Teisco 6 (a sudden neccesary buy after his steel was ripped on flight to Japan).
Billy Gibbons snags 'em when he finds 'em.
Some of them sound good, and all of them look crazy.
Good enuf for me.
After missing out on a nice and long sought after Epi 'Rocco', I'm gonna sooth that anguish by snagging THE oddest looking steel I've ever seen.
A huge long scale console Teisco dbl. 8 w/2 per neck gold metal flake PU covers and a body that is WAY melted (factory designed!).
This 'thing' looks like it has some serious sounds waiting to be unleashed. Whether that's good or bad will soon be known.
Merle Kekuku made great music with his teeny Teisco 6 (a sudden neccesary buy after his steel was ripped on flight to Japan).
Billy Gibbons snags 'em when he finds 'em.
Some of them sound good, and all of them look crazy.
Good enuf for me.
After missing out on a nice and long sought after Epi 'Rocco', I'm gonna sooth that anguish by snagging THE oddest looking steel I've ever seen.
A huge long scale console Teisco dbl. 8 w/2 per neck gold metal flake PU covers and a body that is WAY melted (factory designed!).
This 'thing' looks like it has some serious sounds waiting to be unleashed. Whether that's good or bad will soon be known.
- Blake Hawkins
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Here is a Teisco Lap Steel being sold in Japan. (38,000 Yen, Roughly $360) I never played Teisco Steel, I wish I could afford this one.
http://www.genu.co.jp/photos/Teiscolap.jpg
Teisco is still making guitars (but not steels.) I own one called Spectrum 5 which is truly fantastic guitar.
http://www.kawai.co.jp/teisco/top.html <font size="1" color="#8e236b"><p align="center">[This message was edited by Kunihiko Suzuki on 07 April 2005 at 07:57 PM.]</p></FONT>
http://www.genu.co.jp/photos/Teiscolap.jpg
Teisco is still making guitars (but not steels.) I own one called Spectrum 5 which is truly fantastic guitar.
http://www.kawai.co.jp/teisco/top.html <font size="1" color="#8e236b"><p align="center">[This message was edited by Kunihiko Suzuki on 07 April 2005 at 07:57 PM.]</p></FONT>
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- Blake Hawkins
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Nice to know they are still in business.
When I visited the "factory" in 1953 it was in 4 or 5 little rooms with maybe 10 employees.
Each worker could do multiple jobs and so when they made lap steels, everybody would work on them.
A few days later they might be building amps and the same workers would be assembling
the electronics.
They were located near Bando Bashi in Tokyo.
I've seen a number of different designed steels from them, rarely the same one twice.
Blake
When I visited the "factory" in 1953 it was in 4 or 5 little rooms with maybe 10 employees.
Each worker could do multiple jobs and so when they made lap steels, everybody would work on them.
A few days later they might be building amps and the same workers would be assembling
the electronics.
They were located near Bando Bashi in Tokyo.
I've seen a number of different designed steels from them, rarely the same one twice.
Blake
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Gentlemen, thank you for your fantastic stories. I was born in 1967 when Teisco was taken over by Kawai music (that's what I learned,) so I really donft know the background of Teisco company. I've heard that Kawai is reproducing Teisco brand guitars with complete fidelity, so my understanding is that they are Teisco guitars. There is a company named Teisco Industry that is making some guitar parts, furniture, and some types of machines. I think it is a very confusing story.
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These pictures might give us a clue? The last one is very very Japanese, in my opinion.
http://ysfc.weblogs.jp/chronofile/images/teisco_40s02.html http://ysfc.weblogs.jp/chronofile/images/teisco54_egnl.html http://ysfc.weblogs.jp/chronofile/images/teisco_54_ega.html http://ysfc.weblogs.jp/chronofile/images/teisco54_egr.html http://ushigomepan.cool.ne.jp/photo/guitar/teisco8b/01.html http://ushigomepan.cool.ne.jp/photo/guitar/teiscotgh/01.html
http://ysfc.weblogs.jp/chronofile/images/teisco_40s02.html http://ysfc.weblogs.jp/chronofile/images/teisco54_egnl.html http://ysfc.weblogs.jp/chronofile/images/teisco_54_ega.html http://ysfc.weblogs.jp/chronofile/images/teisco54_egr.html http://ushigomepan.cool.ne.jp/photo/guitar/teisco8b/01.html http://ushigomepan.cool.ne.jp/photo/guitar/teiscotgh/01.html
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- Blake Hawkins
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