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When guitars had style

Posted: 20 Dec 2013 9:07 pm
by Dennis Smith
A Harmony on Ebay.
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Posted: 21 Dec 2013 6:53 pm
by chris ivey
that's cool...never seen that design before!

Posted: 24 Dec 2013 4:47 pm
by Paul Honeycutt
It almost looks like a solid body electric fiddle.

Posted: 25 Dec 2013 10:00 am
by Richard Shatz
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Posted: 25 Dec 2013 10:05 am
by Richard Shatz
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Posted: 25 Dec 2013 9:59 pm
by Dennis Smith
Two nice guitars Richard. The Royal looks like a 40's-50's Teisco. Looks a little like a nat new yorker.
The other looks like one of the plexlglas Magnatones I've never seen one with all three colors on one guitar. Are the flower on top or under the fretboard? Did you get it that way?

Posted: 25 Dec 2013 10:14 pm
by Doug Beaumier
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Posted: 25 Dec 2013 10:52 pm
by chris ivey
far out stuff.

Posted: 25 Dec 2013 11:27 pm
by Bill Creller
Lots of beautiful designs etc.
I often wondered how good those guitars were for tone etc. Only a pretty face ?
Most folks figure that the guitar they have is a good sounding instrument, which is normal, and the way I thought with my first steel guitars.

Interesting thing to think about......

Posted: 25 Dec 2013 11:44 pm
by Doug Beaumier
In my experience, beautiful, stylish design does Not necessarily mean a great sound. Like other things in life, sometimes beauty is only skin deep! 8)

Posted: 25 Dec 2013 11:54 pm
by Bill Creller
So beauty is in the eyes of the beholder, but maybe not in the ears ! :D

Posted: 26 Dec 2013 7:18 am
by Tom Pettingill
:evil: ... I'm mad ... I want a Toon control too!! :wink:

Seriously though, there have been so many wonderful styles and designs over the years. Steel guitar has such a rich history and it is that history that I often find inspiration in.

Posted: 26 Dec 2013 12:56 pm
by Len Amaral
I am so glad I discovered the lap steel and learning about the many different models that have so much history behind them. My Rick model B has such a warm tone I am playing it every day and I finally understand that "sound" Eddie Cunningham mentioned in another thread. What a way to start 2014 :)

Posted: 26 Dec 2013 2:07 pm
by Adam Nero
Really loving the beautiful Hawaiian laps in this thread. Thanks for the photos, gentlemen.

Posted: 26 Dec 2013 3:13 pm
by Doug Beaumier
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Posted: 27 Dec 2013 12:13 am
by Michael Butler
wow! that is all i can say about the amazing looking instruments you folks have posted!

play music!

B 6

Posted: 27 Dec 2013 3:19 am
by Ralph Czitrom
Doug - Your contributions to this forum are always enjoyable and educational. A quick question: is that an optical illusion or is one of those B6's a long scale guitar? I was under the impression that Rickenbacher only made them in short scale.

Posted: 27 Dec 2013 4:56 am
by Rick Aiello
Ralph, that's a Bakelite Spanish guitar ... Same scale length as the steel :D

Posted: 27 Dec 2013 8:27 am
by Doug Beaumier
Yes, a Spanish (standard) guitar. I believe that was the first electric guitar ever made?

Posted: 27 Dec 2013 8:42 am
by Noah Miller
Doug Beaumier wrote:Yes, a Spanish (standard) guitar. I believe that was the first electric guitar ever made?
Not quite. Stromberg-Voisinet had a model called the "Electro" in 1928; it picked up the movement of the top of the guitar rather than the strings, but it still sent that signal to an amp. Rickenbacker themselves built Spanish electric guitars as early as 1932 (using outsourced bodies and necks). The bakelite Ric model was arguably the first solidbody Spanish guitar, but there are also contenders from Vivitone and Slingerland.

First electric six string

Posted: 27 Dec 2013 9:11 am
by James Nottage
It always seems risky to name the "first" of anything. However, in this case the guitar in question, although early, had predecessors. The Ro-Pat-In company, later renamed Richenbacher Electro Instruments produced an electric six string guitar with wood body starting in 1932. In the middle of that same year they released the aluminum lap steel "frying pan". A prototype of the six string guitar is at the Wichita-Sedgwick County Museum in Wichita, Kansas. Its original owner was Gage Brewer of that city. The Electro Spanish Model B guitar did not come out until about 3 years later.

Posted: 27 Dec 2013 9:40 am
by Doug Beaumier
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Posted: 27 Dec 2013 9:48 am
by Alan Brookes
I thought I'd seem them all over the years, but there are a lot of interesting instruments in this thread that are completely new to me.

As I've said many times, a lap steel is just a plank with strings and a pick-up; the rest is all artwork, and the builders of these lap steels have shown a lot of ingenuity. 8)

Posted: 27 Dec 2013 9:58 am
by Doug Beaumier
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Posted: 27 Dec 2013 10:24 am
by Lynn Wheelwright
Doug,

Did you own the triple neck yellow MOTO unit with the black hand rests/PUP covers in the case on the lawn?

Lynn