The Last Bass Outpost

Gear Discussion Forums => Gibson Basses => Topic started by: Dave W on February 12, 2018, 10:42:10 AM

Title: 1941 Gibson Upright
Post by: Dave W on February 12, 2018, 10:42:10 AM
https://minneapolis.craigslist.org/hnp/msg/d/upright-bass-1941-blonde/6459290758.html

Grog, you need this.
Title: Re: 1941 Gibson Upright
Post by: ilan on February 12, 2018, 10:55:48 AM
"It is NOT 100% original as the tuners, fingerboard and tail piece have been updated."

In violin family instruments this means nothing. It's not a guitar. Every Strad, for example, has had its fingerboard and tailpiece replaced several times. Only the body, and to some degree the neck, are important. A violin maker can re-neck a Strad and it would still be a Strad.
Title: Re: 1941 Gibson Upright
Post by: Highlander on February 12, 2018, 02:26:04 PM
I'd be tempted if the readies were there... not an everyday item... 8)
Title: Re: 1941 Gibson Upright
Post by: Pilgrim on February 12, 2018, 02:27:07 PM
That looks like a very fine deal to me.  Decent uprights aren't cheap.
Title: Re: 1941 Gibson Upright
Post by: patman on February 12, 2018, 03:57:45 PM
agreed
Title: Re: 1941 Gibson Upright
Post by: Grog on February 12, 2018, 04:35:45 PM
https://minneapolis.craigslist.org/hnp/msg/d/upright-bass-1941-blonde/6459290758.html

Grog, you need this.

I eyeballed it a couple times. It's too big & the few times I tried playing one should be more than enough of a deterrent. That being said, why would Gibson buy Epiphone in the middle fifties to get the tooling for it's upright double basses if they were already making them?
Title: Re: 1941 Gibson Upright
Post by: Dave W on February 13, 2018, 07:29:59 PM
I eyeballed it a couple times. It's too big & the few times I tried playing one should be more than enough of a deterrent. That being said, why would Gibson buy Epiphone in the middle fifties to get the tooling for it's upright double basses if they were already making them?

Good question. I suspect the real reason CMI bought Epi was because they got lots of parts and a name with a long history for peanuts. Something like $20K, IIRC.