Cleanest 1969 EB-3 at Norm's (+demo)

Started by ilan, March 22, 2024, 02:04:14 PM

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4stringer77

Back in the early 60s, the long shoremen, field hands, lumberjacks and iron workers who doubled as bassplayers needed extra space for their huge meat hooks to navigate around the controls. As the cultural revolution took hold, Gibson realized the stoner hippies playing psychedelic music didn't need as much room for their dainty girly hands. Just a guess.
Contrary to what James Bond says, a good Gibson should be stirred, not shaken.

gearHed289

Quote from: 4stringer77 on March 25, 2024, 11:25:06 AM
Back in the early 60s, the long shoremen, field hands, lumberjacks and iron workers who doubled as bassplayers needed extra space for their huge meat hooks to navigate around the controls. As the cultural revolution took hold, Gibson realized the stoner hippies playing psychedelic music didn't need as much room for their dainty girly hands. Just a guess.

;D ;D ;D I almost replied with something about bass players' man-sized hands, but your response is far better.  8)

ilan

It's a feather-weight short scale, just a reminder.

ajkula66

Quote from: ilan on March 28, 2024, 08:49:00 AM
It's a feather-weight short scale, just a reminder.

Yeah I'm reminded of that fact whenever I pick one of my '69 EBs right after I've played my '70 Les Paul Bass... :)

To me personally, '68-70 EB-0/3 have the sweetest necks ever...obviously, YMMV.
"...knowledge is a deadly friend when no one sets the rules..." (King Crimson)

My music: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLKh45r6zj5Mti2qalpHfROjxWtSB_HyUT

ilan

Quote from: ajkula66 on April 12, 2024, 06:06:16 PM
To me personally, '68-70 EB-0/3 have the sweetest necks ever...obviously, YMMV.

My '70 slothead EB-0L's neck perfectly fits this description.

Dave W

Quote from: ilan on April 14, 2024, 03:45:36 AM
My '70 slothead EB-0L's neck perfectly fits this description.

Ditto with my slothead.