Gibson worker JC sig story at TB

Started by Barklessdog, March 01, 2010, 03:59:02 PM

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godofthunder

I meet Jack at the House of guitars while I was working there around '86. Next to Lemmy and Pete Way one of the nicest guys I ever meet, I have a picture somewhere packed away in the garage.
Maker of the Badbird Bridge, "intonation without modification" for your vintage Gibson Thunderbird

eb2

We had a torrid affair in 1973.  He used me and left me crying in a heap.
Model One and Schallers?  Ish.

Dave W

Quote from: eb2 on March 02, 2010, 02:33:19 PM
We had a torrid affair in 1973.  He used me and left me crying in a heap.

That sounds almost as traumatic as having to sit through an Airplane concert.

Stjofön Big

I don't doubt for a minute that Jack Casady's a nice fellow. But it didn't click between him and Esbjorn.
And besides, Casady's one of the most talented and influential bass players I've heard. Those first Airplane records! I had never heard anyone play like that before! He's a bit like Phil Lesh in the approach, with wide pattern travels, but with more nitro.

Pilgrim

I have a JC and I like it!  It hasn't gotten its share of playing time recently, but that is about to change.

"A computer lets you make more mistakes faster than any other invention with the possible exceptions of handguns and tequila."

Chris P.

There's a very interesting story about Epiphone in the current edition of British guitar mag 'Guitar & Bass Magazine.' It's about the history but also about present Epiphones. Also an interview with Jim Rosenberg.

In short Jim tells us that a in the nineties, Epiphone were just a sub brand making Gibson clones. Containers of bad instruments came to the US, a lot of guitars weren't passing quality control, so they had loads of bad instruments and nobody knew what to do with it. Rosenberg started to make Epiphone like a real brand and he started with having an office in the far east, checking factories, checking quality control. They made a lot of improvements, but the bad thing was that those factories also built guitars with other brand names and they used the improvement for the 'competiting brands' too. After a while Epi started some own factories. Jim's very proud of the new Epiphones (Wilshire and so) and they really used Lennon's old Casino to make the reissue.
At the moment they also have their own R&D and PR people.


Dave W

Quote from: Chris P. on March 04, 2010, 01:32:15 AM

At the moment they also have their own R&D and PR people.


Does "at the moment" mean "until Gibson's creditors take control"?


Chris P.