sanrest.blogg.se

Gibson thunderbird bass players
Gibson thunderbird bass players








gibson thunderbird bass players
  1. GIBSON THUNDERBIRD BASS PLAYERS SERIAL
  2. GIBSON THUNDERBIRD BASS PLAYERS SERIES

Still, this Thunderbird IV confirms that Gibson in the early 1960s was at least trying to come up with viable alternatives to Fender’s venerable Precision and Jazz. And that hasn’t changed in a half-century. In spite of all of the innovations found on Gibson’s original Thunderbird bass series, Fender basses continued to clobber the Kalamazoo company’s models in terms of sales. There’s the custom color facet, of course, but Gibson records indicate that only 87 Thunderbird IVs were shipped in 1965, and that included instruments in the new glued-neck “non-reverse” configuration that were shipped in the latter half of the year. This Cardinal Red Thunderbird IV has more than one rarity factor going for it. In the vintage guitar lexicon, original neck-through models (and their reissues) have become known as “reverse” models, while the glued-neck examples are called “non-reverse” models. The new versions had glued-in necks and a silhouette changed to look like they’d been flipped over yet again i.e., they now looked more like Fenders. In late 1965, Gibson changed the construction and cosmetic style of Firebird and Thunderbird models.

gibson thunderbird bass players

February 4, shirts mail week of February 14!!Īvailable for a limited time, VG’s Fab Fours shirt recalls the pop-art movement while honoring four classic basses. The term “neck-heavy” was/is often applied, and they’ve garnered more than their share of broken headstocks. Thunderbirds produce a more resonant sound than short-scale Gibson basses of the era, but they weren’t without shortcomings. Notable players of original Thunderbirds included Martin Turner of Wishbone Ash, and the late Allen Woody of the Allman Brothers Band and Gov’t Mule. Some black instruments were also manufactured, but were never catalogued as a color option. Other colors on the chart were Heather Poly, Pelham Blue Poly, Golden Mist Poly, Kerry Green, Silver Mist Poly, Inverness Green Poly, Ember Red, Frost Blue, and Polaris White. Ten colors were available, including the gorgeous Cardinal Red that drapes this 1965 example.

GIBSON THUNDERBIRD BASS PLAYERS SERIES

The standard finish on early T-Birds was sunburst, but one of the most important marketing innovations for this series was the introduction of Gibson’s custom-color program (they trailed Fender in this concept, as well). Original Firebirds had rear-projecting banjo-style tuners Thunderbirds had conventional bass tuners, located exactly where they would be on a Fender instrument. The single-pickup II had a volume and tone control, and the double-pickup IV had two volume controls and a master tone knob. They featured new humbucking pickups without polepieces, and their Tune-O-Matic bridges and stop tailpieces were also new. There were cosmetic and electronic differences in the Firebird I, III, V, and VII guitars (neck inlay, tailpieces, number of pickups, etc.), but the Thunderbird II and IV were simply one- and two-pickup models with dot fretboard inlays. So for the T-Bird, it softened the profile of the Explorer to create what resembled flipped-over Fenders, with a protruding treble bout and no cutaway on the bass side near where the neck joined the body. Early examples had a two-piece full-length neck, but by the end of the first year, a nine-layer laminated neck was employed for better strength.įive years before the Thunderbird, Gibson had committed a cosmetic blunder with the too-futuristic Flying V and Explorer guitars (at least one Explorer bass was built).

gibson thunderbird bass players

Companions to the Firebird guitars, Thunderbirds featured neck-through construction with body sides glued to the neck block. Gibson opted to get into the full-scale electric bass market in earnest with the introduction of the redoubtable Thunderbird model in 1963. The two were normally short-scale, but were available in full-scale variants for a few years starting in ’69. The next solidbody Gibson bass was the ’59 EB-0, which would go through several cosmetic and electronic changes as it and a two-pickup EB-3 became Gibson’s mainstay electric basses in the ’60s. Only 546 were shipped before the instrument was discontinued in 1958, supplanted by the EB-2. Gibson’s response came in 1953 with the Electric Bass (its actual moniker), which was a short-scale (301?2″) mahogany-bodied, violin-shaped instrument with a telescopic end pin that allowed it to be played upright. Sure, it built a couple of electric uprights in the late 1930s and the semi-hollow EB-2 in ’58, but all too often its solidbody basses played catch-up with Fender instruments.įender introduced its full-scale (34″) solidbody Precision Bass in 1951, and it quickly caught on. In spite of its laudable history, the Gibson company’s solidbody electric basses have never been much of a factor in the market.

GIBSON THUNDERBIRD BASS PLAYERS SERIAL

1965 Gibson Thunderbird bass, serial #263668.










Gibson thunderbird bass players