Pricey Guitars

Posted by: central on 31 March 2004

SmileFurther to the recent axe topic, has any one ever played a guitar that was so good it justified it's ridiculous price.
Examples vintage Fender's, Gibson, Martin etc,
or exotica like Flet's, Hausers in the Classical field.
Very interested to hear your thoughts?
Posted on: 31 March 2004 by jayd
Strummed a $20k D'Angelico New Yorker once (blond, mid-forties vintage). Didn't actually try to play it as I was totally intimidated by it. Sound and looks, a true work of art. Worth it if I had that kind of dough.

There are several guitars in the (relatively) humble $2-$4k range that are worth every penny, in my opinion.

jay
Posted on: 31 March 2004 by Robert Derwae
Jayd:

Now, don't keep secrets...

Robert
Posted on: 31 March 2004 by Peter C
PRS Custom 24 : Great action and sounds the business through Valve Amps, superb looking guitar

Taylor 814Ce : Not cheap at £2449, but brilliant

Taylor 614Ce : Maple Back & sides, Lovely sound and great action, a doddle to play.
Posted on: 31 March 2004 by Rasher
I played a reissue LP at £3450 which just wasn't anything special at all. I have a LP that was a prototype made by Gibson custom shop as a forerunner of the Classic 1960 reissue, and I bought it after it had travelled the world at trade fairs for a very reasonable £740 in 1989. Now, that was a real bargain, and it is the best LP I have ever played. Being essentially a custom shop 1960 reissue, I suppose it should be too. Smile I have changed the pickups to Seymour Duncan PAF's, which I had made as zebra stripes by the factory, which took them 3 months to get right! Expensive, but worth it. They since started manufacturing zebra stripes as a stock item, but got the black/white parts around the wrong way.
Posted on: 31 March 2004 by NaimDropper
Several notches above Pedulla are both the Warrior line and Fodera. At least in my opinion.
Unbelieveable.
I've got a Warrior Signature and it is a tone monster as well as being a dream to play and beautiful to boot.
80+ year-old Mahogony forms the body, Purple Heart fretboard and tone stripe, Quilted Maple top, all sculpted...
Next is one of those beautiful Foderas...
Expensive, not for most working musicians (can't afford it on what gigs pay!) but a considerable treat to own.

http://www.warriorinstruments.com
http://www.fodera.com

David
Posted on: 31 March 2004 by central
Oh come on guys let's raise the level, £3000 is not big money for a guitar, i am talking guitars like the aformentioned D'angelico.
A Greg Smallman will set you back £25000, a prewar D45 Martin £75000+ there must be some of you out there who could fool the dealer into thinking you were seriously interested in buying one, so you could have a plonk?
Posted on: 31 March 2004 by Peter C
ghunter

To me a 52 Tele Reissue is a better sounding guitar , than the American Standard Tele.

Theres more body to the sound and I prefer the neck.
Posted on: 31 March 2004 by Simon Crosland
Mrs.C played a D'Angelico New Yorker replica made by Joe White a few months back. The price was undisclosed but understood to be not small. In the low thousand pounds bracket Joe makes fabulous instruments. Aside from that, the custom Hamer USA Studio that Mrs.C normally plays is very good for the money and being rarer than the usual PRS and Les Paul crowd makes it more appealling to us as well!

Cheers,
Simon
Posted on: 01 April 2004 by Tim Jones
The original Warwick Thumb bass was very expensive (£900 was a lot of money in 1986), but it was a dream to play.

I bought a 1970 Fender Jazz Bass for around £1000 in Andy's a few years ago and it was a truly sweet thing...
Posted on: 01 April 2004 by Mike Hanson
I've got an Alembic Epic, which at roughly US$2K is second from the bottom of their line. If the pure joy of playing this model is any indication, then the high-end custom models that they create must be orgasmic. Check out www.alembic.com.
-=> Mike Hanson <=-
Posted on: 01 April 2004 by Mike Hanson
BTW, there's a fantastic shop here in Toronto called the The Twelfth Fret that does a booming business in new and used guitars. They've got most of their selection on their web site for your viewing pleasure. Most of the time they're in the US$1-4K range, but every once in a while a US$20K beauty appears.

-=> Mike Hanson <=-
Posted on: 01 April 2004 by joe90
Also check out Jackson's Rare Guitars at
www.jacksonsrareguitars.com.
I bought a '78 US Strat from them and their description over the net was dead accurate to what I received.

They have some truly JUICY stuff.

A good guitar is a good guitar to me. I once had a cheap-as Ibanex double-cutaway Ibanez Artist with figured top, fully bound neck, ebony fingerboard, glued neck, gold hardware (and good!) with twin humbuckers that I picked up for the equivalent of £200! I lament that I ever sold it.

Sometimes you have to pay a fortune to get that puppy and, let's face it, who cares who much when emotion is involved?

I wouldn't squawk at paying huge sums for a guitar I wanted.
If it sounded good and scored me more girls.

Joe90

Joe90
Posted on: 09 June 2004 by Peter C
Martin D42 - Great guitar

Not cheap at £2879, but worth the money.

Recently tried a 1966 Brazilian Rosewood Back & Sides D28 - excellent sounding guitar. Not cheap at £3249, but Brazilian Rosewood is rare and it sounds so much better than any new D28 I've tried or heard.
Posted on: 09 June 2004 by P
Did someone say Pricey?

I dread to think what some of thesewill go for given their previous owners.

Click on each pic for a full description.

P
Posted on: 09 June 2004 by Peter C
A bit more than they would cost on ebay I suspect
Posted on: 09 June 2004 by Roy T
Iconic Fender guitars for sale at up to $500m

I saw this in another place and thought you might be into purchasing "wholesale" rates. Big Grin


By Lina Saigol, European M&A Correspondent
Financial Times; Jun 09, 2004

Thirty five years after Jimi Hendrix immortalised the Fender Stratocaster guitar by setting fire to one at the 1967 Monterey pop festival, the musical instruments company is for sale in a move that could value it at up to $500m (£272m).

Fender is understood to have appointed Goldman Sachs to look at selling the business, which is expected to be put into a competitive auction.

People familiar with the situation said proceedings were at an early stage. Interest is expected from trade and financial buyers.

Weston Presidio, the US private equity firm, backed a management buy-out of the company, led by William Schultz, chairman and chief executive of Fender, in 1985.

Fender was then owned by CBS, which bought the business for $13m in 1965 from Leo Fender, creator of the first electric guitar with a solid body.

Mr Schultz and his team had to rebuild the business as they owned only the name, the patents and parts that were left over in stock.

Initially, Fender imported its guitars from offshore manufacturers, but later set up a flagship domestic factory in Corona, California.

Fender guitars have developed iconic status around the world. The company's guitars include the legendary Stratocaster; the Telecaster, the first solid-body electric Spanish-style guitar to go into commercial production; the Precision Bass; and the Twin Reverb. In their last concert on the roof of the Apple headquarters in London's Saville Row in the film Let it Be, the Beatles' backdrop was fashioned from Fender amplifiers.

Eric Clapton had two favourite Stratocasters which he called "Brownie" and "Blackie". Kurt Cobain, lead singer of cult rock band Nirvana, was rarely seen without his Lake Placid blue or red Mustang.

Weston Presidio was founded in 1991 and manages more than $2bn in capital. It has invested in more than 70 companies in sectors including consumer, retail, industrial, media and publishing.

Goldman Sachs and Weston Presidio declined to comment.

Fender's biggest industry rival is Gibson Guitars, which makes the Les Paul model.
Posted on: 09 June 2004 by undertone
Did you know that Randy Bachmann (Guess Who, BTO, solo) has the largest collection (private or otherwise) of Gretsch guitars in the world? Estimates of the value are staggering.

Value is not what something is worth, it's what somebody is willing to pay for it.
Posted on: 10 June 2004 by Phil Ward
Find the right guitar and yes, almost any price can be justified. My fretles Wal custom was worth every one of the £600 I paid for it in '83 (just remembered, I funded it by selling my first Naim system - a 12S/160), and there's no sensible sum of money that'd convince me to part with it now.

Phil
Posted on: 10 June 2004 by P
So there I was thinking I might be in with a chance on JJ Cales 79 Strat in the up and coming auction and then I discovered how much stuff went for the

last time!!

Holy Shit!

P