Vintage Guitar and Bass forum

Wow I did it right

Wow I did it right
« on: April 21, 2010, 01:56:24 AM »
I took my EBO down to Chicago Music today, probably the oldest music store in Tucson to find a case for it. I had it assembled minus the tuners and bridge. He told me it was the best color match he has ever seen on a Gibson. Not bad considering it was bare wood last Saturday. That really made me feel great. Mike has been repairing guitars for thirty years there and has seen his share. He is going to re fret the neck and has an out of house guy that can do the head and mask the logos properly. I am going to take the tuners and strings and what ever is left and he will set it up for me. I bought a case for it. We wound up on the third floor that resembled a museum of string instruments and cases. I can see how he has managed to work there thirty years.

I wonder if I can still remember how to play it? I was a fair player in my day. I played with the lead guitar player for David Crosby once. He had a band called Sugarmill and the bass player had to leave so I picked up where he left off. We did some Buffalo Springfield tunes. Boy life was sure simpler in those days.
« Last Edit: April 21, 2010, 02:27:19 PM by vortilon »

jules

  • *****
  • 3068
    • View Profile
Eb0
« Reply #1 on: April 22, 2010, 10:19:26 AM »
Sounds like it is coming together nicely. Isn't playing bass like riding a bike? I've never given up for long enough to know whether you forget it all.
 
Looking forward to the finished pics...

Wow I did it right
« Reply #2 on: April 26, 2010, 01:29:21 AM »
Done
The head stock I had to do myself and is a very humbling experience and as can be seen by the picture is not right but since it's a player I will live with it until I find someone that can do a more proper job.




eb2

  • ****
  • 456
    • View Profile
Wow I did it right
« Reply #3 on: April 26, 2010, 05:02:45 AM »
HOT DANG!!! A 3x12 SP3100 Bassman cab!
boom

Wow I did it right
« Reply #4 on: April 26, 2010, 06:08:56 AM »
Quote from: eb2;13667
HOT DANG!!! A 3x12 SP3100 Bassman cab!


I just bought that at a close out sale $150.00 Chicago Music Store Tucson they have great deals. The new Epiphone case $40.00. I bought a 67 bassman blackface amp on ebay to power it. Waiting for it to show up on the UPS truck. I guess I am a bass player again. I plugged the EBO into a little practice amp today and it never sounded or played so goood. Strings are really close to the neck now with no buzzing frets. Mike at Chicago music in Tucson really is a good tech. Send him any fret work, he did the job in two hours for two hundred with a reface of the board as well.
« Last Edit: April 26, 2010, 06:18:38 AM by vortilon »

Wow I did it right
« Reply #5 on: April 26, 2010, 10:24:50 AM »
That Gibson looks beautiful. I'd stick on some old CSNY and Buffalo Springfield tunes, crank up the hi fi and play along. Your bass playing will soon be fluent again, particularly on an instrument that's such a joy to play:)

Wow I did it right
« Reply #6 on: April 28, 2010, 11:56:43 PM »
I was there in the 90's they didn't want to sell me anything ! They had numerous modded and butchered EB0s and EB3s, They wanted crazy money for them. I kept saying they are not stock, they called them custom.:roll: Nice bass btw

Added "P"!
« Reply #7 on: April 29, 2010, 04:49:36 PM »
Aha. I see you have done what I did, 30 years ago.:)
I sort of regret doing it, must have wacked a bing chunk off the value.
Having said that. . . . . . it only cost me £72.00.
Ah, those were the days!:roll:

Couldn't get on with the VERY bassy sound (not called for at that time) so
I slapped in a precision pick-up, just like yours.
Made a big difference but then I got into long scale any it only comes out once or twice a year.:)
Mine's a '63, with the black Pup.

Nice looking bass. :)

Wow I did it right
« Reply #8 on: April 30, 2010, 01:03:53 AM »
Thanks all for your kind words. Eric that Fender PU must be great. I am really enjoying this thing but still waiting for my bassman amp. I hope I don't have to write the UPS breaks amps song. :roll: I am looking for some people to play with and I see nothing has changed in all these years (still a shortage of bassplayers).

jules

  • *****
  • 3068
    • View Profile
Gibson EB0 Fender Bassman
« Reply #9 on: April 30, 2010, 02:43:07 PM »
Quote from: vortilon;13671
I just bought that at a close out sale $150.00 Chicago Music Store Tucson they have great deals. The new Epiphone case $40.00. I bought a 67 bassman blackface amp on ebay to power it.

wow, bet that will sound great! Got the facilities to record us a clip? :)

 

Recent posts on vintage guitar and bass

1970 Rosetti Epiphone guitar catalogScan of 1970 Epiphone guitar catalogue produced by Rosetti for the UK market. Undated but most likely from mid-late 1970, this was the first UK catalogue to show the new range of Japanese (Matsumoku) Epiphone guitars. Interestingly, these pages show the Epiphone solid bodies with a single-sided Fender-style headstock layout - a feature quickly replaced with a typical two-sided Epiphone headstock almost immediately. Epiphone electric guitars: 9520, 9525; bass guitars: 9521, 9526; acoustic guitars: 6730, 6830, 6834
1971 A World of Guitars by Rosetti catalogueScan of 1971 Rosetti catalogue (UK) featuring guitars from from numerous manufacturers worldwide: guitars by Epiphone, Hagstrom, Levin, Hoyer, Egmond, Eros, Moridaira, Kiso-Suzuki, Schaller, and Tatra.
1971 Selmer guitar catalogueScan of 1971 Selmer guitar catalogue showing the range of electric and acoustic guitars distributed by the company: guitars by Gibson, Yamaha, Selmer, Hofner and Suzuki. 1960s Selmer had always placed Hofner at the front end of their catalogues, no doubt these were the better sellers - but into the 1970s Hofner were slipping somewhat and only appear at the tail end of this publication, pride of place going to Gibson, and to a lesser extent Yamaha. In fact this is the last Selmer catalogue to include the many Hofner hollow bodies (Committee, President, Senator etc) that had defined the companies output for so many years - to be replaced in the 1972 catalogue by generic solid body 'copies' of Gibson and Fender models. A number of new Gibson models are included for the first time: the SG-100 and SG-200 six string guitars and the SB-300 and SB-400 basses.
1968 Selmer guitar catalogueScan of 1968/1969 Selmer guitar catalogue (printed July 1968), showing the entire range of electric and acoustic guitars distributed by the company: guitars by Hofner, Gibson, Selmer and Giannini. Selmer were the exclusive United Kingdom distributors of Hofner and Gibson at the time, and this catalogue contains a total of 18 electric guitars, 7 bass guitars, 37 acoustics, and 2 Hawaiian guitars - all produced outside the UK and imported by Selmer, with UK prices included in guineas. This catalogue saw the (re-)introduction of the late sixties Gibson Les Paul Custom and Les Paul Standard (see page 69) and the short-lived Hofner Club 70. Other electric models include: HOFNER ELECTRICS: Committee, Verithin 66, Ambassador, President, Senator, Galaxie, HOFNER BASSES: Violin bass, Verithin bass, Senator bass, Professional bass GIBSON ELECTRICS: Barney Kessel, ES-330TD, ES-335TD, ES-345TD, ES-175D, ES-125CD, SG Standard, SG Junior, SG Special GIBSON BASSES: EB-0, EB-2, EB-3 - plus a LOT of acoustics branded Gibson, Hofner, Selmer and Giannini
1961 Hofner Colorama IHofner Colorama was the name UK distributor Selmer gave to a series of solid and semi-solid guitars built by Hofner for distribution in the UK. The construction and specifications of the guitars varied over the period of production, but by 1961 it was a totally solid, double cutaway instrument, with a set neck, translucent cherry finish, six-in-a-row headstock, and Hofner Diamond logo pickups. Available as a single or dual pickup guitar, this sngle pickup version would have been sold in mainland Europe as the Hofner 161.
1971 Commodore N25 (Matsumoku)Commodore was a brand applied to a series of guitars produced in Japan at the well-respected Matsumoku plant from the late 1960s to the mid 1970s - and sold primarily (perhaps exclusively?) in the United Kingdom. The models bearing the Commodore name were all guitars available from different distributors with different branding. Although there may have been some minor changes in appointments (specifically headstock branding) most had the same basic bodies, hardware and construction. Equivalent models to the Commodore N25 (and this is by no means an exhaustive list) include the Aria 5102T, Conrad 5102T(?), Electra 2221, Lyle 5102T, Ventura V-1001, Univox Coily - and most famously the Epiphone 5102T / Epiphone EA-250.
1960 Hofner Colorama IIThe Hofner Colorama was the name given by Selmer to a series of solid (and semi-solid) body Hofner guitars distributed in the United Kingdom between 1958 and 1965. The Colorama name actually applied to some quite different guitars over the period, but in 1960 it was a very light, semi-solid, set necked guitar with one (Colorama I) or two (Colorama II, as seen here) Toaster pickups. Although an entry-level guitar, it was very well-built, and a fine playing guitar; certainly a step up (at least in terms of craftsmanship) from many of the Colorama guitars that would follow, and a good deal of the guitars available in Britain circa 1960.
1971 Epiphone 1820 (ET-280) bassBy the end of the 1960s, a decision had been made to move Epiphone guitar production from the USA (at the Kalamazoo plant where Gibson guitars were made), to Matsumoto in Japan, creating a line of guitars and basses significantly less expensive than the USA-built models (actually less than half the price). The Matsumoku factory had been producing guitars for export for some time, but the 1820 bass (alongside a number of guitar models and the 5120 electric acoustic bass) were the first Epiphone models to be made there. These new Epiphones were based on existing Matsumoku guitars, sharing body shapes, and hardware, but the Epiphone line was somewhat upgraded, with inlaid logos and a 2x2 peghead configuration. Over the course of the 70s, the Japanese output improved dramatically, and in many ways these early 70s models are a low point for the brand. Having said this, there are a lot worse guitars out there, and as well as being historically important, the 1820 bass can certainly provide the goods when required.
1981 Gibson MarauderProduction of Bill Lawrence's Gibson Marauder began in 1974, with production peaking in 1978. But by 1980 the model was officially discontinued, though very small numbers slipped out as late as spring 1981. Over 7000 examples shipped between 1974 and 1979, and although no totals are available for 1980 and 1981, it is unlikely production reached three figures in either of these years. These final Marauders were all assembled at the Gibson Nashville plant, and had some nice features not available through the later years of production, such as a rosewood fretboard, and in this case, an opaque 'Devil Red' finish. It's a great looking and fine playing guitar!