Z Gentle (Z Alex Gentle), on 21 August 2010 - 09:24 PM, said:
All I can add is I recall the Beatles short video of Paperback Writer that came out (and I think previewed on the Ed Sullivan show) in 1966; George Harrison was playing a heritage cherry SG Maestro and I remember thinking Harrison's SG was about the coolest thing I had ever seen. I got my first SG Maestro a year later to play in a garage band, that ended up doing proms and parties, and such. Been an SG enthusiast ever since. Always will be.
I do agree.
But my point is not about the SG itself - but about Gibsons strange lack of historical guitar knowledge. The Stratocaster was around seven years before the SG. So the SG cannot - in 1961 -
be the most radical guitar design the world had witnessed so far. Right? But that's what Gibson stupidly say.
Producing such nonsense Gibsom leaves the impression of being a guitar company without history. And they actually litterally are. Because if you ask them questions about their technical roots for instance - including the CEO - then the answers is "Sorry, but we left all the papers in Kalamazoo".
They sure did. They left Gibson spirit, and Gibson build quality too. But then go back an get it for god sake. You need it. Get to your roots or Gibson continue as the worlds biggest company for making Gibson copies - if you see what I mean.
When it comes to the SG itself it is btw not the most radical guitar design the world had witnessed. It's a rather traditional design - and was as well already in 1961 - with a glued in neck, two pickups and hardware taken directly from Gibsom designs that were already around in 1961 and had been for a while. It's basicly a shaved down Les Paul (the maple shaved off) given a Stratocaster inspired outline and ergonomically features.
So it's simply rubbish - and why shall we - who pay grotesque money for these guitars - contribute finansial to such nonsense they produce in the marketing department. If Gibson cut these expenses off then Gibsons could be a lot cheaper - even still being the most expensive guitars on planet Earth stimulating the impression that they also are the guitars of the highest quality.