The internet age has heralded an unprecedented amount for guitar tinkering, particularly Hybridization. Post pics of any hybrids that you've seen that you think works really well and say why!
I saw this over at Cousin Offset's gaff - someone there also made one with different finish but I can't locate that thread right now. I think they work really well, in fact better than Telemasters which always seem to have too much blank wood behind the bridge to be truly pleasing.
iCEByTes wrote:5 Most Jizz face maker Solo�s , classic Rock music i ever listened.
iCEByTes wrote:Blunt a joint , Take the Touch , Listen this.
Dave wrote:I think they work really well, in fact better than Telemasters which always seem to have too much blank wood behind the bridge to be truly pleasing.
That's why I would want a Telemaster with the JM trem.
Doog wrote:Tone is stored in the balls
theshadowofseattle wrote:That's why there's two: one for pee, one for tone.
HNB did a 'Jazzstang' once that looked sexy as heck iirc, but I'd love to have jazzmaster circuitry and trem in the compact-ness of a Mustang body and scale length.
Yes, EGC get almost all of their hybrids right. I've seen some very nice plexiglass bodied guitars from them too. There was also a nice Hagstrom HIIN- meets - Travis Bean.
That's a pretty cool axe, in a funky way. Love the offset (but the offset F-holes are kinda...dunno... ...maybe if there was just the top F-hole?). Beautiful harmony of the natural wood body, Maple neck, and black trim make the F-holes more dramatic. From Wikipedia:
The Starcaster was commercially unsuccessful, perhaps because of a public notion that Fender was a "solidbody, single coil brand" and Gibson was the "semi-hollow, humbucker brand". As a result, Starcasters are very rare, but are worth less in today's vintage market than many other semi-hollow guitars from the same period to collectors because of their unpopularity and lack of name endorsers at their time of manufacture.
Several modern high profile guitarists use the Starcaster as a preferred instrument. Jonny Greenwood, guitarist of Radiohead, can frequently be seen playing a Starcaster on stage. Sammy James, Jr., guitarist and front man of the Mooney Suzuki, uses a natural finished one and appeared on Late Night with Conan O'Brien with it on June 21, 2007. The guitar can also be seen in the music video to Morrissey's single "You Have Killed Me". Dave Keuning of The Killers also started using one shortly before the release of the album Sam's Town. He could be seen playing his Starcaster during The Killers headline slot at Glastonbury Festival 2007, on Later... with Jools Holland for "Read My Mind" and in the videos for "For Reasons Unknown" and "Human".
Scott McMicken of Dr. Dog employs the Starcaster as one of his main guitars, along with an Epiphone Sheraton II and a Gibson ES-335. Trey Anastasio of Phish plays a custom Languedoc guitar that was originally designed after the vintage Fender Starcaster. Arctic Monkeys guitarist Jamie Cook can also be seen playing one at the 2009 Reading Festival, also in the video for the 2009 single 'Crying Lightning'. Chris Walla of Death Cab For Cutie has occasionally used a Starcaster live.
Construction
The Starcaster has a unique headstock design, with a painted bottom curve matching the color of the guitar body. No other production Fender guitar before or since had the same headstock, but some prototypes of the Fender Marauder, and also designed by Fields, had a similar headstock design. It was also unusual for a semi-hollow guitar in having an asymmetrical ("offset") body, a maple fretboard, a bolt-on neck, a novel control configuration consisting of a volume and tone control for each pickup as well as a master volume control, and Fender's traditional six-on-a-side tuning pegs.
I wouldn't mind havin one, and if I had one now I'd hang on to it...bet they will become collectable even if not primo.
taylornutt wrote:Starcasters are difficult to find and expensive. While a Coronado II might run $1200-$1500 range, Starcasters are often double that...
I played one at the last guitar show and it's heavier than you might think. It's definitely on my guitar bucket list.
paul_ wrote:If I ever get a singlecut LP kit the Gretsch Paul shall ride again...Past a certain point they became the only thing I ever built on Kisekae
Not sure exactly what you're referring to...a build yer own guitar kit?..."Gretsch Paul"?..."Kisekae"? Would you explain? And the reason I'm curious is the LP-lookin guitar with the f-holes looks just like my beloved guitar, a BluesHawk.
Hey, no need to build unless building is yer passion; check out the wonderful Gibson BluesHawk if you haven't become familiar with this model. I have two and love em. You can buy this Gibson, with P90s (and a dummy coil for the humbuck function), for what you'd invest in your build.