I haven't done a video of any sort in forever, so...
[youtube][/youtube]
Found it and got it for my bandmate five years ago, she's pretty much in love with this guitar, almost never wants to play anything else. Never seen another one like this.
Daisy Rock Retro-H Emerald Sparkle
Moderated By: mods
- honeyiscool
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- Posts: 2072
- Joined: Tue Feb 01, 2011 11:36 pm
- Location: San Diego, California
Daisy Rock Retro-H Emerald Sparkle
Kicking and squealing Gucci little piggy.
- honeyiscool
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- Posts: 2072
- Joined: Tue Feb 01, 2011 11:36 pm
- Location: San Diego, California
I like that one, too, the Retro-H Deluxe. It comes with a roller bridge and fantastic pair of mini hums which sound so nice. I had one for a while for a couple of years. You should set up an alert for those. I used to find them for quite cheap on Reverb and eBay. I got my red one for $200 with a nice soft case, too.Doog wrote:Dang, love that axxxxxxxe
I've been keeping a sly-eye out for one of these for years:
[image]
I hate the Bigsby tailpiece for maintenance reasons (though I love their sound) so I prefer the Bangles signature which has a full tailpiece instead. There's also the regular Retro-H with the female symbol on the 12th fret which is cool, but it seems a little empty cosmetically, so I prefer the Bangles signature of the various Retro-H shaped mini hum guitars.
If you want to know what the Retro-H Deluxe can sound like in a band setting, I recorded a couple of songs with it on my band's album. Both these tracks use the Retro-H for the lead (normally I use my MG73). I know a band mix is kind of the worst way to hear a guitar, but I think it still has some of the sweet stock character, plus it has the unmistakable Bigsby sound in a couple places.
But back to my bandmate's guitar, what I've never seen in any other Daisy Rock is the combination of Tune-O-Matic, Retro-H semi-hollow body (adaptation of the Stardust Elite body), full-sized humbuckers, and that sweet, sweet, emerald sparkle finish. I absolutely love that one. When I found that guitar for her five years back, I knew it was perfect. Never seen any like it since.
I think that was the moment I realized that guitar line sounded like a cat.Nick wrote:Haha through the links under that video I just rediscovered your Hey tutorial, the part where you have a duet with your cat at 11 minutes took me out of the existential crisis I was having tonight and made me laugh.

Thanks!speedfish wrote:Great Video! Really enjoy listening to you play.
Kicking and squealing Gucci little piggy.
Great, thanks!honeyiscool wrote:I like that one, too, the Retro-H Deluxe. It comes with a roller bridge and fantastic pair of mini hums which sound so nice. I had one for a while for a couple of years. You should set up an alert for those. I used to find them for quite cheap on Reverb and eBay. I got my red one for $200 with a nice soft case, too.Doog wrote:Dang, love that axxxxxxxe
I've been keeping a sly-eye out for one of these for years:
[image]
I hate the Bigsby tailpiece for maintenance reasons (though I love their sound) so I prefer the Bangles signature which has a full tailpiece instead. There's also the regular Retro-H with the female symbol on the 12th fret which is cool, but it seems a little empty cosmetically, so I prefer the Bangles signature of the various Retro-H shaped mini hum guitars.
If you want to know what the Retro-H Deluxe can sound like in a band setting, I recorded a couple of songs with it on my band's album. Both these tracks use the Retro-H for the lead (normally I use my MG73). I know a band mix is kind of the worst way to hear a guitar, but I think it still has some of the sweet stock character, plus it has the unmistakable Bigsby sound in a couple places.
Alas, they're pretty rare over here in the UK, it'd seem; I've had an alert on eBay for years :/