11/14/2011
Gibson Custom ES-335 Dot Electric Guitar, Faded Cherry Satin, Plain Maple Review
Average Reviews:
(More customer reviews)I wasn't even shopping for one when I got it. I was looking for headphones. Honest. It called to me, though. I can still hear it. "Take me home," it pleaded. I just couldn't say no and thus acquired my first Gibson six string. Learned to play on a lovely SG style Melody Maker a long time ago and had an EB2D bass for a long time but never a six string.
What a beauty! Gorgeous finish, great looking headstock and hefty without being uncomfortable. After playing Fenders and Ovations for years I had to re-do all the patches on my multi-effects stomp box because the 335 is just too powerful compared to those guitars. Those Classic Humbuckers will take your face off if you're not careful! The neck was comfortable right from the get-go and has remained so. The tuners are precise and easy to use and the one neck adjustment I've had to perform couldn't have been easier. I can never find local replacements for the Brite Wires that came with it (nice strings!) but D'Addario EXL110s sound great on it so that's what I use. The guitar's sound is clear and unique with all sorts of tone options available for any song. It's so much fun to play I don't even bother using an amp when noodling around between gigs - another trick that's hard to accomplish on a solid body Fender. The satin finish glosses up over time and looks great. Heck, even the case is gorgeous.
The only gripes I can think of are that it could have used a bit more thorough checking prior to shipping - the B string was binding at the nut when I bought it, necessitating a trip to the local luthier/tech and the saddles don't appear to have been notched for the strings the way I'm told is normal. I also wish they'd use the same size screws for the strap pins as it's a bit of a pain to retro-fit my preferred strap locks on them with the two different holes. (My EB2D had the same oddball screw arrangement.) Rather than fussing with it, I just use "over-the-strap" twist-on Dunlop locks.
This guitar is similar to the ones I grew up seeing and hearing people like Clapton, Johnny Rivers and Justin Hayward play. Never really planned on getting one and now that I have it I'm scared to take it to some of the places I play but that's OK. Everyone needs to treat themselves to a really nice axe every now and then and this one's mine. :-)
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History speaks for itself. The ES-335 is one of the most important guitars of all time. Right from its introduction in 1958 as the world's first semi-hollowbody electric guitar it has been a mainstay of players eager to balance the gorgeous, round, mellow tones perfect for jazz and blues with the edge and sustain of a full-blooded solidbody.
Countless music legends have immortalized Gibson's ES-335.
Today the Gibson Custom Shop creates exacting duplicates of the ES-335 as it first left the Kalamazoo plant in 1958. That year just 267 were built, but the original vintage 335s grew steadily in popularity, peaking in 1967 thanks largely to Eric Clapton's high-profile use of a cherry ES-335 in the band Cream.
Body and Finishes The Custom Shop ES-335 is available with many finish options, reflecting the color choices that have evolved over the model's 50-year history. In Satin finish, trans black and cherry colors are available, with a plain maple top, back, and rims. Ebony is available only in plain maple. With the figured maple top, back, and rims option, cherry, tri-burst, antique natural, light burst, and vintage sunburst colors are available. Wine red, trans brown, Beale Street Blue, and cinnamon burst finishes are also available in limited quantities, along with gold hardware, for figured and for plain maple models.
Regardless of color, the ES-335 retains its classic proportions: 16 1/2-inches wide, 20-inches long, and 1 3/4-inches deep. The neck is one-piece mahogany beneath a 22-fret rosewood fingerboard with pearloid inlays and a single-ply binding. Additionally, there's single-ply binding on the top and back.
Hardware All hardware is nickel, and there's a classic ABR-1 bridge with a lightweight aluminum stopbar tailpiece. Neck length is 24 3/4 inches with a 1 11/16-inch nut width. Satin finish models have vintage style tulip shaped tuners, while figured and plain tops come with Grover kidney-shaped tuners. All Custom Shop ES-335s have powerful '57 Classic humbucking pickups, two volume pots, two tone pots, and a three-way pickup selector switch. They are strung with Gibson Brite Wire .010 strings and come safely nestled in a black levant case.
Famous Players Spanning numerous decades, the ES-335 has been in the hands of countless musicians. From Chuck Berry's numerous performances to Alvin Lee's incendiary performance at Woodstock to Police's 2008 tour in NYC, the ES-335 has been the instrument of choice for any players seeking gorgeous, round, mellow tones, tempered with the edge and sustain of a full-blooded solidbody electric like the Les Paul.
Nitrocellulose Finish Applying a nitrocellulose finish to any Gibson guitar is one of the most labor-intensive elements of the guitar-making process. A properly applied nitro finish requires extensive man hours, several evenly applied coats, and an exorbitant amount of drying time. But this fact has never swayed Gibson into changing this time-tested method, employed ever since the first Gibson guitar was swathed with lacquer back in 1894. Why? For starters, a nitro finish dries to a much thinner coat than a polyurethane finish, which means there is less interference with the natural vibration of the instrument, allowing for a purer tone. A nitro finish is also a softer finish, which makes it easily repairable. You can touch up a scratch or ding on a nitro finish, but you can't do the same on a poly finish. In addition, a nitro finish is very porous in nature, and actually gets thinner over time. It does not "seal" wood in an airtight shell--as a poly finish does--and allows the wood to breathe and age properly.
All VOS (Vintage Original Spec) series guitars will use a proprietary process that includes unique steps for staining, wet-sanding, and hand-rubbing; subsequently the guitars reflect what a well-cared for 40-year-old guitar looks like. The result is a remarkable patina that will delight even the most discriminating enthusiast.
Labels:
ebony,
electric guitar,
epiphone,
faded,
gibson,
gibson sg,
guitar,
semi-hollow body,
sg,
solid body
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