Sal
Senior Member
If you want to be a rebel, an outlaw, and play "alternative" music ... you play a Guild.
If you want to be a rebel, an outlaw, and play "alternative" music ... you play a Guild.
Or a "Trigger"
(Actually we've seen evidence he did play Guild w-a-a--ay back when)
:glee:
In this Rolling Stone interview about how Willie found Trigger he mentions the Guild at 1:44 "I'd been playing this Guild…"
Touche!
:glee:
Were you the guy who posted that originally?
Notorious outlaw Peter Tork played a Guild too.No, it wasn't me. Funny thing, I just saw this video the other day and I was wondering if it ever had been posted here. And I agree with you, Willie playing Trigger is just as outlaw as it gets!
Oh yeah, and a JS Bass, too:
I was wondering if you were going to see that. I actually originally called it a JetStar but then remembered your previous mention of that nomenclature (obviously incorrectly) so changed it to "JS".I see a nit. I am going to pick it. The pictured bass is a JetStar. Guild never called it a JS.
The post 1970 solid body double cutaway bass was usually cataloged as a JS bass. However Guild sometimes referred to it as JetStar.
So JS only refers to one body shape, available ~1970-77. JetStar refers to the Gumby shape from the mid-60's or, to the confusion of all, the JS
Oh, boy newly discovered uber-rare photo never seen here before:
I do believe that's an FS46ce.
Looks more like an FS20-CE to me! Fun color!
www.guitarsgalore.nl
Just sayin'. There might be room. At the top. For Guild. Soon. Uh . . . . Never mind . . . .Discussed at length here and a few other threads:
http://letstalkguild.com/ltg/showthread.php?195527-Gibson-bankruptcy&highlight=gibson+creditors
walrus
Karma.And after all these years here I am with 4 Guilds and nothing else. They're built well. They look great and they sound great.
Imagine......... back to Guild after 53 years!
How does that happen?