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Riding Bare Back? Do my eyes deceive me?


TommyK

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No saddle. Wonder if maybe it was a free-standing saddle' date=' and it's just missing? Good find!

 

[img']http://www.epiphone.com/thevintagecollection/images/1930Recording1.jpg[/img]

 

 

Not particularly hard to find. Go to Epiphone's main page, click on the thumbnail in the lower right entitled "The Vintage Collection."

 

It's the "Recording 4" guitar.

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Dunno' date=' but I would bet it was a marketing term. Even back then.

I mean if it was good enough for the pros to use for recordings, then it's gotta be good right?

 

 

[/quote']

 

most likely, LSG. i'll bet KSD or JK would know for sure of the term's origin.

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At first blush I'm thinking 'Recording' would be equivalent to 'Artist'. i.e. all the tone without the bling. But... this 'Recording 4' seems to be blingy.

 

Remember too that, I think it was Gibson, that sold a banjo called "The Electric Banjo". Nope, no pick-ups, no wires, no electrics just a banjer with, at the time as Edison was electrifying the world, a hot sounding name.

 

I've even seen where, in Japan, a brand of rice was sold with the English word "Radioactive" :-& emblazoned across the front. Probably just because it looked cool and more 'Western'. =D>

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I didn't mean freestanding as in an archtop bridge would be. I meant a piece of freestanding bone that sat on the bridge itself' date=' just in front of the drop off.

 

Kind of like this one.

 

[img']http://www.epiphone.com/thevintagecollection/images/1930Model4Archtop3.jpg[/img]

1930Recording1.jpg

Ah... So.... I didn't see the rabbet. The FS saddle is just missing on that example. Probably gave one the opportunity to adjust intonation abit too. Quite ingenius that Stathopoulo familiy.

 

I learned something today.

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Remember too that' date=' I think it was Gibson, that sold a banjo called "The Electric Banjo". Nope, no pick-ups, no wires, no electrics just a banjer with, at the time as Edison was electrifying the world, a hot sounding name.

 

I've even seen where, in Japan, a brand of rice was sold with the English word "Radioactive" :-k emblazoned across the front. Probably just because it looked cool and more 'Western'. #-o [/quote']

 

A.C. Fairbanks -- which later was purchased by Vega -- offered the 'Fairbanks Electric,' a lighter-built precursor to the 'Fairbanks Whyte Laydie.' For some historic background, see http://www.mugwumps.com/acf_date.htm .

 

Also, I remember in the Fifties (1950s, that is! <smile>), when everything was 'Atomic this' and 'Atomic that.'

 

Dave in SLC

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