Members kayd_mon Posted August 28, 2013 Members Share Posted August 28, 2013 Echopark '59 Deluxe Courtesy of Chicago Music Exchange: Echopark is Gabriel Currie, a custom handmade guitar maker from Echo Park, Los Angeles, CA. Gabriel worked for and learned from legendary guitar inventors Leo Fender at G&L Guitar Company and Tak Hosono at Hosono Guitar Works before starting Echopark Guitars. The '59 is Echopark's homage to the definitive era in guitar making history. Combining the best elements of the '58 Special and the '59 Junior into a model that is nothing less than a tribute to two legendary American made instruments. One piece, lightweight slab Equatorial Mahogany body - thickness: 1 7/8" Equatorial Mahogany "long tenon" neck One piece korina neck (back), medium '59 "D" profile Rosewood Fingerboard Dimensions: nut 1 11/16" & heel: 2 1/4" First thickness @ .095 5th, .098 9th, .105 14th Black matte pickguard 6mm mop inlay dot position markers Hand-cut bone nut Bamboo side markers Dunlop "155" fret wire, Jescar medium jumbo fret wire 12" radius 3/32" head plate Tuners: vintage black button "tulip" tuners Bridge: TonePros AVT2, "aged nickel" vintage style wrap around aluminum with steel studs/bushings Pickups: Echopark '59 P-90 dogear in the bridge position, Echopark '63 mini humbucker in the neck position Electronics: Custom CTS 500k long shaft pots, PI0 tone cap, .022pf .033pf .047pf .05pf, switchcraft jack, three-position switchcraft , cloth "pull back" wire, nickel shielding Finish: Vintage Vanguard Burst Red Mahogany three tone burst on neck. Available colors include: red mahogany, 2 tone burst, T-bird green, Cadillac green, TV yellow, Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members gardo Posted August 28, 2013 Members Share Posted August 28, 2013 Sorry ,i never cared much for that body style Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members BydoEmpire Posted August 28, 2013 Members Share Posted August 28, 2013 I dig it, although I'm not a mini-humbucker fan. I'd rather have a P90 in the neck. No way I'd pay the asking price, but I'm sure it plays and sounds great - hot. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members Buttcrust Posted August 28, 2013 Members Share Posted August 28, 2013 Is it wrong to say I'd prefer to shop for 10, $350.00 guitars, before I purchased that ? I bet ya it's wicked pissa Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members Malcolm Ramone Posted August 28, 2013 Members Share Posted August 28, 2013 Is that a homage to the First act headstock also? -Adam Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members kayd_mon Posted August 28, 2013 Author Members Share Posted August 28, 2013 I like it. It's expensive and I'd probably never buy it, but I like it. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members PurpleTrails Posted August 29, 2013 Members Share Posted August 29, 2013 At a third of that price I might buy one, even if I think the tone knob is in a pretty awkward spot. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members slideroni Posted August 29, 2013 Members Share Posted August 29, 2013 Totally want. Nice thick neck. Now I just need to rob a bank. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members mistersully Posted August 29, 2013 Members Share Posted August 29, 2013 like it a lot Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members BeanoBoy Posted August 29, 2013 Members Share Posted August 29, 2013 Cool guitar. I had a Les Paul Goldtop with minis ( Deluxe?). Wish I still had it. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members Ancient Mariner Posted August 29, 2013 Members Share Posted August 29, 2013 Well that's a darn ugly guitar, and $3500 is rather a lot of cash, especially considering it's half reliced and half not. Might sound fabulous, but it's never going to sell on looks. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members tim gueguen Posted August 30, 2013 Members Share Posted August 30, 2013 Ancient Mariner wrote: Well that's a darn ugly guitar, and $3500 is rather a lot of cash, especially considering it's half reliced and half not. Might sound fabulous, but it's never going to sell on looks. Nothing relicced on that guitar. It has a sunburst finish on the neck. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members Visconti Posted November 11, 2013 Members Share Posted November 11, 2013 Here is Phil X playing an Echopark El Cabillo loaded with an Arcane P90 Phil X pickup. He's plugged into a Satellite Atom. The tone is pure rock and roll. Johnny Depp owns this guitar. Here's Johnny Depp with an Echopark Ghetto Bird. Here's an interview with guitar builder Gabe Currie owner of Echopark Guitars. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members liko Posted November 11, 2013 Members Share Posted November 11, 2013 Visconti wrote: Here's Johnny Depp with an Echopark Ghetto Bird. I keep forgetting that Depp is an insanely talented guitarist. Nice axe; kind of "back to basics" other than the shape, fits the classic rock genre well. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members kayd_mon Posted November 12, 2013 Author Members Share Posted November 12, 2013 I'm sure many people have used cheap guitars on record. Everything is rack/PC modeling and ProTools tricks anyway these days. On tour? Maybe cheap guitars are less reliable. But you don't need to drop $3k for a reliable guitar. I like thr Echoparks that I've seen. They're like Gibsons for people with deeper pockets. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members Visconti Posted November 12, 2013 Members Share Posted November 12, 2013 kayd mon, head over to Youtube and watch the Premier Guitar Rig Rundown videos.One of the videos is about Joe Don Rooney rig from Rascal Flats. On the road he takes 3 Bogner Ecstasy amps. Those amps cost $13,000 just for the amps. Then you'll see his guitars.I have a cheap Carvin Bolt I leave out all the time and I like the way it sounds unplugged, but once it's plugged into an amp it sounds thin like a $350 dollar guitar and I would never use it on a recording. So what's so special about Echopark guitars? They're built like 17th century Antonio Stradivari Stradivarius violin that's currently worth more than a million dollars. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members kayd_mon Posted November 12, 2013 Author Members Share Posted November 12, 2013 I've watched many rig rundown videos. Just because successful musicians often have expensive gear doesn't mean it's required. Lots of people use relatively modest gear. Many people don't use $13k guitar amps, for example. Also, if you can't intonate your Epi LP, you're not doing it right.The Echoparks are nice-looking Gibson clones that have attention to detail and probably sound nice. We should probably just leave it at that. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members Visconti Posted November 12, 2013 Members Share Posted November 12, 2013 kayd_mon wrote: I've watched many rig rundown videos. Just because successful musicians often have expensive gear doesn't mean it's required. Lots of people use relatively modest gear. Many people don't use $13k guitar amps, for example. Also, if you can't intonate your Epi LP, you're not doing it right. The Echoparks are nice-looking Gibson clones that have attention to detail and probably sound nice. We should probably just leave it at that. How much attention to placement of frets, level of frets and fret dressing do you think is paid to an Epi compared to an Echopark?It's in the details for why a guitar cost what it does. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members kayd_mon Posted November 12, 2013 Author Members Share Posted November 12, 2013 I'm not trying to rag on your company here, I'm just saying that it's not absolutely necessary to have uber expensive gear. Also, whether or not the frets are better on an Echopark or an Epi, it's just false that Epis (and many other modestly-priced guitars) can't have spot-on intonation. They can. Maybe not always from the factory, but setting intonation isn't like splitting atoms. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members Visconti Posted November 12, 2013 Members Share Posted November 12, 2013 kayd_mon wrote: I'm not trying to rag on your company here, I'm just saying that it's not absolutely necessary to have uber expensive gear. Also, whether or not the frets are better on an Echopark or an Epi, it's just false that Epis (and many other modestly-priced guitars) can't have spot-on intonation. They can. Maybe not always from the factory, but setting intonation isn't like splitting atoms. My company? lolI like a few Epiphones. The guitars like the John Lennon because It's made in the Gibson custom shop. I know how to intonate guitars. Damn I've been playing for decades. Any guitars made in China are the inexpensive guitars and they outsell the American guitars because they don't cost alot. The problem is they build them as fast as possible and there's not a lot of quality control. Therefore it is hard to get them to intonate good enough for a recording session. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members kayd_mon Posted November 12, 2013 Author Members Share Posted November 12, 2013 Sorry, I figured it was your company since you're so hardcore about them, what with digging up this thread and all. Again, if you can't intonate your average Epiphone, you're not doing it right. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members Visconti Posted November 12, 2013 Members Share Posted November 12, 2013 kayd_mon wrote: Sorry, I figured it was your company since you're so hardcore about them, what with digging up this thread and all. Again, if you can't intonate your average Epiphone, you're not doing it right. Any company that spends time on frets is going to build guitars that intonate properly. Echopark, Kauer and Thorn come to mind. Fender and Gibson too. Epi is in the same class as Washburn and Samick. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members gardo Posted November 12, 2013 Members Share Posted November 12, 2013 kayd\_mon wrote: Echopark '59 Deluxe Courtesy of Chicago Music Exchange: Echopark is Gabriel Currie, a custom handmade guitar maker from Echo Park, Los Angeles, CA. Gabriel worked for and learned from legendary guitar inventors Leo Fender at G&L Guitar Company and Tak Hosono at Hosono Guitar Works before starting Echopark Guitars. The '59 is Echopark's homage to the definitive era in guitar making history. Combining the best elements of the '58 Special and the '59 Junior into a model that is nothing less than a tribute to two legendary American made instruments. One piece, lightweight slab Equatorial Mahogany body - thickness: 1 7/8" Equatorial Mahogany "long tenon" neck One piece korina neck (back), medium '59 "D" profile Rosewood Fingerboard Dimensions: nut 1 11/16" & heel: 2 1/4" First thickness @ .095 5th, .098 9th, .105 14th Black matte pickguard 6mm mop inlay dot position markers Hand-cut bone nut Bamboo side markers Dunlop "155" fret wire, Jescar medium jumbo fret wire 12" radius 3/32" head plate Tuners: vintage black button "tulip" tuners Bridge: TonePros AVT2, "aged nickel" vintage style wrap around aluminum with steel studs/bushings Pickups: Echopark '59 P-90 dogear in the bridge position, Echopark '63 mini humbucker in the neck position Electronics: Custom CTS 500k long shaft pots, PI0 tone cap, .022pf .033pf .047pf .05pf, switchcraft jack, three-position switchcraft , cloth "pull back" wire, nickel shielding Finish: Vintage Vanguard Burst Red Mahogany three tone burst on neck. Available colors include: red mahogany, 2 tone burst, T-bird green, Cadillac green, TV yellow, Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members Visconti Posted November 13, 2013 Members Share Posted November 13, 2013 gardo wrote: kayd\_mon wrote: Echopark '59 Deluxe Courtesy of Chicago Music Exchange: Echopark is Gabriel Currie, a custom handmade guitar maker from Echo Park, Los Angeles, CA. Gabriel worked for and learned from legendary guitar inventors Leo Fender at G&L Guitar Company and Tak Hosono at Hosono Guitar Works before starting Echopark Guitars. The '59 is Echopark's homage to the definitive era in guitar making history. Combining the best elements of the '58 Special and the '59 Junior into a model that is nothing less than a tribute to two legendary American made instruments. One piece, lightweight slab Equatorial Mahogany body - thickness: 1 7/8" Equatorial Mahogany "long tenon" neck One piece korina neck (back), medium '59 "D" profile Rosewood Fingerboard Dimensions: nut 1 11/16" & heel: 2 1/4" First thickness @ .095 5th, .098 9th, .105 14th Black matte pickguard 6mm mop inlay dot position markers Hand-cut bone nut Bamboo side markers Dunlop "155" fret wire, Jescar medium jumbo fret wire 12" radius 3/32" head plate Tuners: vintage black button "tulip" tuners Bridge: TonePros AVT2, "aged nickel" vintage style wrap around aluminum with steel studs/bushings Pickups: Echopark '59 P-90 dogear in the bridge position, Echopark '63 mini humbucker in the neck position Electronics: Custom CTS 500k long shaft pots, PI0 tone cap, .022pf .033pf .047pf .05pf, switchcraft jack, three-position switchcraft , cloth "pull back" wire, nickel shielding Finish: Vintage Vanguard Burst Red Mahogany three tone burst on neck. Available colors include: red mahogany, 2 tone burst, T-bird green, Cadillac green, TV yellow, Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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