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This guitar was purchased in the
USA from Thoroughbred in Florida (before they became Sam Ash) when Tony was on a trip there in 98. It's a Gibson Les
Paul that came from the custom shop before they used that for marketing only.
Interestingly it only weighs around 6 Lbs ( that's around 2.8 Kilo's to everyone else ) so
it is a very light guitar for a Les Paul - in fact it's the lightest Les Paul that we've
ever seen.
It is supposedly equivalent to a
56
Les Paul but with obvious enhancements such as the PAF pickups etc. The guitar
utilizes
aged parts and binding with an inked serial number. The cost to Tony was $US2600.00 and he
felt that this was a good price at the time. There is some lacquer cracking on this guitar
- this could conceivably be related to the overall weight/wood combination - who knows.
This guitar is featured on
"Mother Funker" from the Rainy Days Album - in fact Mother Funker was written on
this guitar by Tony in around 10 minutes! - checkout our Real Audio page for the sound of
this guitar. More recently this guitar featured on "Commoner" from the
"Guitar Lab" album.
The truth is - that
a 'friend' of mine wanted a play - he did - but dropped the guitar on the neck
and cracked the wood - causing a costly repair - which he would not pay for
(fancy that). This was in fact one of the best guitars I ever owned - that is,
until he screwed it.. Needless to say, he's no so
much a friend anymore (actually he's an a******e) so there I've said
it.... if you want one of those - take him - he's free! He tells me
these days he owns the guitar... best place for it - with the other
junk. I well remember his father visiting me to collect other kit
which I was holding until he paid for the repair. I gave the kit
back eventually and never got paid - period.
This instrument has been sold
- it was never the same after the neck job and I don't need a
kitchen table right now.
The moral of this story is -
don't let ANYONE touch your guitar, that is unless you don't care
about the guitar, or it can easily be replaced - but most of all
make sure the dude who drops it pays can pay in full - if not then
don't let them near your kit!
Here's the Picture ...

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