Hey folks- so this is not quite a gypsy guitar but it swings really hard, and the hand-carved walnut back and sides have a bright attack that is not unlike a Dupont MDC-50E I used to have. See the craigslist add for details and pics, PM me or respond to the CL listing with djangobooks in the email if interested.
Thanks!
http://westslope.craigslist.org/msg/3509895851.html
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If someone on the forum is interested i will ship it, well packaged and fully insured. It is my preference that it goes to a player instead of a collector/hoarder and that is why I have not put it on ebay yet.
A lot of people don't realize that Epiphone didn't always mean budget Gibson, they were in fact Gibson'e biggest competitor in the 30s and early 40s. They were hurt by economic conditions in the 40s and the death of Epaminondas Stathopoulo, company president and son of the founder. His brothers took over but neither was anywhere near the businessman or musician that Epi was. After a disastrous strike in 1951 and relocation to Philadelphia, the company went under and was eventually bought by Gibson. The Gibson people were actually interested in Epiphone's line of upright basses, only to discover that they had bought everything, including tools and dies for making guitars, a great many guitars in various states of completion, and the name. The first Gibson Epiphones were produced from these tools and dies. Eventually they began making low-cost Gibson style guitars under the Epiphone name.
"Epiphone - The House of Stathopoulo" by Jim Fisch and L. B. Fred is a wonderful history of the company, with hundreds of photographs, ads, and catalog pages.
"It's a great feeling to be dealing with material which is better than yourself, that you know you can never live up to."
-- Orson Welles
The other unfortunate thing they did was recycle some of the model names of the Epi professional models - Broadway, De Luxe, and Emperor. The original Emperor was a magnificent beast, an ornate 18 1/2 inch monster that was AFAIK the biggest archtop ever produced, other than the Strombergs, which reached 19". NOw it's the name of a Chinese built electric cutaway arch top. Real shame.
At least they didn't reuse Triumph, the workhouse of the Epi professional line and a counterpart to the much revered Gibson L-7.
The Emperor was (unfortunately) front and center in one of the all-time great guitar ads, The Emperor and the Maid."
"It's a great feeling to be dealing with material which is better than yourself, that you know you can never live up to."
-- Orson Welles
The '36 Broadway is a beaut for sure. And, here I live in Colorado -- if I had the bucks, I'd be all over it! Someone's gonna get a truly sweet guitar, fer sure! AE
The 53 Epi had a giant baseball bat neck that I hated. The 46 has a full, but comfortable neck. Tone on these guitars rivals anything Gibson or D'Angelico made.
I bet the new owner will be quite pleased. Old American archtops of a professional quality are the best guitars ever made.
@klaatu, I liked seeing the emperor and the maid advert. There is another great one i remember seeing (but cant seem to find it now) that had a similar motif but with a blonde girl, and the slogan was 'some gentlemen prefer blondes', of course promoting the natural (non-sunburst) finish. Pretty risque by pre-war standards. I guess jazz guitarists tend to respond to a certain type of aesthetic, I should start looking for a model i can use in my ebay listing!