And here's a photo of an American soldier in Vietnam with what looks like a cheap Vietnamese guitar. It looks like someone at the Harmony factory dropped acid and decided to combine a Patenotte and a Strat.
Hadn't tought about that! It makes perfect sense...
Micky DunneLiverpool UK✭✭✭✭Olivier Marin, JWC Modele Orchestre, AJL La Flasque
Posts: 156
I was in Vietnam 2 years ago and had the chance to go to a village on the Mekong Delta (tourist day trip) there was a local Vietnamese folk duo playing and the guitar had a scalloped neck :shock:
It's a Selmer-style guitar by Colorado luthier John Rumley. I dig the single-coil pickup idea, the headstock, and the wood he used for the back.
Also - - - make sure you scroll down to see some other examples of his work. He has a beautiful archtop electric with some bizarre wood (reclaimed from a 100-year-old barn) and tooled leather sides (like an old Gretsch Round-up). I look forward to seeing future examples of Mr. Rumley's work.
Comments
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http://www.specimenproducts.com/instru/maccaferri.html
http://www.gypsyguitars.com/makers.php? ... tatus_id=3
1991 Gerome
http://www.gypsyguitars.com/makers.php?id=9&status_id=3
Here's a link to a nice-looking tenor petit bouche made by a luthier in Maine:
http://www.earnestinstruments.com/selma.html
And here's a photo of an American soldier in Vietnam with what looks like a cheap Vietnamese guitar. It looks like someone at the Harmony factory dropped acid and decided to combine a Patenotte and a Strat.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5cI85iPt ... ch=brozman
It seems the chap was in high request by war cinematographers!
www.manouchetones.com
http://tinyurl.com/puhly
It's a Selmer-style guitar by Colorado luthier John Rumley. I dig the single-coil pickup idea, the headstock, and the wood he used for the back.
Also - - - make sure you scroll down to see some other examples of his work. He has a beautiful archtop electric with some bizarre wood (reclaimed from a 100-year-old barn) and tooled leather sides (like an old Gretsch Round-up). I look forward to seeing future examples of Mr. Rumley's work.