Fender's first electric guitar

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Paul Davids

Paul Davids

6 ай бұрын

I played one of the first solid body electric guitars Fender ever made, a totally mind blowing experience!
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Hi, my name is Paul Davids! I am a guitar player, teacher, producer, and overall music enthusiast from the Netherlands! I try to inspire people from all over the world with my videos, here on KZfaq.
If you want to know more about me, check out PaulDavidsGuitar.com or check out my guitar courses at: learnpracticeplay.com and nextlevelplaying.com, and acousticadventure.com
Thank you for watching!
Paul
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Пікірлер: 574
@halohat2286
@halohat2286 6 ай бұрын
To me, they aren't vintage. They are survivors. Like old cars, motorcycles and people. To survive for so long, what a gift to us all.
@longjonwhite
@longjonwhite 6 ай бұрын
You’re welcome… Jon, 72
@TheBcoolGuy
@TheBcoolGuy 6 ай бұрын
Haha yes! Old guy! :D Hello! I am a young guy! I'm 23. :)) Hope you're having a good time. It's been snowing here, but it keeps melting. @@longjonwhite
@bloatedtreeful
@bloatedtreeful 6 ай бұрын
So true. There are plenty of old guitars out there these days and more become vintage every day, so in a way there are becoming fewer rare guitars every day. But old dogs like the ‘50 Broadcaster are like the rare men who have fought in both world wars.
@longjonwhite
@longjonwhite 6 ай бұрын
@@TheBcoolGuy I'm doing fine thanks young 'un. I'd be doing a damn sight better if my old Dad had the foresight to buy me one of those new-fangled Fender Broadcasters as a Christening present in 1951. or even a Martin D28 woulda worked!
@coolboy-qc4eb
@coolboy-qc4eb 6 ай бұрын
just like cars, old guitars are just a showpiece.. ngl the 59 les paul sounds heavenly but this can be achieved easily with any gear for way less..
@xlankex
@xlankex Ай бұрын
I recently got a chance to play a '51 Nocaster at a GREAT little guitar shop in the Seattle area. I knew they had it based on their online inventory and I wasn't even planning on playing it. It just wanted to see it in person. The guy was awesome, all I said was that I wanted to see it and he pulls it off the wall, hands it to me and says, "do you want to play it". I was blown away. I said, "You know I can't buy it right?" he says, "Well if people don't play them and enjoy them then they just hang on the wall and go out of tune". That was bucket list guitar for me. I'm not an amazing player by any stretch but it was so much fun and I had a massive smile on my face the whole. It was all original and so much fun. Amazing shop, really cool staff. What blew me away about playing it though was that it really didn't feel any different than my telecasters at home. People talk about the thick necks on the old Tele's and based on my experience, I don't understand where that comes from at all. It felt completely natural and seriously, it felt just like playing my guitars at home. I'll never forget that experience. So much fun.
@moose1164
@moose1164 6 ай бұрын
My father in law has a 50 Broadcaster. His father originally bought it brand new, then when he became a teenager he handed it down to him, played it throughout his teens then pretty much put it in the case and has sat in the closet for countless years. It has a sound and feel that I cannot describe. It amazes me every time I get to pick it up and play it. We end up having to do tons of research to pinpoint the year. I told him it belongs in a museum somewhere.
@Goofy_The_Scot
@Goofy_The_Scot 6 ай бұрын
Museum....... nah, it deserves to be played!
@mke7605
@mke7605 6 ай бұрын
Yup, it deserves to be played.
@joemorris4424
@joemorris4424 6 ай бұрын
Agreed, keep it in the family and make sure everyone knows how meaningful it is to be passed down through generations!
@bloxa
@bloxa 6 ай бұрын
If you can afford, keep it in family, but 200k can create a lot of opportunity for younger generation.
@moose1164
@moose1164 6 ай бұрын
Naw I agree trust me. Guitars were meant to be played not looked at but the vast majority of musicians will never get to see one in person let alone play it. I would not have. It’s genuinely a piece of history and should be admired by lots of people.
@markbrooks4471
@markbrooks4471 5 ай бұрын
It always strikes me as amazing that Fender got it so right from the get go. The Precision bass went through some evelutionary changes but the Telecaster and Stratocaster are essentially the same today as those early Fifties models.
@gejskelly
@gejskelly 6 ай бұрын
Big shout out to GuitarPoint for being relaxed about letting people actually play vintage instruments and not gatekeeping them. I visited last year and they were really welcoming and relaxed, which definitely isn’t easy when you’ve got bursts, blackguards etc. on display. Really great guys 👌🏼
@wolfgang4078
@wolfgang4078 5 ай бұрын
Guitarpoint together with Thomann?
@edhusz7555
@edhusz7555 3 ай бұрын
Basically almost every shop for modern musical instruments in Germany is like that. As a german citizen I don't know why that is, but I really like it this way. Maybe because music culture is a kind of "counter culture" to the mainstream german temperament/mentality? Just an idea... :)
@darkiee69
@darkiee69 6 ай бұрын
Love the 59 LP, that's how a road worn guitar looks, not like it's been dragged behind the tour bus the whole tour. A few dings, belt, and button, wear on the back, arm wear on the upper lower, a little wear around the edges. But that's it. For those who want to relic their guitar, have a good look at this one.
@jmeakin4
@jmeakin4 6 ай бұрын
While you're an excellent player and educator with a charismatic personality, Paul; another key to your KZfaq success is whoever is holding the camera and editing the footage. The cinematography and production of these videos truly are professional level quality.
@davidsnyder3799
@davidsnyder3799 6 ай бұрын
@@Ghost1126 Envious much?
@ThatBaritoneGuitarGuy
@ThatBaritoneGuitarGuy 6 ай бұрын
Fender proves time and time and time again how simplicity and minimalism are always the best design.
@flybynight1929
@flybynight1929 6 ай бұрын
So just keep recreating them over and over, give them an 'artist model' or reissue name, and keep raising the prices for the same wood and wire.
@matteopaolucci6801
@matteopaolucci6801 6 ай бұрын
He did it for construction and price reason, so the neck and the wood work wouldn't have to be so precise and applied automation to the production line. Neckthrough construction is much more refined and obviously gives loads more sustain
@zingleraster9124
@zingleraster9124 6 ай бұрын
@@flybynight1929as opposed to Gibson…… I have a ‘50’s Original Tele. A beautiful guitar & what I consider value for what you pay for without going down the custom shop rabbit hole
@joeltunnah
@joeltunnah 6 ай бұрын
Well I wouldn't really call a Strat, Jazzmaster, or Jaguar, "minimalist" designs.
@bunsenn5064
@bunsenn5064 6 ай бұрын
@@joeltunnahThe Strat came 4 years after the Tele. The Jazzmaster and Jaguar were even later, and were intended to be an upper-end model line.
@SamBrockmann
@SamBrockmann 6 ай бұрын
Without this guitar, we wouldn't have what we so take for granted today.
@charlie-obrien
@charlie-obrien 6 ай бұрын
Every electric guitar that's worth a damn was born of the Broadcaster. Leo worked out all the bugs that others had run into for 20 years. What was the answer? I'm not sure, but I pretty sure using two magnetic pick ups had something to do with it.
@ZigZagZimolag
@ZigZagZimolag 6 ай бұрын
Great video Paul! That '59 Les Paul sounds incredible, incredible tone - even on video it sounds so open compared to the CC
@gkott78
@gkott78 6 ай бұрын
When I purchased my first custom shop guitar, I knew it had to be something historically significant. I wound uo with the 70th Anniversary CS Broadcaster in a very tasteful Journeyman relic. I have probably played that guitar every day since it arrived and it is by far my favorite i ever have put my hands on. I can only dream of an original.
@kamalmusallam
@kamalmusallam 5 ай бұрын
Wow that guitar sounds so soulful...very acoustic side to it’s vibes! Lovely!
@Rudi__bf
@Rudi__bf 6 ай бұрын
We need more Vintage guitar Videos❤
@stratmagic6893
@stratmagic6893 6 ай бұрын
My friend has 59 burst and i have an R9 with a Brazilian rosewood fretboard. I played them side by side and although the 59 had that little bit extra Paul was mentioning my R9 did play better in the hand. I have been fortunate in my life to have had my hands on about 30 bursts. They are truly something special.
@xA-A-RONx
@xA-A-RONx 6 ай бұрын
Love when you upload. Your voice is so soothing. Great video!
@scottkidwell3601
@scottkidwell3601 6 ай бұрын
A good friend of mine is a luthier, and trained under his boss. His boss has a '52 Telecaster bought new. It has seen some things, and has been played all over the Pacific Northwest. It's an amazing instrument, and being able to hold and play a piece of history was an honor. Thank you for sharing your adventures, Paul. Both the Tele and the Les Paul sounded great under your hands. As always, great video production. 🙏🏻🤍
@therealdoug1000
@therealdoug1000 6 ай бұрын
Great video as always Paul. Gorgeous guitars!
@IanTheAlternative
@IanTheAlternative 6 ай бұрын
Paul, you’re the best guitar content creator on this platform!!🔥🔥🎸🎸
@ron.meier_guitarist5363
@ron.meier_guitarist5363 6 ай бұрын
Hell yeah, he is:))
@curtvona4891
@curtvona4891 6 ай бұрын
Him and Rick B.
@robstanton9215
@robstanton9215 6 ай бұрын
I love the fact that not much has changed in 70 years on the “Tele/Broadie”. I have an American Standard Tele, a Les Paul Classic, and a Les Paul Custom. Aside from a few cosmetic differences, they are very much as they were from the early days. Thank you for your videos!
@ZappaIrl
@ZappaIrl 6 ай бұрын
Just something about the look, feel, and sound of a Fender Tele or Strat that makes it the ultimate in guitar for me.
@nimblybimbly4002
@nimblybimbly4002 Ай бұрын
5:50 It's such a breath of fresh air to hear piano in a video like this. A lot of guitar player/creators could learn from that trick!
@picksalot1
@picksalot1 6 ай бұрын
The thing I was most impressed with was the guitar store. What a beautiful place to try out guitars! Thanks
@thesillygooseisloose
@thesillygooseisloose 4 ай бұрын
The natural relic on it is just beautiful.
@christopherweise438
@christopherweise438 6 ай бұрын
That '59 burst did sound incredible. More warm and creamy than the modern version.
@SuicideVan
@SuicideVan 6 ай бұрын
I think what you are hearing is just old faded pickups that aren't as hot as modern new ones.
@christopherweise438
@christopherweise438 6 ай бұрын
@@SuicideVan - Original PAF's were low output by design. That's how they are SUPPOSED to sound.
@foljs5858
@foljs5858 4 ай бұрын
@@SuicideVan that's just as good then!
@SuicideVan
@SuicideVan 4 ай бұрын
@@foljs5858 of course, there's no hard set rules and there was a huge variance in pickup output back then. Nobody was counting winds, and occasionally a guy/gal was anxious to get out to their smoke break or something.
@brianbastiaans4231
@brianbastiaans4231 6 ай бұрын
Hoi Paul, this is as close as finding a real timemachine… to feel and go back in time to what music really was al about. Guitars are here to be played and inspire those who plays them. Groetjes Brian Keep doing what you do!
@scottcurry4116
@scottcurry4116 6 ай бұрын
Thanks for sharing Paul!
@MichaelMcCormick77
@MichaelMcCormick77 6 ай бұрын
All of your videos are amazing Paul! Do you have any tips for growing a guitar channel?
@georgem5589
@georgem5589 6 ай бұрын
Great video, the production quality does justice to those great guitars. Paul's playing is haunting and ethereal, like the video and the guitars. A great tribute.
@l6srob990
@l6srob990 6 ай бұрын
Great video as always and nice sounding guitars
@millichips1
@millichips1 6 ай бұрын
sooooooooo loving this video. The tele, you just have to pay homage to "got it right first time design" that's so rare these days. The early Les Paul wow I would really like to hear that through a cranked amp. The difference to the new / expensive Les Paul was really surprising. I've been lucky to play a few old vintage/expensive guitars and felt they were difficult to play and not really inspiring. BUT... one 60's Strat I played which had one owner from new and has been played regularly, was easily the best sounding and (to me more importantly) felt like a dream to play. I feel so lucky that I still feel passionate about electric guitars after 50 years of playing. Thanks for posting this video Paul :0)
@jcsk8
@jcsk8 6 ай бұрын
GREAT burst! Thank you for make falling in love with vintage bursts for the fifty time this week.
@snickpickle
@snickpickle 4 ай бұрын
I have a couple of rules that I employ whenever I try out ANY guitar that isn’t mine: 1) I won’t use a pick unless it’s a used guitar; and 2) I will under no circumstances allow a belt buckle or any kind of metal buttons or snaps touch a guitar. (I don’t even like having vinyl or plastic snaps/buttons touch the guitar either.) Whenever I let people try my guitars, I require them to take off their jackets , or in the case of shirt buttons, I’ll probably let the vinyl/plastic ones go, but if metal, they have to put a piece of fabric between them and the guitar. I learned this the hard way from buying a very used Mosrite that clearly was from the late60s/1970s (part of the “big belt-buckle” era) - granted, I got the guitar cheaper, thanks to the damage that wore all the way through to the wood! And one time, my then-7-year-old son asked if he could “play” my Les Paul. I don’t own “investment” guitars, and I wanted to encourage him to play anyway, so I said that was fine. He kept the guitar flat on the table and dragged the pick across the strings - and the body - so in 20 seconds, he managed to scratch the heck out of the non-pickguard side of my 1990s LP! (Thankfully not a vintage year, anyway…) But in the end, I just have too much respect for other people’s axes to do something so stupid and easily avoidable as to put a nick or scratch into a beautiful instrument! I was so surprised to see the owner allow Paul to wear his jean jacket with the metal buttons!
@IamMusicNerd
@IamMusicNerd 4 ай бұрын
As many have pointed out, there were many electric guitars before the Broadcaster, but most were hollow or semi-hollow and expensive. Gibson and Gretsch and Epiphone all had electric guitars that pre-date the Broadcaster, but they were not really rock guitars and were expensive. The Broadcaster was the first main stream solid body electric guitar, that was cost effective for it to be the first one to become mainstream. And it was there when rock took off in the early 50’s.
@Tjk186
@Tjk186 6 ай бұрын
A very special and emotional moment for you Paul…thanks for sharing, glad you enjoyed being a little scared playing these special tools of music that allowed your talents to shine 👌
@BobPerrone
@BobPerrone 6 ай бұрын
What a beautiful shop, and you are one very lucky man 😊!
@albertn9549
@albertn9549 6 ай бұрын
amazing video Paul! truly piece of history.
@matthewridgeway9250
@matthewridgeway9250 6 ай бұрын
There is nothing more satisfying than trying out and playing awesome guitars. That '59 Les Paul sounded so good, I could melt on the very first chord. And the Broadcaster was as good a guitar now like it is timeless. And the new Gibson. Fantastic. I am so glad for the guitars on my tool chest. Les Paul Superme, '61 SG re-issue, a splash of Gretsch solid, and hollow body guitars as well as acoustics. I don't have a genuine Strat, but I do have a great telecaster I love very much. I feel privilaged with what I have, including my fender acoustic, Maton EBG808 and Gretsch resonator. I also hace a Gretsch Dixi Six Guitjo thing. It is a bit dissapointing, though I did slot some rubber gromets between the strings from the tail piece to the bridge which did help, even so, it is a lot of fun regardless as one can poke fun at popular songs and turn any song folk or hill billy at a gathering. Having a collection of many guitar types is essential for one to have as limitless sonic opportunities as one can in their musical pursuits. Thank you for this video. It only cements the fact that my collection of instruments has almost reached its pinnacle. Jusy need a Djano Reinhardt Selmer, a Greg Smallman and Sons classical, and a Gibson SG Special with wrap around bridge and two P90s to complete my ultimate hoard of got to instruments.
@RC32Smiths01
@RC32Smiths01 6 ай бұрын
Love the Tele's appearance. Indeed, the scratches and worn out look give it an honest and genuine sense of authenticity. Definitely plays in such a classic 50s tone too. Vintage guitars must be preserved so much!
@doppelgangermusik420
@doppelgangermusik420 6 ай бұрын
Had the honour to play an original Broadcaster last year at a local vintage guitar shop. There is just something to the feel, that will stick in your head for weeks. It was nice having a peace of popculture history in your hand, that was made before pop music was even invented!
@eastbaystreet1242
@eastbaystreet1242 6 ай бұрын
Same here. Carters in Nashville. Marked under $100,000 because it had been re-fretted. It was so exciting just to spend a few minutes with it.
@richarde3378
@richarde3378 6 ай бұрын
My favorite guitar is my mint-condition, all original 1951 Ibanez Jem 777.
@chrisfournier6144
@chrisfournier6144 6 ай бұрын
Zero made so very rare but the tone is to die for!
@samuelhatman8995
@samuelhatman8995 6 ай бұрын
So! You played a guitar as old as me. I started with my birthday Uke at age 4. I'm not alone in a unique love of this episode. First it's your production, never last than the artistically curated content. But more Paul, I do not have to play well, like your skill. At night or in early day before work my moments with the guitar are open, willing, begging passion and then I can sleep or work. And there is one Gibson, built 60 years ago, gifted to me new my 9th birthday. I reserve it for emotions past those others may see. It knows me and plays easier and better, resonant, pliant in my old hands much better than new. I felt every note you played on each guitar. Thanks!
@chrishb7074
@chrishb7074 6 ай бұрын
Mark Knopfler’s 120 guitar collection is getting auctioned at Christies in London on January 24th. Could you ask them really nicely if you might go and make a video about those?
@robinbrown7890
@robinbrown7890 6 ай бұрын
That is like time travel......the sounds coming out of that Tele are the same as for the player who first assembled it 53 years ago (Leo or one of his team) and went..."hey, listen to what this thing I built can do". Gave me goosebumps.
@sirtogii5216
@sirtogii5216 6 ай бұрын
Beautiful. I guess what has changed is not the instruments themselves (very much) but the amplifiers and ways to change the sound and the way musicians play them.
@ac81017
@ac81017 6 ай бұрын
Still can't believe with all that the evolution of the Gibson les paul standard has if anything gone backwards. I heard that magical almost tele twang on the bridge pickup on the original 59. And that neck pickup, just pure magic. Great video.
@user-up9cv6os6z
@user-up9cv6os6z 6 ай бұрын
Great video. Thanks
@Acre00
@Acre00 5 ай бұрын
The Telecaster (or Broadcaster) is still around 70 years later not because guitars haven't advanced in that time, but because guitarists don't want them to advance. It is very interesting that despite being very creative people generally, musical artists tend to be very conservative when it comes to their instruments. There are many changes that are objective advancements and upgrades that could be applied to these designs, auch as sculpted heel joints and more durable fret wire, but so many guitarists didn't want them - they want the "real thing"
@ateliergallez7594
@ateliergallez7594 2 ай бұрын
very nice video ! You have touched music history....
@herm2000
@herm2000 5 ай бұрын
wonderfull, to hear the neck pickup of the broadcaster and the difference (Les Paul) between modern and first series ! Thank you.
@hariossa
@hariossa 6 ай бұрын
I guess part of the difference between the 59' Les Paul and the new one is that the old pickups are not potted
@low3603
@low3603 6 ай бұрын
That 59 is killer. By far and the best sounding guitar you played. The loudness and tone comes through clearly, even on KZfaq. WOW!!!
@bazzathegreat3517
@bazzathegreat3517 6 ай бұрын
I have always had strats. Then I decided I needed a tele just to have one. Found one at a good price and was instantly hooked. There is just something about the flat plank of wood with a giant neck bolted on that works. The neck pickup is sweet and smooth. Then the bridge is twangy clean and just overdriven perfection as you crank it up.
@paullanglois3768
@paullanglois3768 6 ай бұрын
What beautiful and historic instruments. Paul makes them sing. So amazing to think about how relatively young the electric guitar really is in human history. Thanks for sharing.
@redbarchetta8782
@redbarchetta8782 6 ай бұрын
Also, those old pickups in the 59 will always sound better than the new Burstbuckers and are wired 50s style. I believe Gibson CS models are still wired modern which causes the neck pickup to be darker. I removed my BBs and put a set of Tom Holmes which sound close IMHO to the originals and re-wired 50s style. It has a lot more clarity then when I got it stock.
@kennethfaught8754
@kennethfaught8754 6 ай бұрын
Excellent playing, and obvious that in the moment Paul wants to play EVERYTHING! Love it! ❤️👏
@wildcat31772
@wildcat31772 6 ай бұрын
That painting of Slash in the background is dope af too.
@readrepairs
@readrepairs 6 ай бұрын
Beautiful review
@Evy-1988
@Evy-1988 6 ай бұрын
hardly heard the difference (just a little bit) between the 59 burst and the reissue, but oh my, I FELT it. Even through youtube.
@artrogers3985
@artrogers3985 6 ай бұрын
Congratulations. That is so cool!
@brianwood7237
@brianwood7237 6 ай бұрын
Good morning from America Paul Today our country celebrates Thanksgiving And this is the first video that pops up on my feed Such a gift By the way my friend's son goes to college and studies social and cultural Anthropology, primarily using music art and media as source materials He's a white kid and a huge hip hop fan However he likes all kinds of music and he's been recently fascinated with old fifties American made electric guitars for some reason I just sent him the link to your video and he already watched it and his father told me he couldn't stop walking around and showing everybody saying, can you believe we made this? Can you believe we made something like this in our country back in the day? Thank you for inspiring us Americans to appreciate the good that we have accomplished in this country, because every day we are reminded of all the bad
@wadesimon3536
@wadesimon3536 6 ай бұрын
Such a great video! The love of everything guitar is infectious!
@Lynx-iu2de
@Lynx-iu2de 6 ай бұрын
To just think about where it all started is just beautiful.
@JaimeMCEWEN
@JaimeMCEWEN 4 ай бұрын
That original 59. Wow!! I'm a tele guy but that sounded unreal
@eudeciogabriel8571
@eudeciogabriel8571 5 ай бұрын
Very cool. Iconic
@Hrithik23
@Hrithik23 4 ай бұрын
It would be really interesting to hear one of these 50s guitars played through a 50s amp. In my opinion it will give an even better idea of the sound that Leo Fender had in his mind when designing this.
@vansongs
@vansongs 6 ай бұрын
I watch quite a few videos of guitar content. Every time one of yours comes up I think, well done. But I only see very few. I realized after this video to click the bell reminder. You make really good videos. Sorry it took so long to get with it. Reminded me to shake up my old man habits a bit.
@aliemad5211
@aliemad5211 6 ай бұрын
Always glad to see you ❤
@mirage809
@mirage809 4 ай бұрын
Some of the magic with those vintage guitars from the 50s is something that cannot be replicated. They're very random instruments. Handwound pickups with a lot of variance combined with 70 years of wood working, components drifting, magnets degrading. It all leads to a unique instrument. The history these instruments carry makes each of them one of a kind. That Broadcaster is amazing though. It's more than 70 years old, been through so many different players, yet it still looks and sounds amazing. It's obviously a guitar that has been played a bunch, but also one that was loved and taken good care of by its owners. You could hang it on the wall next to Fender's current options and it'll blend right in. Leo got it right on the first try.
@MarcCoteMusic
@MarcCoteMusic 6 ай бұрын
I'm not an "old guitar mojo" kind of guy but, man, this is the guitar equivalent of the Marc Cohn lyric from Walking in Memphis, "Tell me are you a Christian child, and I said, 'Ma'am, I am tonight'."
@toshishimura
@toshishimura 5 ай бұрын
A small batch of Broadcasters without truss rods was released in November 1949 and then recalled in January 1950 and had truss rods retro fitted, the earliest truss rod models have maple skunk stripe and not walnut
@NPGowMusic
@NPGowMusic 5 ай бұрын
So nice sounding guitar!🤜
@pickersgrip
@pickersgrip 6 ай бұрын
This was fun to watch!!
@thecsrecords
@thecsrecords 6 ай бұрын
Mike Campbell from Tom Petty and The Heartbreakers have one. Fender even made a custom shop limited edition based on his original Broadcaster called "CS Heartbreaker" which is the cheapest way to have this model today.
@camo2204
@camo2204 6 ай бұрын
Simply amazing video Paul. What was the piece you played at the end in the background? Beautiful!
@svbarr
@svbarr 6 ай бұрын
MANY of the earliest ones had weak wimpy neck pickups. I have a refin Nocaster and the neck pickup ain't nuthin' but MAN the bridge pickup reminds me of a great super hot P90 on the best Les Paul Junior. But you roll of the highs and it's a clean jazzer. I agree with the Esquire fans -- you only need the bridge pickup if you know what you are doing. Pople have told me to re wind the neck pickup hotter -- but I'm leaving it vintage original.
@tommc49
@tommc49 6 ай бұрын
I have a 70th anniversary Broadcaster reissue from a few years ago which I really like. I'm sure there is no comparison to the 70 year old original, but it works for me. It was a pretty limited reissue, and there was also a custom shop versions that was reliced which of course, cost 3x more.
@astrofire68
@astrofire68 6 ай бұрын
“Open” is the perfect description. The old LP’s notes were just a bit clearer and separated. What a beautiful instrument 😍
@stevenneufeld3791
@stevenneufeld3791 4 ай бұрын
great video!
@lazvt8469
@lazvt8469 6 ай бұрын
The 59's LP vs the 2012 LP comparison was similar to the difference between my wonderful Tone King Imp and the Hamstead Artist.....the Artist is more open, magical to me. Great vid, Paul...as usual!
@ghostfacechil5991
@ghostfacechil5991 6 ай бұрын
such a beautiful work of craftsmanship into these old boys
@bartvschuylenburg
@bartvschuylenburg 6 ай бұрын
I hope you’ll get the chance to play some Tele and Strat prototypes as well. Would be nice to see and hear fender’s guitars from the development stage.
@willemvanriet7160
@willemvanriet7160 6 ай бұрын
Paul, u allow us to have these precious & priceless experiences with u! Thank u SO much!
@Mrbeahz1
@Mrbeahz1 5 ай бұрын
Yes the 59 Les Paul sounds so much fuller - every string is clear. No comparison to the best you can get now.
@drownthepoor
@drownthepoor 4 ай бұрын
I'm a Telecaster owner, and it was shocking how good that '59 LP sounds. Last time I went to a guitar shop to get a cheap Epiphone Les Paul I ended up getting a Telecaster Deluxe, and though I'm glad I got it I still need a LP. For playing metalcore the LP has the chug/thump you can't get from a bolt-on neck.
@timharris6835
@timharris6835 6 ай бұрын
First fender was the Esquire a one pickup guitar before the two pickup Broadcaster. That shop has some amazing instruments if I should be so lucky to get to Europe I will visit. Big thanks to Paul Davids a great player and educator. I had a September 52 blackguard for 10 years a great guitar and when cranked it was awesome. Ten years ago they were less than half the price now asking.
@torah58
@torah58 6 ай бұрын
The first solid body mass produced electric guitar was Fender Esqiure. It had a different head stock, one pickup and no truss road. It was quickly upgraded to the Broadcaster. The first solid body electric guitar was made by Paul Bigsby. It was hand made and he only made a couple of guitars.
@roncarguy72
@roncarguy72 6 ай бұрын
That Broadcaster literally brought me to tears listening to you play it. The MOTHER of all guitars. Thank you for that presentation.
@jr0706
@jr0706 6 ай бұрын
Just something I noticed...that scenery on the trip reminded me of driving through eastern Tennessee.
@ryanvergara3603
@ryanvergara3603 6 ай бұрын
Glorious. Epic in every way.
@pierrebrault9692
@pierrebrault9692 6 ай бұрын
Lucky man ! You deserve it ! 🙂
@landguitar
@landguitar 6 ай бұрын
good video, thank you! You are indeed fortunate to have been able to play these guitars! To me, not being a Fender guy, both LP's sounded so much better. I guess you had to be in the room, because the CC#4 sounded more "present" in the video. Probably played better too...
@charlesgillespie5049
@charlesgillespie5049 6 ай бұрын
Always such great content Paul. Years ago you visited the quiestion "Do we need Amps?". I would love to see your take on this subject now as modelers have really kinda taken the lead in the last year or two. Even Fender now has jumped intom the game with the Tone Master Pro. Please consider visiting the modeler market with your approach and meticulous ways.
@classicalguitar715
@classicalguitar715 6 ай бұрын
Great guitars! I bought a 1961 strat in 1966, sunburst finish. I wish I hadn't sold in the eighties...it had a really beautiful tone through a Vox AC 30.
@RouvenKasten
@RouvenKasten 6 ай бұрын
So crazy these guitars are already sold!!!
@rjblaskiewicz
@rjblaskiewicz 6 ай бұрын
What a great opportunity! Wow.
@cinda1951
@cinda1951 6 ай бұрын
I have had my Broadcaster since 1965. Still have it!
@larrybremer4930
@larrybremer4930 6 ай бұрын
A neighbor had a '51 Nocaster (if I recall it was around serial number 1017). Sadly a past owner had it refinished in black (was originally blonde that could be seen in the neck joint when neck was removed) that utterly destroyed its collector value, but he enjoyed playing it up to his final days. I will never forget its twangy tone, or the looks on the guitar tech's faces when he took it to the local GC for appraisal.
@markknowles6374
@markknowles6374 6 ай бұрын
Love this video.
@jonasstribrny1263
@jonasstribrny1263 6 ай бұрын
For me, this owervelming sound of that old gibson is the gold vintage sound. You know that wats in my mind when someone says wintage sound, and i absolutly love it.🤤 the sabe with the Brodcaster. But to be fair the modern one got real close.😳 (sorry for my english)
@veroneliot277
@veroneliot277 6 ай бұрын
The old one just sounds like a record already !! It is fat but not muddy, has presence but is not harsh and clarity while having a warm character. I’m pretty sure you can achieve this tone with the new ones, but you’ll have to put work in it.. eq,compression etc. Nothing will ever justify to pay 350K for a guitar but god it really is the sound of heaven haha
@Johnnylooks_Overhead5164
@Johnnylooks_Overhead5164 6 ай бұрын
The Broadcaster. When I was sixteen. My uncle was called to an old lady neighborhood family friend. We went over and she gave him this paintbrushes black electric. We took it to the garage and got some fine sandpaper and sanded the headstock. And lo and behold Fender Broadcaster. The local music store offered him any guitar on the wall. And any half stack. And all the gear and equipment to get started. He declined the offer and still has it today. At sixteen I told him he was nuts. He was the smart one. I've played it many times and it's total classic. Now almost fifty . We still jam it. Amazing how things come to us . Thanks for this informative video. Oh ya the pick cover over the strings was removed as usual .
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