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Thanks, JW, also for the gear references.
I'm fortunate to have no such back pain, and prefer the footstool as it offers me a simple portable solution to establishing the same instrument as well as body positioning no matter what seating may be available.
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12-14-2015 04:34 PM
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I played a 1967 last weekend. Although I wasn't shopping for an ES 175 (I already have one), I almost bought it. I didn't buy it because it had a narrow nut and slightly flattened top. I was surprised how much I liked it because I though I didn't like the sound of light laminate archtops. I tried 50's ES 175's as well as recent VOS's in the past. I find them a bit too bright and acoustic sounding when amplified. But this one had a full and warm sound although it was light and acoustically lively. I guess not as light as 50's models. These 60's models (although this was 67, not early 60's) are the perfect balance between heavy and light built in my opinion. Now I have to get a 1963 or 1964 ES 175 (because of the neck profile preferences). Mine is a 2013 model. I love it but it's different.
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Originally Posted by Stringswinger
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Originally Posted by Tal_175
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Originally Posted by lawson-stone
These days, the thicker neck of the 50's Gibson seems to be in style. But styles change.....
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Originally Posted by lawson-stone
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[Edit: This is a pointless post, since my posts from 2015 are visible in the thread - I just didn't go back to read all of it... oh well]
I actually have a 1963 single pickup 175, it weighs 5 lbs 12 oz and has a lot of acoustic character, which is usually my preference. The neck is quite slim from back to front but with a normal 1 11/16" nut width, just barely. I had it re-fretted with medium jumbo frets and a new nut. I find the neck profile really nice, similar in some ways to a Fender (radius not withstanding).
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Originally Posted by Tal_175
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Wow. All you have to do to witness the special nature of the 1960-1964 "generation" of ES175 is look at prices on Reverb. The guitars from this era run $7000-10,000 and more, while on either side the prices are a step down. That's only with instruments carrying original pickups and wiring, of course. Must be something in the demand, because there is definitely an "early 1960's price hump."
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For 1964 prices don't seem to be higher than newer used ES 175's (I'm not sure if these are prices for guitars with original pickups):
Gibson ES-175D 1964 Sunburst Price Guide | Reverb
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175 Guitars are great Workhorse Jazz guitars. But for me there are so may other options available that offer more versatility. Benedetto Standard comes to mind at least for me.
There is a great Bambino Deluxe for a reasonable 3k inthe for sale forums at the moment!
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Originally Posted by Tal_175
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Originally Posted by lawson-stone
I sold my 1963 with 57 classics and stainless frets (a plus to some, a minus to some) and non original neck binding and replaced inlays for $4500 last year. Now that 175's are no longer in production I presume it might sell for a bit more today.
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I think vintage archtop prices are a bit lower in Canada than the US. With the new customs regulations on rosewood, used guitar markets of US and Canada have been largely separated.
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Resurrecting this thread has me missing my old ES-175. It wasn't '60-'64 (it was a '68), but it was an exceptionally nice guitar. Not that I don't regret selling _every_ guitar (I do), but this one was special.
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Originally Posted by lawson-stone
Lawson, the late '57-'60 models bring the highest prices, big factor being that people routinely strip them of their parts, especially the PAF pickups (twin pickup models bring more of course)
The parts are mainly used to restore Gibsons of that era and they sell for astronomical prices.
I had a just about dead mint '59 175D that I could have parted out and made alot more in the sale, but it never was a consideretion for me, I always find it sad when I see a nice old Gibson that has parts replaced. The only good that does is maybe make a vintage guitar more affordable for someone that doesn't have 10k+ to spend.
p.s the guy that bought it from me intended to strip it but the guitar was so nice he couldn't bring himself to do i
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Originally Posted by wintermoon
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A good gauge is sold listings, not asking prices.
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Originally Posted by lawson-stone
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This is actually a better sample of the guitar's tone, though it might still be too woody for you. I find it really grew on me over time.
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Originally Posted by lawson-stone
It's becoming increasingly clear to me that I need one of each.
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Originally Posted by Tal_175
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Thought I'd add mine to this old thread!
Autumn Leaves (Jazz Guitar Live)
Today, 04:05 PM in The Songs