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Originally Posted by John A.
I guess a 335 is what one settles for when they don't have a 355 or 347 around. (ouuuuuuuuuuch).
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08-23-2019 09:09 PM
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Originally Posted by Jazzstdnt
Oooh... 347...
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Originally Posted by GNAPPI
Yeah, my 347 was blond. Truth be told, I happily played an ES-335 for years though.
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Originally Posted by starjasmine
Dave Stryker PI could easily be a syndicated Tv show from the early 80s.
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Originally Posted by Little Jay
There were some cool ones.
But that was mostly in the 30s and 40s.
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Originally Posted by christianm77
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
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135s in the 90's are righteous guitars. Versatile. More dynamic response than a solid body or a 335. Increased body depth over a 335 and extra internal volume due to having only 1 cutaway. The extra resonance due to that additional cavity size is largely obliterated by the solid block, but it does make for a subtle increase in responsiveness that suits a jazz gig. Nowhere near the dynamic range of a carved archtop, but enough to be a respectable jazz vehicle in a combo, while still handling louder blues and rockabilly settings.
A good guitar, as long as you stay before about 2003. After that, the quality completely tanked and they then came out with the embarrassing 137 toy.
BTW, my '96 135 is on offer to pay for my Slaman carved top (purchased here).
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Originally Posted by benrosow
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Originally Posted by benrosow
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Originally Posted by christianm77
i like 8 strings, though.
Everything but the drum tracks on that is my .strandberg* Boden OS 8.
Which is chambered, but without F holes, btw...Last edited by dogletnoir; 08-29-2019 at 09:25 AM.
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Originally Posted by christianm77
and what looks like a Van Eps string damper. i wish we had a sound sample to go with the pic!
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Originally Posted by dogletnoir
#embracethedweeb
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Originally Posted by starjasmine
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Originally Posted by sgcim
http://www.davestryker.com/wp/wp-content/uploads/2012/02/021008stryker132.jpg
Once you get past the fluff about how pretty it is cosmetically, this review basically calls out a few things like the ebony fingerboard (I'm no expert but I think the 335 could be had with ebony or rosewood) , factory coil tap on both PUPs and the fine-tuners on the bridge. Sounds like the 347 is a pretty nice axe.
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Originally Posted by dlew919
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Originally Posted by starjasmine
:-)
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To be perfectly honest I have trouble distinguishing all this 3 series guitars. If it’s got ears that’s close enough.
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Originally Posted by zcostilla
Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk
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Originally Posted by sgcim
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Originally Posted by christianm77
Well .. There is the late 60s to 70s fully hollow Gibson 150DC .. a Mickey Mouse version of the ES-175
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Originally Posted by christianm77
In my defense, a quote from the following
Then I saw what would become my main guitar, a tobacco sunburst 1980 ES-347, hanging on the wall at a guitar store in Brooklyn. I traded my ES-335 for it.”
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Originally Posted by benrosow
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Hey - you can't impose a moratorium on me from the UK.
That's guitar repression without representation!
I'll play all the Jazz I want on mickey mouse ears guitars, and if you don't like it, maybe I'll start throwing "real" archtops in the harbour - err, harbor?
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Uppity colonials
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Silly cousins!
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Originally Posted by Lobomov
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John stowell may not approve of the moratorium...
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Now y‘all made me pull out my 335 copy again, after three Telecaster years. Sings like a bird.
Gesendet von iPad mit Tapatalk
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Originally Posted by Average Joe
The keyboard player I played with had comp. tickets to a gig he was doing at Seventh Avenue South, the Brecker Bros. club in NYC, and he was playing the same guitar there. Probably that was the guitar that he used up till about 1988. I think he used it on the video tape of him playing with
Getz back in the 70s.
I don't think it was a 335, in fact most of the guys that got good jazz sounds out of their Gibson semi's used other models
Grant Green and Terry Smith- 330s
Dave Stryker- 347
Chuck Loeb- not a 335
This is why we're declaring a moratorium on the 335, they're no good for jazz!
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OK, I'm in. I pledge not to buy one.
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ES-335 The original Fusion Guitar! A marriage of hollow and solid body guitars.
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Originally Posted by sgcim
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Originally Posted by jads57
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Originally Posted by sgosnell
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Originally Posted by citizenk74
(And the biggest bonus: it’s worn brown, the modern production ES-335 doesn’t even come in that colour!)
Last edited by Little Jay; 09-02-2019 at 03:09 AM.
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Full disclosure, I love ‘em and 345s, as well as 355s, of which I have one, but if you’re giving out passes, I think “Captain Fingers” deserves one as well.
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Ritenour deserves an exception, but--funny--he plays a signature L-5 these days.
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Originally Posted by Greentone
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Originally Posted by Doctor Jeff
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Originally Posted by christianm77
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Originally Posted by Thoughtfree
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Up until maybe the 1990s The ES-335 and it's variants were basically the only fusion of hollow and solid body with glued in necks available.
Now with so many choices available from PRS as well as smaller builders there is every combination one could possibly ask for.
So I stand by my earlier statement of the 335 being the original Fusion guitar.
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Originally Posted by Greentone
Actually these days that L5 shares the limelight equally with the Les Paul that the Custom Shop built for him(Exhibit 2 your honor)
Guitar: The Instrument That Rocked the World
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