"Engel" + "Guitar" = Enguitar. haha.
I picked up this gorgeous set-neck body last year. No idea what brand or anything. The guy I bought it from said it came from a local guitar maker. It looks like it has several routing mistakes which is why I got such an awesome deal on it. However the neck is really nice and I love the bare wood flame top. Looks like it was routed to be like a Fender Telecaster Custom with a humbucker at the neck and a single coil near the bridge. Or maybe that humbucker is more like a p90 size. I have a Barney Kessel pickup which I just might put in that neck position.
Click on the photo to see some more pics and stay tuned for updates to this project.
Monday, November 29, 2010
1990s Danelectro U2 reissue
This isn't a resurrection or anything but it's a fun little guitar I picked up a while ago. Has a great sound that comes close to a Fender Telecaster but with a little less treble.
Sunday, October 24, 2010
Harmony Rocket H53 from the early 1960s

The tone control really shapes the sound drastically, as you'll see in my video below.
The neck is super straight, I think it has a simple steel bar in it, not sure, but this thing will not bend. At least, not this particular one. It's a joy to play.
I picked up this guitar from someone on the south shore. I don't have any "before" pictures but trust me when I say this, I actually think some mice lived inside it at one time. I didn't find any mouse droppings, but it was full of little bits of pillow stuffing and seed shells. Maybe the stuffing was in there to reduce feedback, but the seed shells? The guitar was covered in dust, the bridge wasn't adjusted correctly (and it had been glued at one time I believe). And there was some gummy puffy sticker of some kind once attached to the headstock with some horrible glue that was very difficult to get off. This glue damaged some of the logo on the headstock.
A good amount of work went into resurrecting this guitar. Everything is original except the hand-made pickguard with logo, and the pickguard bracket. It's definitely got nicks and dings, but it's got that vintage shine and plays like a dream. And of course, it sounds amazing.
Wednesday, April 14, 2010
Hondo II Les Paul
Hondo started making cheap copies of Gibson Les Pauls, but most were based on Standard designs. This Hondo II is probably from the 1970s and it's pretty unique in that it looks almost like a Les Paul Custom. It's got beautiful inlay on the lawsuit era headstock. A search on the Internet shows that it's hard to find this particular model. Now, while this wasn't a high end model by any means, as it's got a bolt-on neck, it really looks like one otherwise.
I picked up this guitar completely covered with rust and about 30 years worth of thick dusty grime. It needed a lot of cleanup, and some of the wiring looking like it had literally been yanked out.
I replaced the plug and some wiring, hooked it up and was surprised at the pleasant tone. It doesn't have the hot humbucking sounds of modern Les Pauls. It's got a more round sound, softer. Then again, maybe it's because I have the pickups lower from the strings. Still, I like the sound of this guitar. Here's a clip of me noodling around with it.
The action is just a tiny bit higher at the highest frets than brand new Epiphone or Gibson Les Pauls, but if you like the blues, this is a fun guitar to play with. The only drawback to the guitar is that there's a little nick out of the binding on the finger side of one of the lower frets. I doesn't impeded my playing, but if you pull a lot, you might notice it. The guitar bottoms out a bit in some places, but hey, it's a Hondo. You're getting a guitar that's just about as good as an Epiphone, but looks prettier and sounds more unique.
One of the things I love about this guitar is that the paint and nitro cellulose finish is thin enough that you can see the relief in the wood. It's just gorgeous in person. The only thing that looks a bit out of place is the replacement pickguard. I'm going to look for one with more of an aged white or cream edge.
I replaced the plug and some wiring, hooked it up and was surprised at the pleasant tone. It doesn't have the hot humbucking sounds of modern Les Pauls. It's got a more round sound, softer. Then again, maybe it's because I have the pickups lower from the strings. Still, I like the sound of this guitar. Here's a clip of me noodling around with it.
The action is just a tiny bit higher at the highest frets than brand new Epiphone or Gibson Les Pauls, but if you like the blues, this is a fun guitar to play with. The only drawback to the guitar is that there's a little nick out of the binding on the finger side of one of the lower frets. I doesn't impeded my playing, but if you pull a lot, you might notice it. The guitar bottoms out a bit in some places, but hey, it's a Hondo. You're getting a guitar that's just about as good as an Epiphone, but looks prettier and sounds more unique.
One of the things I love about this guitar is that the paint and nitro cellulose finish is thin enough that you can see the relief in the wood. It's just gorgeous in person. The only thing that looks a bit out of place is the replacement pickguard. I'm going to look for one with more of an aged white or cream edge.
Monday, November 9, 2009
They Live
I've got GAS.
That's Guitar Acquisition Syndrome (or Gear Acquisition Syndrome to some). You get laid off and what do you do? Look for a job? No. You start buying guitars. Now, I'm not talking expensive guitars. I'm talking cheap guitars. The guitars we called "junky" back in the '80s. Now people collect those guitars. But most of those guitars really are kind of between "good" and "junky". You can buy a pretty good brand new guitar these days for $300. But there are a lot of old guitars out there from the '50s, '60s and '70s going for $50 to $150 which just need some TLC to bring them up to blowing away those $300 guitars. And a lot of them are American made or pretty good quality Japanese.
Problem is this GAS thing. You can really pile up a lot of those "junky" guitars. We're talking Teisco, Silvertone, Harmony, Kay, you name it, people are getting rid of them... and I'm buying them.
So what do I do with them?
I'm reviving them. Resurrecting them. Not restoring necessarily. That can get expensive. People know you want the missing Teisco roller bridge and so they'll charge $85 on eBay, even though the guitars that use that 2.5 inch non-standard bridge cost about $100. No, I'm resurrecting... bringing back from the dead, just a few things here and there to make them playable, maybe use a completely different roller bridge which is much cheaper. But now the guitar works and plays great. And now it can easily compete against the drones from Fender/Squier and Gibson/Epiphone... not that they're bad or anything... but let's face it... they're kind of... well... boring these days. Their idea of diversity is changing the color or finish and putting some famous guitarist's name on the headstock. :: yawn ::
Come on, let's bring back the golden age of guitars, when there weren't just Ibanez, Gibson and Fender, but you also had Domino, Danelectro, Harmony, Kay, Kent, Kimberly, Silvertone, Supro, Kawai, Teisco, Guyatone, the list goes on....
Let's bring these guitars back to life. Give them new opportunities to make great music.
This blog will be devoted to talking about these guitar projects, such as my very first project, a resurrection of my Kalamazoo KG-2. Stay tuned!
This blog will be devoted to talking about these guitar projects, such as my very first project, a resurrection of my Kalamazoo KG-2. Stay tuned!
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