![]() ![]() The model described thus far is the original Barney Kessel Regular. The guitar was very normal apart from this, with four main controls, a wide body as opposed to the thinline design of the ES models, two humbuckers and a Bigsby vibrato. However, the body was much wider than an SG, and looked unbalanced. The guitar was unusual in shape, with a 25 1/2″ scale length similar to an ES-335, but with much sharper double florentine cutaways, resembling an SG. In general, most favour the SLM versions to the PCM ones and the documentation and models are better represented by the SLM versions.Barney Kessel was a very respected jazz guitarist in the 1950s and 60s, and gained his own Gibson signature model in 1961. Pacific Coast often have an X on the headstock or the pickguard. Both companies often imported from the same source. Pacific Coast Music's Electra logo was nearly identical to the SLM Electra logo from 1972 to 1975 except instead of the SLM gold text, a black text on a white background was used. Bernard Kornblum's Saint Louis Music (SLM) Electra brand competed with his own brother David Kornblum's California based Pacific Coast Music (PCM) Electra brand yet the two were not connected. SLM changed the brand to Alvarez (it's acoustic brand) and switched production to other plants, including Korea. ![]() By 1987 or 1988 Singer Sewing Machines had bought Matsumoku and killed guitar production. By the beginning of 1984, the brand became Electra-Westone and by the end of 1984 just Westone. In the fall of 1983, the Electra Brand becomes Electra Phoenix. Some Korean production began in the early 80's. By around 1981 ties with Matsumoku further solidified and decision eventually made to merge SLM's Electra brand with Matsumoku's Westone brand. Open-book headstocks changed to wave or fan shape by 1978. In 1975 the Tree-of-Life guitars debut with a leaf pattern carved into the top, and the Electra line expanded to 25 models. The first guitar, simply called The Electra, was a copy of the Ampeg Dan Armstrong lucite guitar and issued in 1971, followed quickly by a variety of bolt-neck copies of other brands. The Electra line replaces SLM's Japanese made Apollo and US made Custom Kraft lines. ![]() ![]() Most of the instruments were made by Matsumoku in Matsumoto Japan. #Electra phoenix guitar serial number seriesIt was the only model in all the Electra Phoenix/ Westone Spectrum series to be available in a sunburst finish.Įlectra guitars were imported from Japan by St. The second series was almost a different model entirely- no pickguard, it had pickups mounted flush against the body, like all Phoenix models to follow. Most had a brass '1982 commemorative anniversary' plate on the back of the headstock with an additional serial number. The first series was a deluxe version of the X130 model with special metallic paint and black pickguard like the X130, brass nut, trem bridge, brass knobs. This guitar was a bolt neck double cutaway with ash body, maple neck, chrome hardware, and three single coil pickups with 3-way selector and fat switch (middle on), and brass knobs. This one had the H-S-S (humbucker, single, single) configuration on the pickups while it originally had a S-S-S set up. It's a modified version of the X-145 (vintage sunburst color, X-145VS) guitar they produced. I found out it was made in 1982 by the Matsumoku plant in Japan. I picked up this guitar in August of 2008 and it has a market value of $102.50. ![]()
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