Gibson Last straw...

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Re: Gibson Last straw...

The "BABY BOOMERS" are their target group now.
The people with all the so called disposable income.
Kids are out of the house.
House is payed off.
$401Ks are are healthy.
They've got money to burn.
They're going through mid life crisis, and want to feel like they did in their youth. So, they want those things they saw in their youth but coulodn't afford. Now they can.

And they're are a lot of them.
That's why you see a lot of Senior living apartments and Walgreens going up everywhere.
Everyone wants to tap into that market. It's big money.

You're talking to a Boomer with disposable income. We're getting hit with higher prices everywhere, homes are being foreclosed, the stock market stinks, & jobs are being cut every day. There is no security anymore. We're dumping our big gas guzzlers because they're killing us. It snuck up on a lot of people; they were living comfortably & now they're struggling. It's a nationwide thing. Don't think Boomers have it made. A few do, most don't these days.
 
Re: Gibson Last straw...

Howdy,

At the risk of sending many of you into a fit of rage, let me offer a partial defense of Gibson and thier prices.
1. Everything is going up in price
2. Fuel costs have to be taken into account
3. Costs of material are going up, thanks in large part to #2.
4.Henry Yuskiewicz is greedy!
5. Have ya'll seen the price of a Rickenbacker 360 lately?

A Rickenbacker 360 compares roughly equal to a Gibson ES-335. Until just 2 years ago, the 360 could be had for around $1200!! Are you kidding? Half the price of an ES-335! These days John Hall has nearly doubled the price on a 360, citing rising cost of materials and fuel. An ES-335 for around $2500 isn't all that out of line, compared to a Rickenbacker 360 for $2200.
Do I think that Gibson is over-priced? Yes, but check the competition before you go ballistic. Let's try to compare apples to apples. Fender and Gibson use different construction methods; i.e., bolt-on neck vs. Set neck.

Eggman
PS: I realize, I'll probably have to enter the Federal witness protection program for my own safety, now. ;)
 
Re: Gibson Last straw...

Howdy,

At the risk of sending many of you into a fit of rage, let me offer a partial defense of Gibson and thier prices.
1. Everything is going up in price
2. Fuel costs have to be taken into account
3. Costs of material are going up, thanks in large part to #2.
4.Henry Yuskiewicz is greedy!
5. Have ya'll seen the price of a Rickenbacker 360 lately?

A Rickenbacker 360 compares roughly equal to a Gibson ES-335. Until just 2 years ago, the 360 could be had for around $1200!! Are you kidding? Half the price of an ES-335! These days John Hall has nearly doubled the price on a 360, citing rising cost of materials and fuel. An ES-335 for around $2500 isn't all that out of line, compared to a Rickenbacker 360 for $2200.
Do I think that Gibson is over-priced? Yes, but check the competition before you go ballistic. Let's try to compare apples to apples. Fender and Gibson use different construction methods; i.e., bolt-on neck vs. Set neck.

Eggman
PS: I realize, I'll probably have to enter the Federal witness protection program for my own safety, now. ;)

I think entering the witness protection program is not only advisable but imperative !
Perhaps you've heard that Gibson have just released "Gibson premium quality Earplugs" - RSP $279.00 per disposable pair and shortly to be joined by the "limited edition Zak Wylde earplugs" - RSP $399.00 per pair.
Both sets prominently display the word "Gibson" on each earpiece.

Well, as you said ..."everything is going up in price " and after all Gibson has to pay extra fuel costs to deliver these.
 
Re: Gibson Last straw...

I guess I am a big dummy for buying Gibson guitars.

I guess I am a big dummy because I can afford Gibson guitars.

I honestly don't care what anyone else can afford, what anyone else chooses to buy or what anyone else thinks about what I do with my time and money. This entire thread is pretty silly IMHO.

What I do know is that it takes a lot of emotional energy to get a thread to 8 pages and I am wondering what is the catalyst for all of this energy from some of you. I cannot afford to date a supermodel or drive an Italian sportscar but you don't see me filling up the internet with complaints about it. I am happy with the average woman and vehicle that I have so I don't complain that the "good stuff" is too expensive.

People that are happy rarely complain about anything.
Americans want the best.

And they want it fast.

And they want it cheap.

Americans want to be paid top dollar for their time and labor...but those same Americans don't want to pay other Americans what their time and labor is worth...unless it's a dentist, doctor or lawyer you're paying because you really need one.

So, because we refuse to support our own labor force by paying other Americans what their time and labor is worth, most guitars (and Levis) are now made somewhere other than the USA.

Buy a used Hamer USA if you want the best, want it fast, and want it (relatively) cheap.

Or buy a Gibson and quit complaining about other Americans making a decent living for their labor...

AAH, I was wondering how long it would take for Rhyme and Reason to chime in :friday:
 
Re: Gibson Last straw...

Just for the record, am I Rhyme or Reason?

Eggman, you can come hang out with me and Lew. The yahoos are prolly drinking domestic beer and you know we don't need none of that.
 
Re: Gibson Last straw...

Gibson's been sold a couple times already in my lifetime. I expect it to happen again.

Well... when Gibson was bought by Norlin, it wasn't a very big company. That's why it could be bought at that time... and because of the fact that it didn't grew at all, but the opposite, it was possible to be bought back by a bunch of small investors.

But if you look at it now, you'll see that it grew at least twenty-fold since then, and that's why it still can survive the market, 'cause when one of the companies have a bad year, the others' good year makes up for it.

I also like the efforts on innovation made by the Epiphone company, as you've described earlier, "Gibson's cash cow". It can allow itself to innovate because they're producing the cash. Otherwise they just can't!

Other cash cows from the same company are the piano companies (Baldwin, Wurlitzer, Chickering, Hamilton), the Wurlitzer Jukeboxes and vending machines (they're almost a monopoly, mind you) and the drum company Sligerland.

I don't see the Gibson company weak enough to be bought, not even a "hostile takeover" any time soon.

A good part of my income comes by fixing mostly Fender copies, Epi and other Chinese, Korean and Indonesian made instruments. Thiose are my bread-and-butter. But when a Gibson instrument comes in, so I know I can charge top dollar with no questions asked.

As opposite to octave doctor, I have yet to encounter a Gibson instrument with the bridge so out of whack that it wouldn't intonate, but... in most cases they intonate very close to their physical limit. In my very own first Les Paul, a 1969 two-p'up Custom Black Beauty, I had to replace its original ABR-1 bridge with a Nashville one to be able to intonate it.

Of course, the fact that I've been in business only a fraction of the time octave doctor has been has to be taken into account as well.

Pepe aka Lt. Kojak
Milano, Italy
 
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Re: Gibson Last straw...

Ripoff or not.

I rather have them build great guitars and rip me off than building just another unremarkable piece.
 
Re: Gibson Last straw...

Howdy,

FWIW, my two favorite guitars are, in this order:

1. '98 Gibson LP Sp. (W/ aftermarket P-90s & tuners). It's my "Desert Island" axe.
2. 1980 Gibson ES-335 (Replacement SD '59s). Intonates perfect and is like butter.

Like many of you, I think Henry Yuskiewicz is greedy. I hope Gibson can survive, like Blueman335 pointed out; I think the US is in for some tough times in the near future.
Perhaps Gibson can reduce prices and lay-off some "Chiefs" in the head office?

Eggman
 
Re: Gibson Last straw...

Ripoff or not.

I rather have them build great guitars and rip me off than building just another unremarkable piece.
Heh, I can't NOT agree with that one.
If you're getting ripped of at least make it worth it ;)
 
Re: Gibson Last straw...

Howdy,

At the risk of sending many of you into a fit of rage, let me offer a partial defense of Gibson and thier prices.
1. Everything is going up in price
2. Fuel costs have to be taken into account
3. Costs of material are going up, thanks in large part to #2.
4.Henry Yuskiewicz is greedy!
5. Have ya'll seen the price of a Rickenbacker 360 lately?

A Rickenbacker 360 compares roughly equal to a Gibson ES-335. Until just 2 years ago, the 360 could be had for around $1200!! Are you kidding? Half the price of an ES-335! These days John Hall has nearly doubled the price on a 360, citing rising cost of materials and fuel. An ES-335 for around $2500 isn't all that out of line, compared to a Rickenbacker 360 for $2200.
Do I think that Gibson is over-priced? Yes, but check the competition before you go ballistic. Let's try to compare apples to apples. Fender and Gibson use different construction methods; i.e., bolt-on neck vs. Set neck.

Eggman
PS: I realize, I'll probably have to enter the Federal witness protection program for my own safety, now. ;)


My Father in law lives in your city.. He has a bad temper, he likes to drink, he likes to fight, he likes me, he's looking for you.....

LOL!! I am kidding bro.. Well, oNLY about the looking for you part.. The rest is fact..
Good points. I know fuel and materials is up. I understand inflation.. Just not $200 2 or 3 times a year..

Your point number 4 is the biggest one..

I dont ever look at Ricks, so I had no idea what they run.. thanks for the info.

rhyme and reason?? Im sitting here trying desparately to remember the name of the twins on alice in wonderland... LOL
 
Re: Gibson Last straw...

Heh, I can't NOT agree with that one.
If you're getting ripped of at least make it worth it ;)
+1
And that's the point.
To find a good Gibson today is becoming increasingly more difficult but for the money being asked I'd expect every one to be perfect!
 
Re: Gibson Last straw...

Well, good news: The 2008 Standard finally came out, and they now come standard Plekked. So at least the fretwork problem is solved. That said, I think Gibsons on the whole have improved in the last few years.
 
Re: Gibson Last straw...

Well, good news: The 2008 Standard finally came out, and they now come standard Plekked. So at least the fretwork problem is solved. That said, I think Gibsons on the whole have improved in the last few years.

Where did you see the Plek'd thing about the standard, Zhang? I mean, I knew that all CS instruments came "Plek'd", but a series instrument...

Just curious.

Pepe aka Lt. Kojak
Milano, Italy
 
Re: Gibson Last straw...

Yeah, for an extra 100$ than the pre-2008 Standard.
http://www.gibson.com/en-us/divisions/gibson usa/products/lespaul/standard/
http://www.gibson.com/en-us/divisions/gibson usa/products/lespaul/2008-standard/
(Actually, for the extras it doesn't sound all that bad :))

Still, I think it would be a VERY good step forward if ALL of the upper production line Gibsons got PLEKked (let's say Studio+).
It would mean taking an extra bit of time but I think it'd still be faster than a guy down the production line doing it completely by hand and would still produce more consistent results...
 
Re: Gibson Last straw...

Where did you see the Plek'd thing about the standard, Zhang? I mean, I knew that all CS instruments came "Plek'd", but a series instrument...

Just curious.

Pepe aka Lt. Kojak
Milano, Italy


Got it in an e-mail from Gibson. There was link to the site. But it is definitely the Standard, not any Historic.
 
Re: Gibson Last straw...

OK man, are you actually actively TRYING to misunderstand what I'm saying?

No, you're just not making yourself clear.  When someone says somebody is "milking it", to me that means they are continuing something that has become passe, is no longer hip, and they should either move on to something else or get off the stage.  So to me it sounds like you're saying Gibson should stop making LP's, 335's, SG's, etc.

KeeperOS said:
Look man, 50 years ago everything had to be made by hand. EVERYTHING.

Maybe you missed a digit and meant 500 years ago, but 50 years ago was nowhere near as technologically backward as you seem to think.  By 1958 (50 years ago), supersonic flight, nuclear weapons, and nuclear-powered ships, and the existence of computers were already old news.  They didn't build nuclear subs and supersonic fighters by hand.  It was not a world of Amish and Luddites.

Likewise there were plenty of machines at the Gibson factory, to rough-cut the wood, wind the pickups, mold the plastic bobbins, make all the hardware, and other tech companies to make the pots and switches, etc.  So likewise, the 50's Gibsons were not made entirely by hand. More so than now, sure, but not as much more so as you think.

keeper said:
When one man builds the same thing 50-100 times one cannot expect to get it exactly the same EVERY time. Let alone when there are 50-100 different people building it so, yeah, I guess it would come as no surprise how some would be dogs too.  But today, the technology and the manufacture methods and procedures exist so that it IS possible to build 50-100 the same thing and it still be identical every time. Just look at a Carvin or sth.

I have a Carvin 6-string bass that I really dig.  Have played and checked out many Carvins (they used to have an outlet store near where I used to work) and they do probably the most consistently marvelous fretwork of any maker. 

That said, my 6-string bass had nut slots cut way too deep on the lowest 3 strings that requires me to stuff aluminum foil in the slots to keep the open strings from buzzing on the first fret.  Plus there were other dogs on the rack at the outlet store.

Point being that CNC's and other high tech machines are no guarantee that you won't put out dogs from time to time.  Even the highest tech machines can break down, or have parts that wear out, or the microprocessors go goofy, or have their maintenance neglected or otherwise improperly performed.  And you can also have operator error. And even if the workmanship is flawless, the guitar might be made with a crap piece of wood that makes the guitar sound like hitting a piece of cardboard with a plastic fork.

And the proof is that all the other big makers also have access to all this high tech manufacturing equipment, and yet they still put out dogs to varying degrees.  Yet everyone throws a fit when Gibson does it, primarily over the price, even though the guitars made by some of these other makers cost even more than Gibsons (see PRS).

As I've said many times, Gibson has some problems that definitely need solving.  Customer service and fretwork are my main complaints, though they seem to have addressed the latter with the Plekked Standard, and their humbuckers are pretty much mediocre to downright crappy.

That said, it's just silly to write Gibson off after finding a few clunkers on the rack.  Because when you find one that's right, and it's really not very hard, it's waaaaaay worth the money.
 
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