If you were to own signature guitars, which would they be?

Re: If you were to own signature guitars, which would they be?

I also woul like the Bill Keliher Explorer (with a pickup change)
Elvis Costello Jazzmaster
Chris Shiflett Telecaster Deluxe
dave grohl's Gibson
Any of those upper end les Pauls
Fender never made it into a signature guitar, but if they made a Josh Farro (ex guitarist of Paramore) Signature, I would want to buy it.
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Re: If you were to own signature guitars, which would they be?

I'd really like a Clapton strat. Every one I have played (about 3) has had the most amazing neck shape. And I love the medium frets. I also like that it's not just a re-creation of some old guitar a guy owned, but a model designed to do things the artist wanted, like the mid boost. And it's not ridiculously expensive, like some of the 10,000 dollar les paul signatures.

I'd like a Gilmour strat too, but it's way too expensive, and really, you can build one yourself.
 
Re: If you were to own signature guitars, which would they be?

The Trini Lopez is the first thing to come to mind, except for the Les Paul, which is a signature model, of course... ;)

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Re: If you were to own signature guitars, which would they be?

EB/MM Albert Lee
Gibson Lonnie Mack Flying V
Gibson Elliot Easton SG
Rickenbacker Tom Petty sig 12er
 
Re: If you were to own signature guitars, which would they be?

I guess I may as well throw the Cornell and the Grohl in for good measure...
 
Re: If you were to own signature guitars, which would they be?

First choice would be the George Lynch ESP Serpent (black & white). I've always had a thing for the graphic, and assuming it plays like the Skulls & Snakes, ir likely sounds and feels great. The second choice would be the Gibson DG-335.
 
Re: If you were to own signature guitars, which would they be?

I was never really into the idea of sig guitars, to be honest. Not that I dislike the idea of them, I just never felt that it was a good reason to buy a guitar.

But then I picked this up a few weeks ago...

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It's an Ibanez ORL-1. The only reason I bought it is because Omar just happened to design one of my ideal guitars and Ibanez decided to put it out for a very reasonable price. Omar and I (apparently) have extremely similar taste in gear and we both suffer from left-handedness...the fact that he's one of my favourite guitarists didn't factor into my decision at all.

I've always really loved the offset bodyshape of the Jag/Jazzmaster/Jet King style guitar; they're just extraordinarily difficult to find in the UK for less than £800-£900. I picked this up for £230 brand new on clearance from a UK store because it's been discontinued. Not only does it feature one of my favourite body shapes, but it cured my GAS for a single-pickup guitar, my GAS for another short-scale, and my GAS for something mahogany. If I was designing a guitar, it would probably be very similar to this...except I'd probably either stick a Tele bridge pup in it or route it for a full-sized humbucker; both of which are things I'm considering doing to it anyway.

So, yeah. I own it because it's an ideal combination of specs for me, not because a guitarist I like happens to play one.

The only sig guitars that I've ever been tempted by are guitars that are unusual in some way. I like the May Red Special, the Cobain Jag and the Chris Cornell 335. Teles or Strats with certain pickup combinations and a special colour don't really appeal to me. I'd rather just get a decent regular model and mod it myself.
 
Re: If you were to own signature guitars, which would they be?

Let's see...
- Eric Johnson Strat in red or white
- I'm not big on signature Les Pauls, but I'd get an early Joe Perry one just for the looks. I used to have the Epiphone version, I miss it.
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- two Joe Satriani models, the JS1200 and JS6.
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- Music Man makes mostly signature instruments when you really look at their line. I'd probably pick one original Petrucci model with that chameleon finish, a Steve Morse Y2D in Purple, a Luke III, and two Albert Lees (one HH, one SSS).
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...and last but not least, the Eric Clapton signature Martin 00028
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Re: If you were to own signature guitars, which would they be?

While a straight Les Paul or SG is technically a signature model, I'd allow variants like the Page or Perry or Angus. If all you want is a straight off-the-shelf LP with no one associated with it other than Les Paul, don't bother with making the cliche` joke.


I have had a few Jackson sig models:
-Rhoads
-Mustaine KV Pro
-Kip Winger bass
-Collen Archtop
-Morton Dominion

However, those all had distinct features that were not available on any other model.
-The Mustaine V had a Kahler flatmount non-trem bridge, whereas all other KV models at the time had a Floyd (KV2, KV3) (and I'm speaking about the time when I got the guitar, not when it came out, as the KV2 was originally what later became the KV3)

-The Winger bass was made entirely of Australian Lacewood. If you've never seen it in person, you're missing out. While the bass later became the Futura, it went to a bolt-on neck and lost the Lacewood.

-The Collen Archtop had a unique sculpted body that was actually convex from back to front (belly to bridge), which gave it both a very unique feel when wearing it as well as flawless access to the neck. The top horn was about 1" behind the back of the neck. While the lower "nub" looked odd, it was out of the way.

-The Morton Dominion offers a "chambered body" design (solid neckthrough tenon, hollow on either side of the body) in a "just a hair bigger then a Strat" form factor. It's not big like a 335 or Emperor, or even as big as a Jazz'R, but it sounds and plays considerably different than any other Jackson model (it's not "just a Soloist with a funky body", which is what some companies have done).

However, I'm not a fan of Winger. They sucked, IMO. Technically, the music was spot-on, with far more complex arrangements/composition than their closest "Corporate Rock" competitor Whitesnake. But lyrically speaking, both of them sucked IMO. I'm just not a fan of songs that revolve around your penis. Or anyone else's, for that matter.

I did like some songs from Def Leppard, but have never bought an album. Don't intend to. I can only take so much of Joe Elliot's voice, and Phil Collen doesn't impress me on the scale of say Tony Iommi.

Haven't heard much of Lamb of God, so I can't really comment on Morton's abilities. WHat I have heard on Music CHoice's Metal channel sounds like everything else in that genre, more or less, so I can't say I bought the Dominion as a fan of his.

While I do count myself as a Megadeth fan, I didn't buy the Mustaine KV for that reason. I've always liked Vs. The looks, anyway. I've owned about 5 Gibson Vs over the years, and ended up getting rid of them. I've also owned a few King Vs, including a Double-Rhoads based on Robbin "King" Crosby's Jackson V. As much as I like the looks, I just couldn't get along with the necks. The only Vs I'm comfortable with are the Vantage FV575 and the Jackson KV2T. They both have a more rounded neck profile, similar to a Les Paul, and they're both short-scale. Those factors work together to make them more comfortable for me.
However, all my other, more-regularly-played guitars are 25.5" scale, so go figure.

I'm still on the fence about Rhoads. I did not like his tone when Blizzard came out, and still don't. I also thought his playing was a bit "busy", though at the time I was a huge Sabbath fan, and thought that Ozzy made the mistake of his career by leaving them (being 12 years old, I didn't get the full story on why he left, as the reporting on such things back in 1980 wasn't as thorough as it is today).
As for the Rhoads guitar, I'm not a fan of it. The top horn is overly long for me, and it's got the same old V problems, namely with the neck. I did have one Rhoads Custom model that had a huge neck, but IMO was too big, or at least should have had a more narrow nut width. As well it was Alder, which made it acoustically over-bearing.

I have never in my life had the urge to possess an EVH guitar, whether Kramer or Charvel. I understand the Wolfgang/Axis is loved by many, but I just don't see myself getting one, despite the fact I'm loyal to Jackson guitars (only 2 of my 24 electrics are not Jacksons). However, at one time, on a whim, I did acquire a licensed EVH Strat (Fender Strat in B&W stripes approved by EVH's lawyers). I loathe Strats. I detest them with a flaming passion. This one did not do anything to improve that. I get along great with my Charvel SoCal, for some reason, but aside from that and the one MexiStrat I used to own, I just cannot abide their shape. They look nice, but just feel 9 kinds of wrong, like I've got a sack of potatoes on a strap.

If these models had been available without the artist's association (obviously you can't have a Rhoads without Rhoads, anymore than you can have a Les Paul without Les Paul), I would still have owned them. The artists in question had no influence on my decision to buy, or to sell.
 
Re: If you were to own signature guitars, which would they be?

-The Winger bass was made entirely of Australian Lacewood. If you've never seen it in person, you're missing out. While the bass later became the Futura, it went to a bolt-on neck and lost the Lacewood.

.

This isnt necessarily true I used to have a 92 Futura Pro that was red lacewood neckthrough and sexy as hell.
 
Re: If you were to own signature guitars, which would they be?

Hmm something with a Super strat body, 25 scale and neck through, 14 radius w/24 frets in Jumbo SS. 2 buckers but with the PRS style switching on the old Custom 24's but instead of using the rotary switch using a 5 way. Trem would be a Floyd and tuners a set of goto lockers.
If I went to Carvin I could come close to being able to build what I want off the site right now.
 
Re: If you were to own signature guitars, which would they be?

This isnt necessarily true I used to have a 92 Futura Pro that was red lacewood neckthrough and sexy as hell.

Probably a transition model. Mine was a 91, IIRC. It's also possible, if the trussrod cover on yours said Futura Pro, and you bought it used, someone switched them out.
 
Re: If you were to own signature guitars, which would they be?

Lets see

SRV Strat
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Jeff Beck Strat
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George Lynch Skulls and Snakes ESP
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Warren DeMartini Crossed Swords Charvel
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Ace Frehley Les Paul Custom
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Re: If you were to own signature guitars, which would they be?

I'd love to have a Languedoc. But realistically, either an EBMM or Chet Gretsch.
 
Re: If you were to own signature guitars, which would they be?

I would love an Albert Lee EBMM, or an early 90's Jeff Beck Strat with the HUGE neck. I bought a PRS SE Mike Mushok bari because all the reviews I read/watched were great . . . I don't listen to Staind and have no idea what he sounds like, only because I listen to a lot of Tool and Meshuggah which pretty much ruins it for anyone else in the Metal department (except for Sabbath, of course). I kinda wish I went for the silverburst, but I'm glad I didn't. This guitar is awesome . . . .


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I hope you guys found this 'helpful' .....

OH YA and any of the American PRS Santana's
 
Re: If you were to own signature guitars, which would they be?

The James Burton Tele with strat and s1 switch wiring.

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with mother of peral tuning keys.

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Re: If you were to own signature guitars, which would they be?

I'm certainly not opposed on principle, to having sig models, but the important thing is that it has to be a guitar that I'd want to play on its own merits. I've owned a JEM and a Korean Wolfgang. Both were great guitars. I sold them for many reasons but mainly so I could fly to New York and meet Michael Buble at a taping of The Today Show.

I'd love to have a Malmsteen Strat. It has just about everything I like in a Strat, and I'd use it for anything Strat-related, short of those times I'd want a humbucker in the bridge.

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I've always liked the Jeff Hanneman signature ESP models. They're just simple and functional -- neck-through superstrat, 81/85, Kahler. Years ago I put $300 worth of EMG stuff into a Music Yo! Kramer that I bought for about $110; it's a great player, just living its life and occasionally dreaming of one day waking up as a $3,000 ESP.

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