Introducing The Joe Bonamassa 1950 Broadcaster Pickup Set

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Seymour Duncan, a leading manufacturer of guitar and bass pickups, effects pedals, and pedal amps, is proud to introduce The Joe Bonamassa 1950 Broadcaster® Pickup Set, which faithfully captures the iconic tone of an original Fender Broadcaster from Joe's collection. With Alnico 2 and Alnico 4 magnets, they evoke the essence of the earliest amplified guitars. Handcrafted in the Seymour Duncan Custom Shop, the first 250 signed and aged sets will be a limited edition. zz0.jrsltko9jukzz

In the history of electric guitars, few are as iconic as the Fender Broadcaster®. As few as 250 of these instruments are believed to have been built from the fall of 1950 to the spring of 1951, before Fender transitioned the model to what we all know as the Telecaster® at the end of 1951.

To say Broadcasters® are incredibly rare is an understatement, and to find one in pristine condition is an even greater challenge. Lucky for all of us, our friend and vintage guitar authority Joe Bonamassa had a very special one in his collection with a tone so remarkable that he wanted to share it with the world. Carefully testing and documenting the original guitar’s pickups, the Seymour Duncan team was able to faithfully recreate the sound and look of Joe’s coveted 1950 Fender Broadcaster®.

The Joe Bonamassa 1950 Broadcaster® pickups are a faithful replica of the set found in this guitar. Joe describes the neck pickup as bright and perfectly balanced with the punchy flat-pole bridge pickup. Authentic to Leo Fender’s original design, these pickups evoke the early days of blues, rock & roll, and country.

Built in the Seymour Duncan Custom Shop, this set features Alnico 2 magnets in the neck, Alnico 4 magnets in the bridge, and cloth push-back cable. The raw steel bottom plates of the first 250 sets will be signed by Joe and Seymour W Duncan and will also be aged to match the original set from Joe’s guitar.

These sets will be numbered in limited edition packaging.

After the 250 limited edition sets have sold out, Joe and the Seymour Duncan Custom Shop will offer these pickups as built-to-order models.


 
the dck on these suggest the neck is 42 gauge wire, i wonder if the bridge is as well or if its 43
 
the marketing is over the top for sure, i just saw something about a joe b ugly christmas sweater... :earl:

he can play the hell out of the guitar though
 
I don't know what the quality is like with the products he sells, but these sound about as good as a Tele can sound. We are lucky that he curates his collection and provides access to iconic pickups that can be cloned.
 
I don't know what the quality is like with the products he sells, but these sound about as good as a Tele can sound. We are lucky that he curates his collection and provides access to iconic pickups that can be cloned.

I have to agree...it's kind of awesome that he helps these iconic sounds live on by making them available to the rest of us mere mortals :)
 
I don't know what the quality is like with the products he sells, but these sound about as good as a Tele can sound. We are lucky that he curates his collection and provides access to iconic pickups that can be cloned.

Yeah, I like that too. He's an admitted gear nerd and loves doing this stuff. His live tone blows me away. I have 3 of his live albums. Total monster player and love his phrasing. Been studying it some since I joined the blues/rock band I'm in. There's some elements of his style that works great with our stuff.
 
the fact he actually gigs with his vintage instruments makes me happy. some rich dude keeping a '59 lp in a glass case to show off to his friends seems like a waste of an iconic instrument that was built to make music
 
Agreed. And it's not just a few of them. He has like half a dozen or more out there with him unless it's a fly gig thing.
 
Most people who would own valuable vintage guitars like that wouldn't let you take the pickups apart to see why they are special.
 
im sure everything they do is non-destructive, even to the point of not breaking intact factory solder joints since that could knock thousands of dollars of value off a vintage instrument
 
im sure everything they do is non-destructive, even to the point of not breaking intact factory solder joints since that could knock thousands of dollars of value off a vintage instrument

Oh, I am sure they are super careful. But I couldn't see any other famous vintage instrument collectors allowing this.
 
its a cool thing joe does for sure and im happy he has partnered with duncan for so long on so many awesome products! while his non-gear stuff is what it is, his gear endorsements are all really good stuff.
 
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