Peter Frampton's LPC Found after 32 years

Re: Peter Frampton's LPC Found after 32 years

Pretty nice of those guys. I wonder if they gave it to him or sold it back to him.
I hope they at least got some backstage passes for their help!

Great story though. I hate hearing about people losing their prized instruments or worse having them stolen. It is great to hear there are still people that are willing to do the right thing.
 
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Re: Peter Frampton's LPC Found after 32 years

If you really want to read about the process and the updates on the guitar then you should check this out

http://www.mylespaul.com/forums/vintage-les-pauls/170645-framptons-54-custom-found.html
My god I couldn't possibly read past page 8. Putting aside the fact that these guys give a new meaning to the word geek, half of them are (being) complete d-bags so full of themselves...

Honestly I consider myself a polite person but if I ever were to sign up there (can't imagine why since I really don't care for LPs but for the sake of argument) I wouldn't last a week before getting banned for going all-out on some guy's face for that holier-than-thou attitude...
 
Re: Peter Frampton's LPC Found after 32 years

To answer some of the questions above.
From as far as I could keep on reading, the guys that found it were re-reimbursed for the money they had to pay to buy it from its' current owner (about 5000 USD or sth) PLUS a brand-new Gibson LP.

The guys at the thread found A LOT of discrepancies on that guitar but also found indications that the guitar had been rebuilt, probably by Gibson themselves sometime in 1978 with all-new hardware, fretboard and fretboard binding.

The sneakier of them came to the conclusion that the whole deal might had been kept on the down-low from PF's side either out of fear that the guitar might have been included by a sleazy lawyer in his divorce proceedings or, out of fear of an equally sleazy insurance agency claiming rights to the guitar in case they had paid for its' loss.

That's all I could get out of that thread, it was REAL tiring trying to keep up with it in amidst all the know-it-all comments...
 
Re: Peter Frampton's LPC Found after 32 years

It is cool also that Frampton bought it back for some cash and another guitar.
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To keep it short: they recognised the guitar so they put in some effort to buy the guitar, and it was succesfull. The also contacted Frampton and he is gonna buy the guitar back from them, and they will receive some money + cool Gibson guitar for the both of them.
 
Re: Peter Frampton's LPC Found after 32 years

"...also found indications that the guitar had been rebuilt, probably by Gibson themselves sometime in 1978 with all-new hardware, fretboard and fretboard binding."

Look up Gibson's own description for the Frampton signature Les Paul, which was written before the guitar was found. They state that the guitar had already been converted to three pickups and refinished by Gibson before it came into Frampton's possession in 1970. May or may not be what those guys were talking about. But if anything was done to it in '78, Frampton would surely know, as it was still in his possession at that time.

P.S. I just read on the previous page that someone involved in the search seems to be saying that it was actually a '57. So in that case, not much was changed on it at all.

Makes me wonder about Gibson's claim that the guitar was a '54 that was factory updated at some point before Frampton got it. It seems to be partially made up. Here is how they describe the sig model:

"After paying his dues with Humble Pie and years of solo touring and recording in the late ’60s and ’70s, young British guitar star Peter Frampton hit it huge in 1976 with the release of Frampton Comes Alive, the biggest selling live album of all time. And as every one of the more than 10 million fans who bought it in its first year of release alone could tell you, you only needed to fold down that double-album cover to see Frampton wailing on a black, three-pickup Les Paul Custom. Players by the score ran out in search of their own version of that Les Paul Custom, the instrument in Frampton’s hands widely assumed to be an original 1960 model, but its origins, and its journey to the star’s hands (and out of them once again), reveal some unusual twists and turns. During the first night of a three-night stand in 1970 opening for the Grateful Dead at the Fillmore West in San Francisco while still playing with Humble Pie, Frampton was having trouble with howling feedback from his semi-hollowbody guitar on the big stage. A fan named Mark Mariana approached him after his set on the second night, said he’d noticed the hassles the guitarist was having, and provided a solution: if he wanted to, Frampton could play Mariana’s solidbody Les Paul Custom for the third night at the Fillmore. He delivered the instrument, which looked for all the world like a 1960 Custom, but was in fact a 1954 Custom freshly back from the Gibson factory, where it had been given a new coat of ebony black lacquer, new frets, and three humbucking pickups to update it to contemporary specs. Frampton bonded with the guitar instantly. It not only cured his feedback problems for the closing night of the run, it proved the most tuneful, expressive guitar Frampton had ever played. When he offered to buy it after the set, Mariana said that, no, he wouldn’t sell it—he would give it to Frampton. And through that unprecedented act of generosity, a re-born 1954 Les Paul Custom became one of the most iconic guitars of the decade.

"Sadly, Frampton’s original Comes Alive Les Paul Custom was lost in 1980 when a cargo plane crashed in Venezuela. But Gibson’s Custom Shop raised it from the ashes in the form of the Peter Frampton Les Paul, a guitar crafted in the image of the 1954/1960 Les Paul Custom, but with a few new twists to the artists specifications. Wearing a high-gloss ebony black “black beauty” finish, gold-plated hardware, multi-ply body and headstock binding, and the decorative mother-of-pearl “split-diamond” headstock inlay and block position markers in its ebony fingerboard, the Peter Frampton Les Paul is the spitting image of the original. At Frampton’s request, however, it benefits from a slim-carved neck profile for optimum speed, and a weight-relieved mahogany body and carved solid maple top that both lighten the load and enhance the tone. A classic Tune-o-matic bridge and stopbar tailpiece pairing keep things tight, resonant and sustaining, while three open-coil humbucking pickups of Frampton’s own specification—a 57 Classic in the neck position, a 57 Classic Plus in the middle, and a 500T in the bridge—provide all the tones, from sultry to sizzling, that this virtuoso guitarist is known for. As a high-caliber instrument, the Peter Frampton Les Paul naturally comes with a Custom Shop hardshell case, along with a Certificate of Authenticity and Gibson’s Limited Lifetime Warranty.

"Check one out today at your authorized Gibson dealer, and prepare to let your tone come alive."
 
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Re: Peter Frampton's LPC Found after 32 years

Cool story. Hope they "unveil" the guitar once Gibson gets done w/it. You know a Limited Edition Model will come out reliced and all sooner or later. ;)

I was lucky enough to see him at a small outdoor venue this summer on the Frampton Comes Alive Anniversary Tour. Very cool show and he covered a lot of classic as well as newer material. Well worth seeing if you are a Frampton Fan.

I can just see the front page of Gibson's website: The Peter Frampton Caribbean Classic Les Paul.
 
Re: Peter Frampton's LPC Found after 32 years

this baffles me...

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neck pickup says Duncan Custom ?
 
Re: Peter Frampton's LPC Found after 32 years

neck pickup says Duncan Custom ?


Hamer put/s them in the Monaco Elite's. If I was a shred dude I probably would have kept it, as it was pretty good for that kind of thing, but the magnet pull was through the roof- when I swapped out for PAF styles, it was like I had a brand new (better playing) guitar.
 
Re: Peter Frampton's LPC Found after 32 years

Hahaha... No. I wouldn't have put it on a plane. Or I'd take something different.

Haven't put guitars on a cargo plane, but regular passenger flights are fine. Of course, his particular LP being a bit iconic, well....

Itsa, interesting stuff!
 
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