Guitarist

Huw Price’s NittyGritty

Mini-humbuckers

Gibson acquired the Epiphone company in 1957, along with all the tooling, and shipped everything over to Kalamazoo when production ceased on the East Coast. At that time, the quality of Epiphone guitars was on a par with Gibsons and – according to Gibson’s current vice president of product, Matt Koehler – Epiphone was purchased in order to tap into new markets.

Epiphones couldn’t be seen as mere rebranded Gibsons, and one way to establish the difference was to equip them with an exclusive pickup. Earlier in the 1950s, Epiphone had developed a single-coil pickup with off-centre pole screws and a rectangular metal cover. Gibson’s later PAF humbucker looked a bit like a scaled-up version of Epiphone’s ‘New York’ pickup, so it has been suggested that Gibson decided to develop a scaled-down humbucker that would retain the Epiphone look and slot into the body cutout with minimal adjustment.

One way to establish the difference of Epiphones was to equip them with an exclusive pickup

The resulting mini humbucking

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Guitarist

Guitarist9 min read
Top 40
This issue, Guitarist magazine turns 40. It’s a milestone in a person’s life, let alone a monthly magazine devoted to oddly engaging chunks of wood and metal and the people who play them. But, such is the nature of guitar that a lot can change even w
Guitarist8 min read
Mdou Moctar
Back in the 60s, the template for a protest singer was set as an earnest fingerstyle folkie, regaling a cross-legged audience in a Greenwich Village coffee house. 5,000 miles away, and a half-century later, Mdou Moctar didn’t get the memo (in fact, a
Guitarist2 min read
The Modern World
Priced the same as the high-end Epiphone models, such as the Kirk Hammett ‘Greeny’ 1959 Les Paul Standard, the Lite is a very stripped-back thin-bodied LP with a standard-radius rosewood fingerboard. There are no pull-push switched extra sounds here,

Related Books & Audiobooks