Australian Guitar

Subscripti­ons

FROM THE WAILING BLUES OF B.B. KING TO THE FIRESTARTI­NG FUSION-METAL THAT TOM MORELLO CUT HIS TEETH ON, PLAYERS OF ALL SHAPES, SIZES, SOUNDS AND STYLES HAVE USED THE GUITAR TO EXPRESS THEIR ECCENTRICI­TY. AND FOR OVER A CENTURY, THEY’VE BEEN DOING IT WIT

- WORDS BY MATT DORIA

Ever since the guitar was invented, players have gone to virtually unimaginab­le lengths to put their own personal touches on the instrument. There’s a whole world of variables to argue when it comes down to the specifics (whether we’re talking mass-produced axes or one-offs, luthier-customer deals or big-name sponsorshi­ps, homemade works and so on), but the first real “signature model” guitar can be traced back to 1913, when the Martin company developed a boutique acoustic to the specs of Hollywood-based teacher – and historical­ly significan­t virtuoso of her own accord – Vahdah Olcott-Bickford.

Gibson pioneered the trend of marketing signature guitars for big-name stage players, credibly lighting the spark in 1927 when they launched the Gibson Nick Lucas flattop. 1952 saw them make electric guitar history when they debuted the first ever Gibson Les Paul – a model type still at the tippy top of guitarists’ vocabulari­es today, and one that countless major label monsters and stadium-stuffing soloists have put their own spin on past Paul’s original, trapeze tailpiecef­lourished flair.

Over half a century later, and the signature model guitar has evolved into somewhat of a badge of honour for most famous players – official, brand-recognised certificat­ion that you’re a goddamn freak with a fretboard in hand, worthy of shredding it up with the big dogs. But there are thousands upon thousands of them on the market, now – having a signature guitar, while an enormous career milestone and certainly something worth boasting about for the rest of your life, isn’t the show-stopping, instant induction into the hall-of-fame that it once was.

Throughout history, there have been a stack of signature models and custom builds that not only wowed crowds at gigs and made the records they were played on that extra bit memorable, but have inspired hordes of wannabe virtuosos around the globe to chase their wildest six-stringed dreams – guitars that have become as much their own pieces of art as they are instrument­s to create it. This piece aims to celebrate some of those – a small handful of them, admittedly, but some that we look to as the finest examples of what players can do when they combine their talents as guitarists with their creativity as artists in general.

So, sit back, relax, read on through and start thinking about what your own once-in-a-lifetime custom guitar would look like. Who knows – it might just wind up in our follow-on story ten years from now! featured

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