Guitarist

1961 LES PAUL SG STANDARD

- Words Jamie Dickson Photo Neil Godwin

Its sharp horns seemed to belong to the Devil’s orchestra, not the polite jazz scene of the early 60s. As a statement of intent, the SG’s radical styling succeeded – but maybe not as first intended. The design was swiftly disowned by Les Paul, though it was supposed to be his signature instrument. Rejected by its patron, the SG grew up in the shadow of its iconic sibling, the Les Paul Standard, becoming the anti-hero’s tool of choice from Angus and Iommi onwards...

There is no exquisite beauty without some strangenes­s in the proportion, Edgar Allen Poe once wrote. He wasn’t writing about guitars, to be sure, but those words seem made for Gibson’s SG… The guitars’ devilish horns arrest your attention straight away, but it takes a while to notice that the body is subtly offset, too. The carve on the top of the body is wider and more sensuous than the lower edge of the instrument. Everywhere on the SG you find asymmetry, contradict­ions. For example, the vibrato unit that was originally fitted to it was infamous for not working properly and yet the guitar’s balance isn’t quite right without it, because the SG was designed to have a counterwei­ght to its long neck behind the bridge. Oddities like this didn’t stop players becoming loyal to the SG over the years, though, from Robbie Krieger of The Doors to Derek Trucks. Perhaps its resistance to being easily categorise­d is really the secret to the SG’s longevity, for what can’t quite be pinned down can never truly go out of style. Want a guitar that wails like a Les Paul but weighs less than a Strat? Want to play everything from blues to metal on one guitar? The SG can handle it all. Like a black leather jacket, the SG fits in everywhere yet always retains a touch of renegade spirit. This is its story.

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