The Telegram (St. John's)

Hitting a sour note

Iconic guitar maker Gibson seeks bankruptcy protection

- BY JONATHAN MATTISE

The maker of the Gibson guitar, omnipresen­t for decades on the American music stage, is filing for bankruptcy protection after wrestling for years with debt.

A pre-negotiated reorganiza­tion plan filed Tuesday will allow Gibson Brands Inc. to continue operations with $135 million in financing from lenders.

Gibson guitars have been esteemed by generation­s of guitar legends. After Chuck Berry died, his beloved cherryred Gibson guitar was bolted to the inside of his coffin lid. David Bowie favoured the 1989 Gibson L4 when he fronted Tin Machine. Slash swears by them.

“It is one of the most widely recognized brand names on planet Earth,” said George Gruhn of Gruhn Guitars, a world-famous vintage instrument store.

Gibson, founded in 1894 and based in Nashville, Tennessee, has the top market share in premium guitars. It sells more than 170,000 guitars a year in more than 80 countries, including more than 40 per cent of all electric guitars that cost more than $2,000, according to a bankruptcy filing.

The company has already sold off some noncore brands, acquisitio­ns that contribute­d to its burdensome debt load. Gibson has begun the liquidatio­n process for its debt-plagued, struggling internatio­nal Gibson Innovation­s division, which sells headphones, speakers, accessorie­s and other electronic­s.

“The decision to re-focus on our core business, musical instrument­s, combined with the significan­t support from our noteholder­s, we believe will assure

the company’s long-term stability and financial health,” Henry Juszkiewic­z, Gibson chairman and CEO, said in a news release.

Gruhn, an expert on guitars of all kinds, said the company’s bankruptcy was predictabl­e after it expanded into the home electronic­s business. But that doesn’t mean the Gibson brand will simply go away, Gruhn added.

“The brand name and company’s reputation for making guitars is tarnished, but not dead by any means, and it’s very much capable of being resuscitat­ed.”

In the hands of musicians from B.B. King to Eric Clapton, Jimmy Page, Duane Allman and Slash, Gibson’s electric guitars

have been a foundation­al element of blues and rock. King’s signature guitar, “Lucille,” was a Gibson.

Legendary jazz guitar player Charlie Christian made history playing a Gibson ES-150 - one of the first ever electric guitars - through an amplifier with the Benny Goodman orchestra. The later big-bodied Gibson jazz guitars have been in the arsenal of many great players since then, such as Wes Montgomery and Joe Pass.

One of the only known photograph­s of iconic Delta blues pioneer Robert Johnson shows him with a Gibson L-1 guitar.

And folk-revival of the 1950s and 60s wouldn’t have sounded quite so mellow without battalions

of steel-string Gibson acoustic guitars among the Martins and Guilds.

Elvis Presley didn’t start out with a Gibson but owned and played many of them, according to the website for Graceland, his Memphis home.

Eric Clapton played the solo on the Beatles’ “While My Guitar Gently Weeps” on a Gibson guitar he borrowed from George Harrison, according to Guitarworl­d.com. And Jimmy Page, the legendary guitarist for blues rockers Led Zeppelin, was and remains a longtime Gibson loyalist.

“It’s hard to name any guitar players who play electric or steel-string acoustics who don’t own a Gibson,” said Gruhn, the Nashville guitar expert.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? In this 2016 file photo, Henry Juszkiewic­z, CEO of Gibson Brands, poses for a portrait with a Gibson Custom L-5 guitar during the official opening of the European hub of Gibson Brands at the A’dam Tower in Amsterdam, Netherland­s.
AP PHOTO In this 2016 file photo, Henry Juszkiewic­z, CEO of Gibson Brands, poses for a portrait with a Gibson Custom L-5 guitar during the official opening of the European hub of Gibson Brands at the A’dam Tower in Amsterdam, Netherland­s.

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