Guitar Player

Gibson Custom Shop Murphy Lab

With its new flagship Murphy Lab, the Gibson Custom Shop clones golden-era classics, hand-aged by Tom Murphy.

- BY DAVE HUNTER

FOR SEVERAL DECADES , Tom Murphy has hand-aged Gibson Custom Shop guitars as an independen­t contractor, and has long been acknowledg­ed as the leader in that field. Now Gibson has embraced Murphy’s talents by creating a flagship collection in the form of the Murphy Lab, a department designed, trained and headed by the man himself. As the Gibson exec who pulled the “Let’s do it!” lever on the Murphy Lab, brand president Cesar Gueikian sees it as a crucial part of returning the company to what players are really seeking in a Gibson guitar.

“That’s why I thought the Murphy Lab was so important,” Gueikian tells us. “It started with the Custom Shop and redoing those collection­s, and having a collection that was a true representa­tion of cloned, original instrument­s by year. As for re-creating how those original vintage instrument­s from the golden era have gracefully aged, we wanted to take it up to the next level. And who could be better to lead that effort than Tom Murphy himself?”

In this way, Gueikian says, Gibson is paying tribute to Murphy as one of the pioneers — from Orville Gibson to Lloyd Loar, Ted McCarty and Seth Lover — who helped establish and retain the maker’s reputation for innovation. “It came out of Tom having to put a new neck on an original guitar made back in the ’50s,” he says. “He realized, ‘It plays great with a new neck, but it doesn’t look good.’ So he aged it. That’s where it all started, almost 30 years ago.”

The current project got underway about two years ago, when Murphy brought a guitar to Gueikian’s office. “Tom came to me and said, ‘I want to show you something,’” he recalls. “I opened the case and said, ‘Tom, wow! What a beautiful ’Burst!’ I thought it was a ’59, and he said, ‘This is a new guitar

I just made.’ I told him I wanted to build a lab for him to do this and for him to run the effort. It took a year to build and test it, making prototypes, and now it’s up and running.”

Ultimately, it was an insightful move. It was also a way for Gibson to wrest back production of the finest vintage-spec guitars from the sheds and small shops, where independen­t, often one-person operations have been creating reproducti­on ’59 ’Bursts that some players have been willing to pay upward of $10,000 to obtain.

The Murphy Lab test samples Gibson sent to us include a 1959 Les Paul Golden Poppy Burst Heavy Aged, a 1959 ES-355 Watermelon Red Light Aged and a 1961 ES-335 Sixties Cherry Ultra Light Aged. Since the aging process requires a lot of handwork, pricing increases per model according to the level of wear applied. To avoid the potential bottleneck inevitable in the effort to match a

customer’s model desires to bespoke levels of aging, Gibson has defined a specific menu of desirable Custom Shop models that will consistent­ly be making their way through the Murphy Lab. “We have a Murphy Lab collection of the greatest hits, so that you can grab any other guitar that’s not in there and apply the Murphy Lab treatment,” Gueikian says. “But 90 percent of the guitars people want are already in that collection, in the different aging treatments, so you don’t have to wait.”

The guitars passing through the Murphy Lab are also the most vintage-correct examples Gibson has produced, thanks to the Custom Shop’s applicatio­n of True Historic Specificat­ions devised over recent years. Accurate neck and top carves are based on meticulous digital scanning of originals, and it’s all put together with hot-hide glue, the way it was back in the day. Period-correct plastics include Royalite binding; pickup rings, pickguards and other bits made from cellulose acetate butyrate; and butyrate knobs and cellulose-nitrate inlays. Authentic ’50s tubeless truss rods are used for enhanced resonance and sustain, and pickups and electronic­s made true to late-’50s and early ’60s specs are standard for these guitars. Of course, the paint matters too, and correctly formulated thin, hard-curing nitrocellu­lose lacquer with no plasticize­rs — a finish that ages the way it did after being sprayed on Gibsons in the late ’50s — is also a must.

1959 LES PAUL GOLDEN POPPY BURST HEAVY AGED

As I opened the aged, brown Lifton case containing the Murphy Lab’s 1959 Les Paul, I thought, This must be what it was like for Gueikian when he checked out Tom Murphy’s ’59 Les Paul re-creation. If I didn’t know of Murphy’s existence and Gibson’s wholeheart­ed plunge into the Lab, I’d fully believe that someone mistakenly shipped a $350,000 vintage Les Paul ’Burst to me. This example displays the Lab’s Heavy Aged wear level, with dings, scuffing, checking and edge rubs, in a Poppy Burst finish, a shade from which the red has vanished on its way toward dirty lemon.

Not only do the finish quality and accuracy of the heavy wear compare to late-’50s ’Bursts that I’ve had the pleasure of playing but the guitar feels like the real thing, too. It’s all there: the hardness and texture of the finish, the discernibl­e texture of the wood beneath it, the rounded D-meets-C neck profile with just enough heft to really sink into the palm, and the angle and carve of the top arch. More importantl­y, when played unplugged, this Les Paul has the ring and snap of an old guitar (a flawless setup right out of the case certainly doesn’t hurt, either). It exudes the dry, lively, resonance that’s so difficult to get in a new instrument, of any quality, and that’s what really kicks it over the goal line for me.

Tested through a Friedman Small Box (Marshall 2204-style) 50-watt head and 2x12 combo, a custom tweed Deluxe-style 1x12 combo, and a Neural DSP Quad Cortex modeler into my studio monitors, this Murphy Lab 1959 Les Paul ably continued its heady trip through the time machine. The guitar’s period-correct constructi­on, light eightpound, six-ounce weight and Custom Bucker pickups work together to exude those seemingly contradict­ory blends of bite and compressio­n and snappy brightness alongside the lower-midrange grunt that a great vintage Les Paul with PAFs delivers, all couched in that indefinabl­e something that just makes you want to play and play. The experience was irreproach­able.

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 ??  ?? 1959 Les Paul Golden Poppy Burst Heavy Aged
1959 Les Paul Golden Poppy Burst Heavy Aged
 ??  ?? 1959 ES-355 Watermelon Red Light Aged
1959 ES-355 Watermelon Red Light Aged

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