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The real legend at a price real people can afford. |
The Fender Standard Stratocaster Electric Guitar is the guitar design that changed the world. A select alder body, 21-fret, one-piece maple neck with a maple fretboard, 3 single-coil pickups, vintage-style tremolo, and die-cast tuning keys.
At this low price, why play anything but the real thing?
A really versatile and great-sounding Strat for a very affordable price.
€ 325,-
used.
SOLD!
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Authentic Fender design, upgraded throughout. |
Step up to the Squier Standard Stratocaster Electric Guitar. The vintage style tremolo provides smooth motion and superior tuning stability—modeled on the Fender American Strat, as is the 22-fret fast-action neck. 3 alnico single-coil pickups blast out classic Strat tones.
Squier by Fender Standard Stratocaster made in Japan Electric Guitar Features:
- Agathis body
Polyurethane finish
Maple, C-shaped neck
22 medium-jumbo frets
Rosewood or maple fretboard
Dot position inlays
3 alnico magnet single-coil pickups
5-position blade pickup switch
Master volume, neck tone, middle tone
Synchronous twin-pivot tremolo
3-ply pickguard
Chrome hardware
Die-cast tuners
Made in Japan
Now you can have a really sweet-playing Strat for a really sweet-sounding price.
€ 850,-
OCCASION
near mint condition
RESERVED!
JJ Original Single-cutaway 12string
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A swinging guitar with a twist. |
The combination of the Lipstick tube pickups and twelve strings give this instrument a heavenly tone. A wider than standard neck width and low action make this instrument a dream to play. Playability, tone, and looks...jangle on!
2PU.model....
Jerry Jones Guitar 12 String single cuataway with 2 Pickups Features:
• nut width is 1 23/32"
• 25" scale length and a 21 fret neck
• Indian rosewood fingerboard w/14.5" radius
• trussrod adjustment accessible at the heel
• quality enclosed Gotoh® tuning keys
• standard 5way switch on 3PU models
• hum canceling pickup wiring
• our own balanced Lipstick tube pickups
• quality Gotoh® bridge w/individual string adjustment
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Nashville Factory Closed!
Jerry Jones is retiring and the Nashville factory is now closed. If you are interested, this might be the last one you can get your hands on! |
~ They don't make 'em like they used to ~ ™
€ 1498,-
DEMO
IN STOCK!
You won't really be able to appreciate the magnificent tone and workmanship of this stunning classic until you hold it in your hands.
The Heritage 535 is based on the much loved ES-335, made in the original Gibson factory in Kalamazoo this guitar plays and sounds every bit as good as it looks!
In the traditional Cherry finish, this guitar has beautiful flamed maple all round.
Every guitar player need this guitar like a builder needs a hammer!
Heritage H535 Electric Guitar Features:
24 3/4” scale
22 fret bound rosewood fingerboard
Seymour Duncan Antiquity Pickups
dot inlays on one piece mahogony neck
18" long semi-hollowbody
16" body with 1-5/8" rim
laminated cream bound curly maple top
and back withsolid curly maple rim.
Incl. Hardcase
How it all began..
Heritage Guitar Inc. of 225 Parsons Street in Kalamazoo, Michigan was incorporated on April 1, 1985. The company is going on 25 years old, it has achieved the status of one of the premier guitar companies in the world today. It is, in many instances, the new guitar line handled by countless vintage shops throughout the world. This indicates it is thought of as the collectible guitar of tomorrow.
The idea to start Heritage Guitar began when the Gibson Guitar Corporation closed its Kalamazoo, Michigan factory in September of 1984 and moved all production to its other plant in Nashville, Tennessee (in operation since 1975). When this took place, some of the employees were asked to move to Nashville. However, since their families had spent many years in Kalamazoo, it made it difficult to uproot and move. Therefore 3 men, Jim Deurloo, Marvin Lamb, and JP Moats, decided to start a guitar manufacturing business. In 1985 when the company was incorporated, 2 other former Gibson Guitar Corporation employees, Bill Paige and Mike Korpak, joined as owners. Mike left the company in 1985.
The founders biggest resource is and was the group of craftsmen they could draw from to begin operations. The owners themselves each had in excess of 25 years of hands on experience in making guitars. To this day each of the owners is directly involved in the manufacturing of each instrument.
Heritage started operations in the oldest of five buildings formerly owned and operated by Gibson Guitar Corporation. That building was completed in 1917 and has been a center for guitar manufacturing ever since. Much of the machinery that Heritage uses today, was purchased from Gibson Guitar Corporation.
The first guitar Heritage introduced was the H-140 solid body single cutaway electric guitar. This model was shown at the NAMM show in June of 1985.
Since that time Heritage has added many instruments. Currently Heritage manufacturers Custom Carved Hollow Body Guitars, Semi Hollow Body Guitars, and Solid Body Guitars. This is to say nothing of the countless number of custom instruments made in each of the groups previously mentioned. Banjos, Mandolins, Flat Tops, and Basses, are no longer being produced because of the demand for the guitars mentioned in the above 3 categories.
Heritage is proud of its older employees’ with 25 years of average experience and what it has accomplished in 24 years. Heritage is also training younger luthiers to learn this fine art of craftsmanship.
€ 895.-
USED.
SOLD!
Shergold Guitars, or Shergold Woodcrafts Limited, was established in October 1967 by former Burns London employees Jack Golder and Norman Houlder. Based in east London, the company moved from Forest Gate to Harold Wood in 1973.
Initially they concentrated on producing woodwork for other companies, principally for Dallas Arbiter under the Hayman brand (until 1975); for Jim Burns himself under the Burns London banner; "Ned Callan" and Rosetti. When the contract for the Hayman guitars came to an end, the Shergold company found themselves with significant stocks of part finished instruments and raw materials. With this stock they launched their first guitars under their own brand name from late 1975.
Shergold concentrated on guitar production until 1982, when a downturn in the guitar market (especially for home grown instruments) meant that they returned to general custom joinery producing furniture, and only undertaking guitar work on a custom order basis. In 1983, Norman left the company to emigrate to Australia, but would return to the country (but not to Shergold) within a few years. In 1991, Jack began making new Shergold guitars - the Limited Edition Masquerader - due to a rising interest at that time in British guitars from the 1970s. This revival was short lived, as Jack died in 1992. The Shergold company closed shortly afterwards.
Shergold had an eye for innovation - pioneering features that would be used by other manufacturers (bi-directional truss rod, semi through body neck joint on the Cavalier), and others that have surprisingly been forgotten (interchangeable control electronics on the Modulator series). These features were always tempered by a tendency towards clumsy styling - bodies were slab sided, the juxtaposition of arcane Blackletter script on modern instruments, and the quirky logo of a man carving a guitar body all contribute to a style that was often criticised by contemporary reviews, but now has an authentically 1970s retro feel.
Notable players of Shergold instruments include:
- Mike Rutherford of Genesis, who had a set of double neck Modulators custom made in 1977 which could be split in half and interchanged
- Tim Smith of Cardiacs
- Bernard Sumner of Joy Division and New Order
- Gillian Gilbert of New Order
- Peter Hook of Joy Division and New Order, plays six string Marathon basses
- Julian Cope, plays various Custom Doubles
- P. Paul Fenech of psychobilly band The Meteors
- Marty Willson-Piper of The Church
- solo experimental guitarist GP Hall (who plays a modified Shergold six-string bass with a half-fretted, half-fretless neck)
- Gary Marx of The Sisters of Mercy played a Masquerader
Weer zo'n waanzinnige gitaar van de meester himself: Peer Dellen.
De gitaren van deze man zijn langzamerhand een begrip in Nederland en zelfs over de landsgrenzen.
Heritage Cherry Sunburst,natuurlijk gelakt met cellulose.
Swamp ash body met een quilted maple top,
22 frets neck met maple fretboard, big headstock.
Kinman pickups, Wilkinson tremolo & Sperzel mechanieken, graphtech topnut.
Tel dit bij elkaar op met de craftmanship van de heer Dellen, wat krijg je dan?
Een waanzinnige strat!
€ 998,-
USED.
IN STOCK!
Another awsome guitar by master luthier Peer Dellen.
Peer Dellen is based in the Hague, but he´s known for his craftmanship all over the world.
1957 vintage reissue, limited edition gold,
Gold anodized slagplaat, Rio Grande Quarterpounder pickups,
One piece maple V-shaped neck.
Strat zoals een strat moet klinken!
SN: V114930 (1999)
€ 1798,-
USED
IN STOCK!
Gibson Marauder uit de seventies made Kalamazoo, USA.
Maple neck, rosewood fretboard, 22frets.
Machineheads: Grover.
Black, tortoise pickguard, chrome hardware.
# 00186864
Super gitaar voor een normale prijs.
Top conditie voor een gitaar van 33 jaar oud!
€ 798,- incl case
USED
SOLD!
Beroemde Ibanez copie uit de seventies.
Nicely aged, # K760895, Made in Japan.
Super 70's pickups. Machineheads, non original
Electronics, customized. Aged gold hardware.
€ 498,-
USED
incl. case
IN STOCK!
Massieve mahonie body met massieve AAA Carved Flame Maple top;
gelijmde mahonie hals met palissander toets en Fighter Wing inleg
Twee Londen City Alnico humbuckers met toggle switch;
1 volume + 1 tone regelaar
Houten binding rond de body, hals en kop; Deluxe fixed bridge;
gegoten Grover oliebad-mechanieken; hardware verguld
Transparante laklaag met luxe Pearloid inleg langs de bindings
Kleur: Amber
€ 550,-
DEMO
IN STOCK!






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