Iron1
AmbassaDOOM of Red VVinter
First guitar I ever played on stage was a Gibson Flying V - it belonged to a buddy who had let me borrow it for about six months while he moved cross-country. I tried to buy it from him but he wasn't giving it up. Never played a Gibson I liked after that. And, to this day, have zero interest in ever buying one. Funny thing is Ace Frehley is the one who made me want to play guitar, but I've only ever owned one Les Paul and I got rid of it as fast as I could...
Had this poster on my wall for years and years, like so many other 70s/80s kids.
For me, I think what really hurt them was losing control of some of their unique shapes like the Explorer and V. LTD makes a cooler Explorer body, as does Solar. Jackson has made better Vs since the early 80s, and now ESP, Solar and half a dozen others make V shaped guitars. No one seems to have cloned the SG because Angus Young hasn't been relevant in decades.
BC Rich managed to keep control of their unique body styles and now Warlocks are collectible and still embraced by new guitar players who want something extreme looking to play on. If a young player wants an Explorer or a V, they look elsewhere... And yeah, Les Pauls, Firebirds, Tele etc are GGs, so the average young player wants something that speaks their generation, not ours or our parents.
Gibson obviously makes a good product and has a very loyal following, but like anything else if they don't figure out how to attract new, young buyers, they'll go bankrupt from attrition.
Had this poster on my wall for years and years, like so many other 70s/80s kids.
For me, I think what really hurt them was losing control of some of their unique shapes like the Explorer and V. LTD makes a cooler Explorer body, as does Solar. Jackson has made better Vs since the early 80s, and now ESP, Solar and half a dozen others make V shaped guitars. No one seems to have cloned the SG because Angus Young hasn't been relevant in decades.
BC Rich managed to keep control of their unique body styles and now Warlocks are collectible and still embraced by new guitar players who want something extreme looking to play on. If a young player wants an Explorer or a V, they look elsewhere... And yeah, Les Pauls, Firebirds, Tele etc are GGs, so the average young player wants something that speaks their generation, not ours or our parents.
Gibson obviously makes a good product and has a very loyal following, but like anything else if they don't figure out how to attract new, young buyers, they'll go bankrupt from attrition.


