Nice story and guitar, Mr. Grumpy. Glad you found your "Number One....
I grew up in a recording studio, so I was literally surrounded by music and guitars. As a kid, I remember hanging out at Buck Owens Studio in Bakersfield and watching Roy Nichols and Terry Christofferson, who were always playing Telecasters, but I was drawn to Gibson's.
Then I saw Jimmy Page playing a double neck on TV and I was just mesmerized by it. To me, it was like seeing someone who had tamed a tiger. And the sound of the 12 string was just amazing.
Then, around 1976, I saw Don Felder playing one. I think what grabbed me so hard about Don was that he was dressed like me - jeans and a flannel shirt - I mean, i was just a farm kid who got teased at school for his clothes and this guy suddenly made me feel good about my farm wear....not to mention his phenomenal playing.
Double Necks were always a huge fascination for me and it was over 30 years before I ever got to actually pick one up in person. It was just a few moments of strumming, but it only added fuel to the flame.
For almost 30 years, I played a MIK Squirecaster because it worked and it paid the bills, but I always wanted something more.
I looked at quite a few Gibson double necks over the past year or so and i was shocked to see such a wide variation in neck profiles. A brand new 2017 EDS-1275 i saw last year at Gibson's showroom in Beverly Hills had a reasonable $7,500.00 price tag, but the six string side had that super-thin, 'slim taper' neck that I just don't find comfortable.
There was a Jimmy Page signature EDS-1275 there too, and it had a very nice, 50's style rounded profile neck, but the $15,000.00 price tag just wasn't reasonable in my mind.
I did look at a nice Epiphone G-1275, and while very reasonably priced, I just did not want a Made in China guitar. Not that there is anything wrong with Epiphone, but I wanted something American made, like the old Gibson's I grew up playing in the studio.
So, last year, I started doing research. I first got in touch with Simon Biggs from Gibson's Artist Relations Program and then ended up talking to the Custom Shop at Gibson. While very polite, it was also very clear that Gibson had no interest in building a one-off EDS-1275 with all sorts of custom dimensions.
Next, I called B.Hefner in Whittier, California, who had been supplying me with bodies, necks and doing great finish work for me. This turned out to be the open door I had been looking for.
Through a mixture of custom made parts and some sub-contracted work, I was able to have the double neck of my dreams. Everything I had learned over the years about guitars went into this project.
Experimental Tongue and Groove neck joints, a thicker, slightly larger body, huge neck profiles with twin volutes, thicker headstocks, 13 degree headstock angle on the 12 string side - 10 degree headstock angle on the 6 string side, ebony boards, hand-carved MOP truss rod covers, hand selected (heavily marbled) MOP inlays, my name on the headstocks in MOP and a super hard catalyzed polyurethane finish that looks dripping wet....literally every aspect of this guitar is custom in some regard.
I put almost 1/2 pound of copper tape in this guitar, shielding even the wire routes between the cavities. It is absolutely impervious to RFI/EFI.
To play it is just an amazing experience. It has this incredible resonance - as if its filled with angry hornets - and it is nearly as loud as an acoustic guitar unplugged.
It has been not only my single-most satisfying guitar experience, but it is also a most incredibly versatile guitar.
Despite its weight (11 pounds) and its tendency to neck dive, I still used it as a main guitar - with no backup - and it has proven itself to be reliable.
I've spent hours on end practicing while walking around with this beast, just to bond and get comfortable with it. I learned to use my right elbow to keep the body from rolling upwards while playing rhythym and I roll the necks vertical for soloing.
I am very happy with both my 2016 Gibson SG T Series and my 2016 Gibson Les Paul 50's Tribute, but there is definitely something special about this behemoth.
And although its purely aesthetic, I ordered a pair of MOP switch tips too...
