Guitar Archeology

Tag: Richard Green

Led Zeppelin Seattle Center Coliseum March 17, 1975

by admin on Feb.13, 2010, under Stories

Here are a couple pics of Led Zeppelin at the Seattle Center Coliseum taken March 17, 1975 by Richard Green.

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Paul Revere and The Raiders at The Target Ballroom, Burien Washington 1963

by admin on Jan.17, 2010, under Stories, Uncategorized

Paul Revere and The Raiders at The Target Ballroom in Burien Washington, 1963

Check out those Epiphones !

Another Great Photo by Richard Green !

Paul Revere and The Raiders

Paul Revere and The Raiders

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1959 Gibson ES-140TC

by admin on Jan.15, 2010, under Book, Mick's Vintage Guitars

Here’s a nice one you don’t see every day.

A near mint 1959 Gibson ES140TC.

Another nice photo by Richard Green.
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Gibson ES-5

by admin on Oct.15, 2009, under Mick's Vintage Guitars

Here is a picture Richard Green took of the 1955 Gibson ES-5, that came thru.

1955 Gibson ES-5

1955 Gibson ES-5

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Mario Maccaferri Model G40 Plastic Guitar

by admin on Oct.12, 2009, under Mick's Vintage Guitars, Uncategorized

“Mario Maccaferri, a former concert guitarist and French reed maker, immigrated to the United States in 1939. While he continued his reed making in the United States, difficulty obtaining the reed itself led him to devise reeds made from plastic, a material that caught his attention at the New York World’s Fair in 1939. He filed a patent
application for the novel reeds in 1941, and it was awarded the following year. Maccaferri soon began producing other plastic consumer products, including clothespins, hangers, plastic tiles, acoustic tiles, and later 8-track and cassette housings. Before the war, Maccaferri had designed a guitar for Selmer, Paris, which became famous as the guitar of choice for jazz artist Django Reinhardt. In 1949, Maccaferri combined his interests in musical instrument design with his expertise in plastic to produce the Islander Ukulele, the first plastic stringed instrument. Priced at an affordable $5.95, the instruments were highly commercially successful. In 1953, Maccaferri introduced his plastic guitars, which were not meant to be a cheap substitute for a wood guitar, but rather a highly functional instrument that happened to be constructed from plastic. In 1964, the name of the company was changed from French American Reeds Manufacturing Company to Mastro Plastics Corporation. By 1969, criticism and slow sales caused Maccaferri to cease production of his plastic instruments, the rights to which were sold to Carnival Industries, which never elected to manufacture the instruments. Following his retirement in 1981, Maccaferri continued pursuing his interest in plastic instruments with the development of a plastic violin, which premiered at Carnegie Hall in 1990. Maccaferri died three years later at the age of 92.”

http://orgs.usd.edu/nmm/PluckedStrings/Guitars/Maccaferri/10458/G40Guitar.html

Mario Maccaferri G40

Mario Maccaferri G40

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1960 Fender Esquire

by admin on Oct.09, 2009, under Uncategorized

Here is a nice pic taken by Richard Green of a 1960 Fender Esquire.

As we were getting ready to shoot the picture of the guitar, a train appeared in the tunnel !

You can see the light reflecting off the tracks.

1960 Fender Esquire

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