


It's a '65 LG1 that I got used in 1974 for my 8th birthday. It was $70. Just a plain and simple blues guitar. I took it to Carlo Greco, Manny's luthier back then, in 1984, and he redid it. I practically lived on 48th St in those days. Mohogany bridge added, and intonation and scale length properly compensated. Pickguard removed to improve brightness. Nut handcut by Carlo. I've owned several- Lg1's and Lg2's ranging from mid 40's to '65 pictured. This one is special though. Not just because of the history, it has a voice if you know what I mean.
My whole point is that in many ways this guitar represents the acoustic incarnation of the Telecaster. I wish I could buy a G&L acoustic that incorporated this kind of thinking.
ANyway, fantasy I know, butI thought I'd share cause it's on my mind. My son's birthday is coming up and I went to GC tonight and played about 10 guitars in the humidor. I'm not going to trash any brands here, but there was practically nothing under $1000 worth a damn. If I'm going to fork out for something with as much long term value as my dad did for me, I wish it could be a G&L.
-Tim
BTW- 1.75 nut, 2.375 bridge, 12" radius, 25.4" scale, narrow bout, 4" depth. Mohogany sides and back, spruce top and rosewood fretboard. A very fast neck, even with pretty high action- narrow for some people's taste, but the 50's models has 1.875" for a nut width- preferred by most collectors, and I just like the feel of narrow and tall, as opposed to the other way around. almost the same thing I like about my ASAT's (basically) '52 neck. Narrow at the nut and tall, so my thumb doesn't cramp up. Widening out significantly at upper frets, and thus plenty of space available at the higher frets. Kinda a tele neck really.