Why I Can't Stop Playing This Guitar

Музыка

Check out the FREE Fretboard Fundamentals E-Book HERE:
rhettshullguitarcourses.com/p...
-Some Hollowbody Recs-
150th Anniversary Epiphone Zephyr Regent (affiliate link)
sweetwater.sjv.io/k06QZL
Gretsch G5420TG-59 (affiliate link)
sweetwater.sjv.io/eKzJgO
Guild X-175 Manhattan Special (affiliate link)
sweetwater.sjv.io/DKoAOy
Gretsch G6122T-62GE Vintage Select Country Gentleman (affiliate link)
sweetwater.sjv.io/rQMeLG
Curtis Novak's New Yorker pickup article
www.guitarworld.com/features/...
This video reveals six reasons why jazz guitars excel across various music genres, from blues to funk, and even as a studio secret weapon. Whether you're recording or simply playing at home, you'll be surprised by the versatility and unique tones of a jazz guitar.
👉 Highlights:
Blues Powerhouse: Perfect for achieving warm blues tones.
Funk’s Best Friend: Ideal for crisp, rhythmic funk lines.
Fuzz Lover: Handles fuzz effects like a champ, enhancing your sound.
Studio Secret Weapon: A favorite among producers for its rich sound.
Acoustic/Electric Versatility: Offers the best of both worlds with its hybrid sound.
The Ultimate Couch Guitar: Comfortable and great for casual playing.
💬 Join the Conversation! Do you use a jazz guitar in non-jazz settings? Let us know in the comments!
🔔 Stay Updated: Subscribe and hit the bell to get alerts on new videos about guitar gear and music tips!
🎵 Whether you're a seasoned guitarist or exploring guitar types, find out why a jazz guitar might be your next great musical addition. Watch now and expand your guitar horizons!
#JazzGuitar #GuitarGear #MusicTips
0:00 Intro Jam
2:04 Why I picked this guitar
2:55 We have a vintage one
3:23 Thanks to Sweetwater
3:56 Ambient jam
4:22 Why are these "jazz guitars"
5:20 Its a great Blues guitar
6:15 They're great for Funk
9:05 They love FUZZ
10:10 They're a studio secret weapon
11:24 Acoustic/Electric sound
12:15 It's a great couch guitar
13:17 Let's hear the 1950
14:55 Outro

Пікірлер: 470

  • @Burnt_Gerbil
    @Burnt_Gerbil22 күн бұрын

    I inherited my Grandpa’s 1960 Gretsch 6124 single anniversary guitar. He put a ton of psychedelic stickers on the case. The case handle broke and he made one out of an old leather belt. It is so cool.

  • @ehmmmjay9907
    @ehmmmjay990722 күн бұрын

    I'd love to see an in depth video of you making an intro track by yourself, especially some recommendations on laying down drums without drums or a drummer.

  • @unusefull

    @unusefull

    22 күн бұрын

    neeeeed!

  • @mikerinard6496

    @mikerinard6496

    22 күн бұрын

    Second that, good video idea

  • @kyteluna

    @kyteluna

    22 күн бұрын

    He talked a bit about sampling drum loops in an earlier videos, been doing that a lot and it helped me write a good few fun things

  • @fathuman

    @fathuman

    22 күн бұрын

    EZ Drummer baby!

  • @mannes3721

    @mannes3721

    21 күн бұрын

    Yes 🙌

  • @craigbrowning9448
    @craigbrowning944822 күн бұрын

    These types of Guitars were popular for Rockabilly, similarly the recently deceased Duane Eddy Also if you've seen the film "Concert At Big Sur," everyone in CSNY were playing similar guitars.

  • @aroe3896

    @aroe3896

    22 күн бұрын

    Just what I was thinking. One could do a whole episode on guitars used in Rockabilly and by the incomparable Duane Eddy. And good catch on CSNY at Big Sur. Stills and Young are crushing it with their big Gretsch's. Same during Buffalo Springfield. And Ted Nugent still rocks hard with Gibson Byrdlands.

  • @allendean9807
    @allendean980722 күн бұрын

    1. Two minute intros rule. 2. Epiphone is really killing it lately. 3. If you don’t like Epiphones, D’Angelico make absolutely fantastic big body guitars. As a lefty, buying sight unseen is simply the way things will always be, and having been disappointed at 3 NAMM shows, because no one carries lefties at their booths, D’Angelico always have a wide selection of lefties to play at their NAMM booths! Fantastic guitars, if the Epi isn’t your thing, or if left handed models aren’t available 4. Great video, as always!!

  • @mikewhitfield2994

    @mikewhitfield2994

    22 күн бұрын

    Plus D'Angelicos are regularly blown out at near half price or even less. I picked up a Bedford SH recently for $479, little more than half its "normal" $899 price tag, and it's a fantastic guitar. Indonesian built, flawless finish and workmanship, sounds great with a wide range of all usable palettes and plays even better. I'm thinking now that my next may be a D'Angelico hollow body, as I have several semis but no true hollow body. (Well, one old Greco but it needs more work than I can do.)

  • @kevinmackfurniture

    @kevinmackfurniture

    22 күн бұрын

    🤘🏻😝 SURLY UNDERSERVED LEFTIES UNITE !!... 10% of the U.S. population is left handed... 1% of guitars produced are lefty . Fully half of Fenders total lineup, only comes Right handed.

  • @scottlewis4387

    @scottlewis4387

    22 күн бұрын

    Love my lefty D'Angelico DC Premier (an ES style guitar, but still)!

  • @allendean9807

    @allendean9807

    22 күн бұрын

    @@kevinmackfurniture the thing that drove me nuts about NAMM shows was that the companies who produce left handed guitars, ESP, fender, Gibson, dean, Ibanez, etc., none of them bring lefties to their shows. I think it’s an esthetic choice- having all the pretty guitars going the same direction- but, man. Can’t try out amps, pedals, modelers, nothing. That’s why i loved the D’Angelico booth so much. They always had at least five different lefty versions of their models. I will say, in 2016, Fender really put in the effort; one strat, one tele. Ugh!!

  • @feddomeijerwiersma6955

    @feddomeijerwiersma6955

    21 күн бұрын

    You are dead right on #1. See also Chris Buck’s Rickenbacker opening jam.

  • @AnniottOfficial
    @AnniottOfficial22 күн бұрын

    That intro has all the knee-slapping, head-bopping, stank-facing vibe. Technically speaking of course

  • @JeremyAndersonBoise

    @JeremyAndersonBoise

    22 күн бұрын

    ^ science

  • @freesk8

    @freesk8

    22 күн бұрын

    Almost Pink Floyd-like?

  • @pedroalvarado3614

    @pedroalvarado3614

    22 күн бұрын

    whitch what pedals can i create this sound?

  • @kylegraham2166

    @kylegraham2166

    22 күн бұрын

    This 👆🏼

  • @JedrekVRoscoe

    @JedrekVRoscoe

    21 күн бұрын

    It was very MuteMath

  • @WilliamHaisch
    @WilliamHaisch22 күн бұрын

    I find it funny that guitar choice in different genres was mostly due to what the artist had access to or could afford. Then that style of guitar is the “right kind” for that genre for future generations. (Bringing a double neck SG to jazz jam night - from a Kieth Williams 5 Watt World story). 😂

  • @norseman61

    @norseman61

    22 күн бұрын

    I was thinking the same thing. I was also thinking how incredible some of those greats from the past would have sounded given the choices that are available now. People are always fawning over vintage guitars, but in large part, they sucked in many ways… including tone. Even this big box Epi (and I mean BIG) sounds kind of blah.

  • @autodidacticprofessor869

    @autodidacticprofessor869

    22 күн бұрын

    Jazz guitars feed back easier, are "wooly" in terms of tone and rock n roll guys like treble and cut. They just didn't appeal to rock and roll and electric blues guys as much. They're also not nearly as comfortable to play for extended periods on stage.

  • @ChuckNicholsonTRM

    @ChuckNicholsonTRM

    22 күн бұрын

    @@norseman61man! Have you been around the wrong vintage guitars then.

  • @jackmaniacmusic

    @jackmaniacmusic

    22 күн бұрын

    I mean that’s absolutely the case for punk, artists like the sex pistols used what they could get their hands on, and to this day, juniors and specials are integral touchstones for the genre.

  • @garydiamondguitarist

    @garydiamondguitarist

    19 күн бұрын

    Absolute truth - most if not all of my favourite players made use of what they had available, including in a more extreme example, part of an old fireplace for the Red Special, the rare case of a guitarist building their own from the ground up. Rarely do they ever covet pristine vintage remortgage your house type guitars; the closest I could find was Graham Coxon buying something from Vintage & Rare in London and remarking it was cheaper because it was badly refinished etc. Coveting gear can be fun, but not if it's at the expense of playing what you have. All those hours spent online gear hunting and not buying, are hours that could have been used to practice and get better sounds that way, from your fingers using better technique. I'm sure most players with access to the Internet have been down the GAS rabbit hole, and to be honest less really is more, the 5WW Keith maxim "the most music with the least gear".

  • @gregallen4855
    @gregallen485521 күн бұрын

    Thanks for shouting out Ella, she is a marvellous guitarist !

  • @monty5692
    @monty569222 күн бұрын

    As already noted, Killing Joke's sound was centred on a Gibbo ES295, and then there's The Cult with Billy Duffy playing a Gretch White Falcon. Surprised that these examples (and others) didn't get a mention, Rhet, as it would help better illustrate the broad range of usefulness that you were trying to explain! 🤷‍♂️ BTW, I have two Antoria "Jazz-Star" guitars (the 'poor-man's L5' made in the 1980s), I switched the pickups for Irongear "Rolling Mill" PAF-style pups (poor man's Seymour Duncans 😄), cut down and drilled the hardwood bridge to take a tuneomatic and put Grover tuners on. They are awesome guitars, and the pair of them together probably only owe me about a grand!

  • @imaginaryboy4390

    @imaginaryboy4390

    19 күн бұрын

    Agree, such a Geordie tie in opportunity.

  • @user-pq9ji7kt4l
    @user-pq9ji7kt4l22 күн бұрын

    Dude! I saw you play that at Sweetwater! You were nice enough to stop and say Hi!

  • @risteardohaodha23
    @risteardohaodha2322 күн бұрын

    First player that came to my mind: Geordie Walker, guitarist for Killing Joke, who played a hollow Gibson ES-295. It wasn’t Jazz 😎 May he rest in peace 🙏🏼

  • @Mullewarp

    @Mullewarp

    21 күн бұрын

    Ted Nugent also used a hollow body guitar. A Gybson Birdland. An he played hard rock.

  • @stephanewoodcock1798

    @stephanewoodcock1798

    2 күн бұрын

    It was also my first thought. Yes these guitars can be pretty versatile!!!

  • @hsmoscout
    @hsmoscout22 күн бұрын

    electrified archtop guitars were indeed "all [jazz guitarists] had access to," but they also partially exist because of jazz guitarists! big band music was getting popular and with bigger and bigger ensembles being put together, jazz guitarists started getting drowned out, especially when it came time for them to solo, so there was a growing demand for amplified guitars, met by companies like gibson who basically just slapped a pickup on the archtops the jazz players already used. plus it should be noted that part of why they're still considered jazz guitars is because jazz guitarists prefer the more subdued and "woody" tones you tend to get compared to a solid body as you mentioned, which is the same reason 1920s jazz guitarists preferred the archtop acoustics over flattops

  • @paristhalheimer
    @paristhalheimer22 күн бұрын

    Things I learned about guitars: 1. The genre is defined by the equipment. 2. Equipment is not defined by the genre. 3. Genres are not a "tone." (e.g., there is no such thing as a blues "tone." "What Strat pickup should I get for a good blues tone? questions drive me crazy. SRV certainly left his mark.

  • @hyrumjensen4712

    @hyrumjensen4712

    22 күн бұрын

    How to get a good blues tone: Listen to Freddy King, B.B. King, Sister Tharpe, etc. Play like that on whatever gear you have.

  • @paristhalheimer

    @paristhalheimer

    22 күн бұрын

    @@hyrumjensen4712 there are so many great blues players, and each has their own style and tone.

  • @davidkeller6156

    @davidkeller6156

    22 күн бұрын

    I bought an ES-335 in 1970 for my first electric because….B.B. King. Still prefer semi-hollow bodies to this day

  • @hyrumjensen4712

    @hyrumjensen4712

    22 күн бұрын

    @@davidkeller6156 same reason I got an ES-125 with my enlistment bonus.

  • @hyrumjensen4712

    @hyrumjensen4712

    22 күн бұрын

    @@paristhalheimer I did add et cetera…

  • @jaydenanderson53
    @jaydenanderson5321 күн бұрын

    Bro, my favorite thing about this channel is how Rhett gets in his bag for every opening track. Absolutely fire 🔥🔥🔥🔥

  • @QuincyJamesMusic
    @QuincyJamesMusic22 күн бұрын

    Most forget that some of the most Iconic guitar parts were made on these types of instruments. Think about Izzy Stradlin with his ES-175 on AFD, Alex Liefson with his ES-335 in early Rush, even Steve Howe used his ES-5 SWITCHMASTER on Roundabout.

  • @alanhaynes418

    @alanhaynes418

    15 күн бұрын

    Steve Howe played an ES175 I think you will find - it was Frank Zappa who played an ES-5 Switchmaster until the gigs got too loud and feedback became a problem.

  • @g10ronaldinho
    @g10ronaldinho22 күн бұрын

    My dude, do you ever turn these intros into full fledged songs? They are amazing, and a different vibe from what you play with your band. What do you do with them?

  • @jasoncarlson4769

    @jasoncarlson4769

    21 күн бұрын

    Needs to be inspired

  • @PaulMatthewMusic1
    @PaulMatthewMusic122 күн бұрын

    Khruangbin would be proud of that intro!

  • @mistadobalina3495

    @mistadobalina3495

    21 күн бұрын

    Rhett has been really influenced by this band judging by his last videos and playing styles/tones/genre. Love it!

  • @christopherweise438
    @christopherweise43822 күн бұрын

    Killing Joke's entire sound was based on Geordie using a fully hollow ES-295.

  • @williestyle35

    @williestyle35

    20 күн бұрын

    Thank you for mentioning Killing Joke

  • @garydiamondguitarist

    @garydiamondguitarist

    19 күн бұрын

    Yes and due to his setup and rig and playing, it sounded awesome. He was right - semi-acoustics can be huge for heavier kinds of music. I believe any guitar can work for anything if you're resourceful enough as a player.

  • @philipmarsh3522

    @philipmarsh3522

    19 күн бұрын

    That is quite intriguing. I haven’t listened to that band in forever … like decades. So, obviously I will now spend a couple weeks obsessing, again, on a band I loved during my college days (finally past the Sundays and the follow up of trying to figure out where the heck they went … seriously, that band just disappeared completely).

  • @fredherfst8148

    @fredherfst8148

    19 күн бұрын

    Hey..I have had a 295 for 60 years. It'll have to be sold at some point. Sad. PS. feedback was not my friend

  • @markhammer643
    @markhammer64322 күн бұрын

    Before it got stolen, I used to own a late '50s Epiphone Windsor. It had one of those New Yorker pickups. And before I gave the pickup to Mark Knopfler, I took it apart to see what made it tick. I don't have DNA evidence but those ivory surrounds probably *were* ivory in the older unit. The one I took apart certainly showed indications of being organic matter and not simply molded plastic like humbucker pickup rings. And, speaking of humbuckers, those pickups may kinda sorta LOOK like mini humbuckers, but they are single coils. Don't let the row of adjustable screws on the older unit fool you. Look long and hard enough, and you realize there is absolutely no room for a 2nd coil under them. And you're right. The New Yorker pickups have much in common with gold foil pickups, in that the base plate is folded upwards along one edge and that's what the screws go into.

  • @ChuckNicholsonTRM

    @ChuckNicholsonTRM

    22 күн бұрын

    The original 1950s versions of the pickups are single coils, but the new versions are mini humbuckers.

  • @markhammer643

    @markhammer643

    21 күн бұрын

    @@ChuckNicholsonTRM That may be why they don't have a row of adjustable screws. Moving them further away from the edge, in order to make room for that second coil, would have looked odd and (pardon the pun) "blown their cover". That said, as different as the New Yorker pickups were, when you have a guitar with that overall construction, the specific pickups only make a small contribution to any distinctive sound. I'm sure the mini-buckers sound just fine, even if they aren't historically accurate.

  • @ChuckNicholsonTRM

    @ChuckNicholsonTRM

    21 күн бұрын

    @@markhammer643I think the pickups can make the plugged in sound of an archtop drastically different. I’m not a fan of the original NY Tone Spectrum pickups, so I have no problem with the use of minihumbuckers.

  • @brendancleary9490

    @brendancleary9490

    14 күн бұрын

    I have a hagstrom viking II that has silverfoil mini humbuckers that are splittable and they sound so great in either mode.

  • @demirkaancoskuner9456
    @demirkaancoskuner945622 күн бұрын

    intro jams are amazing

  • @SeanOHanlon
    @SeanOHanlon22 күн бұрын

    The second you switched to the bridge pickup all I heard was a straight up Telecaster. That '49/'50 Epiphone has a beautiful sound. 👍

  • @Joe-pb3lx
    @Joe-pb3lx22 күн бұрын

    I'm a luthier and I'm starting to see a pattern.......necks that are set deeper into the guitar body not height wise but length wise seem to sound better......im going to try something and see what happens

  • @melich_5

    @melich_5

    22 күн бұрын

    Thats why neck through guitars exist

  • @madsam7582

    @madsam7582

    22 күн бұрын

    My design was a bolt on neck that was securely bolted to a center block. I think center block hollow bodies are probably the best sounding and most versatile.

  • @johnandre5558

    @johnandre5558

    22 күн бұрын

    Check out the bolt on neck in the new Eastman electric. Cool idea.

  • @thomasd9237

    @thomasd9237

    22 күн бұрын

    Yep, just look at the Firebird ☺️

  • @thahacksaw

    @thahacksaw

    22 күн бұрын

    To add to the list above, Mulecasters have the neck wood running thru the hollow steel body. Fun vibe

  • @johnpearson5000
    @johnpearson500022 күн бұрын

    The Decemberists were the band that got me into hollow body guitar originally. Shakey Graves brought a lot of new ideas to the instrument also when he was a one-man band.

  • @olddogguitars23
    @olddogguitars2322 күн бұрын

    I bought a Godin 5th Ave Kingpin P90 from Sweetwater a couple of months ago and really love it. As you said, it makes a great couch guitar.

  • @jeffreyjkkelly2520
    @jeffreyjkkelly252022 күн бұрын

    Full-bodied hollow F hole guitars are awesome for all styles of music. My 1938 Gibson L5 GUT guitar gets better with age while played.

  • @Rockfish66
    @Rockfish6622 күн бұрын

    Timely! I just bought a Gretsch and agree with all you said. These guitars are limited only by your imagination! Surprised you didn't even mention Scotty Moore, Chet Atkins, George Harrison, etc.

  • @KevinMerinoCreations
    @KevinMerinoCreations22 күн бұрын

    Love the intro jam! I appreciate the historic notes woven into the video and the sound checks you run the equipment through. The recording of the Acoustic/Electric sound definitely brings a different level of engagement in the overall mood! 👏👏👏

  • @braddietzmusic2429
    @braddietzmusic242921 күн бұрын

    I have an Epiphone Zephyr Blues Deluxe. With the fully hollow construction and three dog ear P90s it is a very different beast than any other guitar I own. It’s acoustic resonance is halfway between my semi-hollow and acoustics. It’s action and playability is very much electric guitar style. When the strings are brand new and bright, it really has an acoustic guitar flavor. When the strings are dead, it has a wooly Jazzbox flavor. I think that more than with any other guitar, the string type and condition affect the sound of this guitar. I haven’t played my Epiphone Zephyr Blues Deluxe at all recently, but I’ve been meaning to. Your video is inspiring me to pull it out again. Great video promoting the flexibility of the hollowbody electric guitar, and a breath of fresh air in the KZread video world of solid body and semi hollow videos. Thank you. Ps: It would be great if you A/B demo/tonal comparison between the original and the current recreation, considering that the pickups have different construction??? Thank you.

  • @AdamLevyGuitarTips
    @AdamLevyGuitarTips19 күн бұрын

    Beautiful, Rhett. Some of my favorite archtop players who aren't specifically jazz: Eric Gale (with the band Stuff); Freddie Stone (with Sly & The Family Stone); and Leo Nocentelli (early recordings with the Meters).

  • @frankrussell4664

    @frankrussell4664

    9 күн бұрын

    You hit all the guys I was thinking of too!

  • @TheSundayParty1
    @TheSundayParty121 күн бұрын

    I was lucky enough to inherit a 78 Ibanez FA-100 from my grandfather when he passed, love that guitar it’s by far my favorite instrument I own and play. I play a lot of rock, punk and folk on it and absolutely love it

  • @phildavison319
    @phildavison31919 күн бұрын

    I wanted to buy something like that years ago when I couldn't afford to. My guitar of choice was a Gretsch because of various people but mainly Duane Eddy. They were also one of the rockabilly guitars of choice as well as being jazz boxes. Anyway, one day I was feeling down so I walked from my office to Regent Sounds in Denmark Street (I chose them because the Rolling Stones recorded their first album there) meaning to play a guitar with no intention of buying it an picked up one of the Indonesian Gretsch hollow guitars with Broad'Tron pickups instead of Filter'Trons. Of course I fell in love with the sounds I could get without using pedals so I bought it. It is the best decision I ever made as far as guitars go. I also quit the job that was making me depressed so, win-win! Like you, every time I look at the thing I want to pick it up and play it and it is something that can be played without being amplified and which sounds good even unplugged.

  • @eldorod
    @eldorod21 күн бұрын

    I just bought a Guild Manhattan 175B, from Sweetwater by the way. and I can't put it down. I've always wanted a big box guitar since I saw Scottie Moore playing one when I was a kid.

  • @jonathanlunneberg1722
    @jonathanlunneberg172222 күн бұрын

    Hollow bodies are where it's at. I picked up an Ibanez AMH90PBM a few months ago. I love it and no I don't really play jazz.

  • @spineonthepine4933
    @spineonthepine493321 күн бұрын

    JUST picked this guy up and love it. Cool to see a jazz box featured. And sustain on that thing is insane.

  • @richardroyster6631
    @richardroyster663121 күн бұрын

    Being a collector since 1971, I am down-sizing my equipment. I am not so sure one needs any more than an acoustic and an electric. I do like jazz boxes, which are also Blues boxes and have had three for over thirty years. But I also do not play them often and fortunately did not mortgage my house on a L-5. My feeling these days is that one guitar is a luxury and more than one, more luxurious. Collecting guitars is clearly better than collecting guns, ( I have many friends into that). These days I am reducing having more stuff. More is not better it is simply more. I played with the Meters, they did not have much equipment, just talent.

  • @duckyjp17
    @duckyjp1721 күн бұрын

    Really great use of effects throughout. You can really feel how much this guitar inspires you.

  • @sickenzzzzz
    @sickenzzzzz22 күн бұрын

    Such a nice vibe on that intro jam!

  • @robslater5528
    @robslater552815 күн бұрын

    Had a '52 Zephyr Regent Deluxe. Incredible box! Thanks for doing this updated review!

  • @TinyNormous
    @TinyNormous22 күн бұрын

    Always thought I wanted an ES335... until I wrapped my hands around a Gretsch. 4 of them around the house now. I play almost 0 jazz on them and they absolutely scream. Been waiting for one of the large guitar voices on here to make this vide. THANK YOU!!!

  • @googo151
    @googo15118 күн бұрын

    Holy f...king s... Rhett! This thing is "FIRE"! What a track and opening to this feed. Wow! Where there is smoke there is fire my brother. This has it all dude.

  • @MangoJerry93
    @MangoJerry9318 күн бұрын

    Man that intro song is everything! Those sounds you got are so unique ❤

  • @doctorbeakman
    @doctorbeakman21 күн бұрын

    The music you played in this video were all suuuper nice, thanks Rhett!

  • @TomConklin
    @TomConklin20 күн бұрын

    Thanks for this video! I’ve been considering adding the Zephyr to my collection…after seeing and hearing you put it through its paces…I will be picking one up!

  • @Robowx
    @Robowx22 күн бұрын

    Rhett, I have a Gibson ES 165 Herb Ellis, a Epiphone Joe Pass and a Gretsch Tennessee Rose. So I think I'm covered.

  • @SSquirrel1976
    @SSquirrel197621 күн бұрын

    Used to own a Casino and need to re-buy it sometime. Such a great unplugged sound and the P90s are always great. Tom Petty talks in a documentary about how most of his sitting around playing and a lot of his studio playing was actually a Casino. I've never really wanted the big jazz box style, the Casino always felt like a better in-between.

  • @FabrizioCalderara76
    @FabrizioCalderara768 күн бұрын

    This video is very revealing, thanks a lot Rhett!

  • @fankhauserg
    @fankhauserg9 күн бұрын

    One thing I like about these guitars and semi-hollow bodies is that you can feel what you play through your chest. They vibrate more. They also have a more mid or boxy tone, which fits some styles and are good for controlled feedback and endless sustain. I usually play rock through solid bodies (Teles, etc.) but always love picking up my old Sheraton.

  • @HeyLiem
    @HeyLiem20 күн бұрын

    When I see those giant Gibson Hollow body electrics, I immediately think of the big loud rock of Ted Nugent in the 1970s! I have my 1989 Gibson 335 dot for the same reasons, I know it's no Byrdland, Les Paul, but it's the biggest Gibson Hollow I could afford. I love it because it inspires loud rock as well as pretty acoustics through the amp. Hey Rhett Shull, these hollow bodies can feedback easily, maybe it's worth an episode of how to avoid feedback at high volume, and also perhaps how to sculpt feedback, à la sonic youth, etc.

  • @frankrussell4664

    @frankrussell4664

    9 күн бұрын

    Also, a mention of plywood vs. carved tops. The plywood tops are much better in a band situation where the guitarist needs to get over a drummer.

  • @JillandKevin
    @JillandKevin10 күн бұрын

    I had a blonde '51 Zephyr Deluxe Regent for several years. I used it in many Western Swing and older Jazz/Swing shows. I was sad to have to sell it when my wife (amazing vocalist) and I sold our houses and hit the road in our travel trailer eight years ago, and just didn't have room for all our guitars. I also had a blonde '51 Triumph Regent as well during that time period. Sadly, it's gone as well!

  • @littlerattyratratrat
    @littlerattyratratrat22 күн бұрын

    Glad you demo'ed it with a fuzz pedal! Been hearing rockers jamming out on White Falcons, lots of noise, very musical feedback...just always sounds great.

  • @joshuamiranda1825
    @joshuamiranda182522 күн бұрын

    I’ve been looking at this guitar for like 6 months. Cool to hear it!

  • @Impractical_Engineer
    @Impractical_Engineer22 күн бұрын

    I used to have a D'angelico Excel Throwback Archtop which was top notch. Ended up selling it for a Heritage H530. The H530 being Hollowbody has it's own vibe but has the essence of a full sized jazzbox. I really enjoy the Hollowbody experience.

  • @jondickers156
    @jondickers156Күн бұрын

    i love watching these kind of video because you can see were the music comes from and how it's made and damn that guitar was awesome thanks for doing this

  • @thomasd9237
    @thomasd923722 күн бұрын

    Yep. Need one. or two... ☺️ Cool song. Thanks for covering this topic 👍👍

  • @tomdecuca3627
    @tomdecuca362717 күн бұрын

    I can see that you like it- it inspires your playing, I can hear it. I have been looking at one of those myself.

  • @4CornersCat
    @4CornersCat22 күн бұрын

    Back in the early 80s these guitars were so out of fashion, you could find wonderful Gibsons at bargain prices. Unfortunately, I didn't. Jump ahead forty years and I bought an older Samick. It's a great addition to my guitar sound pallet. Thanks for showcasing this type of guitar!

  • @guitarswhiskeyandgolf
    @guitarswhiskeyandgolf20 күн бұрын

    I just picked up a Hollowbody Guild Newark St X175 B man totally digging it and this Epi sounds fantastic

  • @jye.acoustic
    @jye.acoustic22 күн бұрын

    I put phosphur bronze strings on mine 👍 warmer tone as the humbuckers only pick up the steel core on wound strings. Had mine over 20 + yrs now.. personally best of both worlds between acoustic & electric.. more versatile. Wouldn't have another solid body guitar. I have that exact style of guitar but mines an old Gould 355. Try it with Martin phospur bronze strings... i think you'll be pleasantly surprised 👍🤗

  • @billowspillow
    @billowspillow21 күн бұрын

    One of my all time favorite albums is called “Snakes in the Playground” by the band Bride. Stylistically it’s in comfortable company with late 80’s Guns n Roses. Loved it since I was in middle school and I’ve never outgrown it. Many years after the fact as I became a guitar player, I was shocked to see that the lead guitar played big hollow body Epiphones like this. It’s a rare thing in that genre and scene.

  • @NickAdelman
    @NickAdelman21 күн бұрын

    you should totally release these jams... that jam would be in my constant rotation on my spotify

  • @samuelcauthorn
    @samuelcauthorn18 күн бұрын

    Love the opening jam! Wicked guitar tone

  • @TommyCrossen
    @TommyCrossen14 күн бұрын

    Seen lots of your intros and this is one of the sickest

  • @rowbags3017
    @rowbags301722 күн бұрын

    Gorgeous example clips! Really inspiring! 😎

  • @Olibertau
    @Olibertau22 күн бұрын

    Hi Rhett. As you ask, I have an Eastman AR380CE HB John Pisano, excellent jazz guitar, that I use for other kinds of music. It's excellent with fuzzy or distorted sounds and also for ambient.

  • @kyteluna
    @kyteluna22 күн бұрын

    my friend’s dad has a big Orange Gretsch, the guy uses it for techno believe it or not. But it’s such a different kind of playing! Absolutely love picking it up from time to time when I’m at his place

  • @stevemehan7276
    @stevemehan72764 күн бұрын

    OMG that 1949 model … amazing tone!

  • @JeremyAndersonBoise
    @JeremyAndersonBoise22 күн бұрын

    Loving the fuzz, delay and shimmer on the intro piece. It is also a fact that I live similar sounds from my rig, so I guess this isn’t exactly big news. Love the guitar a lot!

  • @littlecrow6484
    @littlecrow648415 күн бұрын

    Yes. That guitar , like MOST Epiphones , is absolutely a Work Of Art. Like all the old Gibson hollowbody and semi-hollow guitars ;i.e. Switchmaster , ES335 , L 5 , etc. are the most beautiful instruments ever sculpted. And I must include Guild and Gretsch too. Thanks for the post and you've convinced me to go to Sweetwater and make purchase.

  • @reenchanted
    @reenchanted22 күн бұрын

    I’ve got an Ibanez semihollow and love it. The neck pickup into a Fender tube amp is like melted butter.

  • @timhenes4555
    @timhenes455522 күн бұрын

    I LOVE the style your playing and sound develops into lately🤘🏻🔥 More experimental with effects, and you also seem to develop more of an unique Sound

  • @johnfrei9057
    @johnfrei90579 күн бұрын

    Great song! Great playing!

  • @harmonic3350
    @harmonic335020 күн бұрын

    Nice intro man and tasty blues licks. Hollow body's been on my mind for awhile now, dont push me over the edge ;)

  • @billwagner5870
    @billwagner587019 күн бұрын

    I love them for rockabilly and Duane Eddy instrumentals

  • @beatlemike9
    @beatlemike920 күн бұрын

    I absolutely love the guitar mate, but as a Bass player....NAILED!!

  • @54macdog
    @54macdog22 күн бұрын

    Loved the brief clip of Sister Rosetta with a Gretsch. Get a 6120.

  • @craigclu
    @craigclu21 күн бұрын

    Thanks for this overview. I've got a couple jazz boxes and have always been amazed at how versatile they can be. I've got a D'Angelico EX-1 with a single floating humbucker and its simplicity is appealing and I can get surprising sorts of flexibility from it. An old Washburn J-7 has been a loyal friend for about 20 years and I swear one could use it for just about anything.

  • @paulmitchell5349
    @paulmitchell534911 күн бұрын

    Some of your best playing so far. Some real intention in there.

  • @stevehayick1789
    @stevehayick178922 күн бұрын

    Yes Rhett.. I love the sound and the feel of flats on a hollow body. Have been moving to hollow bodies with my last couple of purchases. The ones with rounds breakup nicely and can live on the hairy edge of feedback with out making me go deaf.

  • @user-vn5zz2iu1u
    @user-vn5zz2iu1u22 күн бұрын

    I bought one less than a year ago off of Reverb for the same reasons. Man these Epiphone's are a sound beast! You found some good sounds off yours. Way to go.

  • @UncleDansVintageVinyl
    @UncleDansVintageVinyl22 күн бұрын

    I picked up a D'Angelico Style B a few months ago at a Guitar Center: the new model with the DeArmond Rhythm Chief. I loved the sound--which can actually get pretty hot. I loved it so much that, a couple of weeks ago, I saw a used Style B "Throwback," with a Johnny Smith-style pickup mounted on the pickguard. The price was great; the color was a little different . . . so now I have two of 'em! Each sounds a little different, and they both sound great. And they're both just a ton of fun to play.

  • @brianmartin1139
    @brianmartin113922 күн бұрын

    that opening piece had an amazing vide. It reminded me of some of the late 80s atmospheric stuff. I could hear it on the Miami Vice sound track. Great word.

  • @matthewf1979
    @matthewf197922 күн бұрын

    I really like the lower end Gibson ES hollow body guitars. No binding or fancy inlays, but they have all the tone in the world. They’re like the Les Paul Jr version of an L5.

  • @DerekBolli
    @DerekBolli19 күн бұрын

    Sounds great. So inspiring 👍

  • @brendancleary9490
    @brendancleary949014 күн бұрын

    I just recently got a fully hollow body that i absolutely love the sound of. It isnt a super big jazz box, it's a hagstrom viking II but i love the mini humbuckers with coil split, and i play it acoustically all the time

  • @alexandresilva3427
    @alexandresilva342722 күн бұрын

    Your intros have been getting better and better with each video

  • @jroc2201
    @jroc220119 күн бұрын

    Excellent,well played

  • @smarmysmoove7731
    @smarmysmoove773117 күн бұрын

    That opening track has to be the coolest sound I've heard in at least five years. Tell me that's going to be posted somewhere.

  • @LMacNeill
    @LMacNeill22 күн бұрын

    The low frets on that 1950 model give it *almost* a fretless sound. When you would slide up and down the strings it was so *smooth!* What an amazing sound that thing has!! Damn, I wonder what one of those is worth?

  • @stephenlawn159
    @stephenlawn15917 күн бұрын

    Nice to see hollow body guitars getting a little air time. So many to chose from. Don't forget the Godin 5th Ave Kingpin and Kingpin II. Kingpin P90s have a very unique sound and the Cherry body is truly beautiful. There are also a few variants.

  • @ericoswood1856
    @ericoswood185622 күн бұрын

    I have that exact model guitar. Jazz guitars are a treat to play. Love the playing on this video.

  • @DennyBob521
    @DennyBob52122 күн бұрын

    I commented on your short, but didn't see this - holy crap, your bass playing is killer! I have an American Archtop/CF Martin CF-1 Hollowbody jazz box, I bought as an investment. I usually don't think of guitars as investments, but these were a really small run by a guy who makes $10k jazz guitars, offered by Martin for half that. I don't play jazz, and it's a bit cumbersome for a PRS player - so I don't play it much. My father was a regionally well known Jazz player back in the early 1960s in Boston, Joe Pass kinda stuff. He was proud I played, but didn't get the Steve Vai type stuff I was aiming for back then. One of the cool things about a some of the old hollowbodies is that nothing except the bridge touches the top. The pickup is attached to the end of the neck, which is where the pickguard is too, and the electronics are attached to the pickguard.

  • @mhowden
    @mhowden22 күн бұрын

    I have one of those! Good choice, it has clouds. Very inspiring instrument at an obtainable price.

  • @simonverkerk8392
    @simonverkerk839222 күн бұрын

    Rhett you spoke my language me playing a hollowbody but not for jazz, thanks for this segment!!

  • @davidkeller6156
    @davidkeller615622 күн бұрын

    Steve Howe of Yes used an ES-175. From what I’ve read he still uses the Gibson plus a Gretsch G6120 Chet Atkins signature model. I owned a Gretsch Chet Atkins for a while but didn’t like the Bigsby on it so sold it.

  • @brianwood7237
    @brianwood723722 күн бұрын

    Rhett, I completely agree I'd never owned a hollow body till several years ago when I bought 1989 Epiphone Emperor is which is the precursor to the Joe Pass model it is an amazing guitar I thought I wanted to learn fingerstyle jazz, however it just didn't take I'm just a slamming jamming kind of guy I love solid body Teles and Les Pauls....HOWEVER I have since fallen in love with this guitar nothing is ever played better smoother sounded warmer instead of playing an acoustic I pick it up just to play it is so amazing whether I'm playing Chuck Berry or rockabilly or even some ACDC riffs it just sings great episode my friend

  • @jacobbond835
    @jacobbond83522 күн бұрын

    Those guitars are great. However I don’t much care to reach around such big bodies. The 335 is about as big as I’m comfortable with. Fantastic intro.

  • @R3TR0R4V3

    @R3TR0R4V3

    22 күн бұрын

    Same here. 335s for the win 😎

  • @PastorShayne
    @PastorShayne20 күн бұрын

    I have one! I have super heavy jazz strings on it, and its great for rock

  • @gringogreen4719

    @gringogreen4719

    18 күн бұрын

    I play with 12s on my hollow bodies. Also I use heavy picks too.😎👍✨

  • @petegdula4749
    @petegdula474922 күн бұрын

    Love that 50's sound. Both are nice, really. Might be on my "gotta have" list.

  • @TbonePlummer
    @TbonePlummer21 күн бұрын

    When I see one I immediately think of Slash grabbing a 175 and laying down nasty filthy rhythm parts on that Ernie Ball documentary for World on Fire!

  • @mortonwilson795
    @mortonwilson79522 күн бұрын

    Both lovely guitars! That vintage is gorgeous . . . it's nice Epi are doing something like this now. I occasionally needed a convincing 'jazzy comping' sound for sessions back in the early '90s and bought a beautiful Korean made Epiphone Broadway which I treasure - very full bodied, moreso than the the 175s I tried back in the '70s (cos, you know, Steve Howe!)! It didn't take long to have fun going for jangly Rickenbacker sounds and terrific bluesy riffy stuff with it. So, yup, every home should have one! 😀

  • @tylerscott9329
    @tylerscott932920 күн бұрын

    That intro should be in a video game sound track. It gave me some Hades sound track vibes and would be killer for a battle theme.

Келесі