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  2. Washburn Guitars - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Washburn_Guitars

    Washburn has been building stringed instruments since 1883. … 130 years of history is at the root of our strong foundation building high quality instruments. [6] However, there is no direct connection between the original Washburn brand and the modern Washburn International.

  3. Oscar Schmidt Inc. - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oscar_Schmidt_Inc.

    Oscar Schmidt was a musical instrument manufacturing company established in 1871. During its long existence, Oscar Schmidt has produced a wide range of string instruments, not only guitars but also numerous models of parlour instruments such as autoharps, celtic harps, guitar zithers, the "guitarophone" (a zither/metal-disc playing hybrid), [3] marxophones [4] and bowed psalteries (or "ukelins").

  4. U.S. Music Corporation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/U.S._Music_Corporation

    U.S. Music Corp. is an American musical instrument company based in Buffalo Grove, Illinois, United States, a suburb of Chicago, [1] that manufactures and distributes products worldwide. The company is currently a subsidiary of Canadian corporate group Exertis | JAM.

  5. Talk:Washburn Guitars - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Washburn_Guitars

    Washburn was a brand owned by Lyon & Healy; the current Washburn organization has little in common with the original beyond ownership of the brand name. There's a lot of interesting guitar and music-biz history around the Washburn brand--certainly more significant than which rocker has a promotion deal with the current trademark owners.

  6. Washburn N4 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Washburn_N4

    They have 22 frets, unlike Nuno's original which had 24, and feature an original Floyd Rose bridge, a birdseye maple fretboard, the original 1 + 5 ⁄ 8-inch (41 mm) nut width and the original N4 neck profile. Manufactured in relic and non-relic versions. A Washburn N3 can be seen in the official music video of Extreme's "Decadence Dance".

  7. William Foden - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Foden

    Foden is quoted in Washburn and Lyon & Healy catalogs from 1892 to the early 1900s. Within he states, "For an absolutely correct scale, ease in playing, volume and purity of tone, I consider that the Washburn instruments have no equal." [5] However, he began ordering Martin guitars for himself and his students at the beginning of the century ...