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  2. Gibson L6-S - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gibson_L6-S

    The Gibson L6-S is a solid body electric guitar. It was the descendant of the L5S jazz solid-body electric guitar.It was the same shape, very much like a wide Gibson Les Paul, but with a 24-fret neck, the first Gibson guitar to have this.

  3. Solid body - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solid_body

    The first commercially successful solid-body instrument was the Rickenbacker frying pan lap steel guitar, produced from 1931 to 1939. The first commercially available non lap steel electric guitar was also produced by the Rickenbacker/Electro company, starting in 1931 The model was referred to as the "electric Spanish Guitar" to distinguish it from the "Hawaiian" lap steel.

  4. Slingerland Drum Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slingerland_Drum_Company

    Slingerland Songster electric guitar (1936-39) Although the Slingerland company was best known as a drum kit manufacturer, it also made guitars in the 1930s. [ 5 ] The Songster electric guitar , featured in a 1939 company catalog, pre-dates Les Paul's "log" guitar and is probably the earliest Spanish-style solid-body electric guitar model.

  5. List of Rickenbacker products - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Rickenbacker_products

    MODEL B - Bakelite Steel Guitar ... (Full Size Solid Body) ... Electro Strings, Slides, Amplifier Covers, Amplifier Legs, Guitar Legs, Amplifier Tube kits ...

  6. Gibson SG - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gibson_SG

    The Gibson SG is a solid-body electric guitar model introduced by Gibson in 1961, [1] following on from the 1952 Gibson Les Paul. It remains in production today in many variations of the initial design. SG stands for "solid guitar". [2]

  7. Teisco - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Teisco

    Teisco guitars became notable for unusual body shapes, such as the May Queen design resembling an artist's palette, or other unusual features such as having four pickups (most guitars have two or three). The vast amount of controls; typically an individual switch for each pickup, plus a tone or phase inversion switch, along with as many as five ...