When.com Web Search

  1. Ads

    related to: old hollow body guitars amazon

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Gibson ES-330 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gibson_ES-330

    The body was 19 in (48 cm) long, 16 in (41 cm) wide and 1.75 in (4.4 cm) deep. Initially the neck met the body at the 16th fret, rather than the 19th-fret on the ES-335. In 1968 Gibson changed the 330 to meet the body at the 19th. The 330 was hollow, whereas the 335 had a center block to prevent feedback.

  3. Semi-acoustic guitar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Semi-acoustic_guitar

    A Gibson ES-150 a hollow-body guitar with a pair of F-holes visible. A semi-acoustic guitar, also known as a hollow-body electric guitar, is a type of electric guitar designed to be played with a guitar amplifier featuring a fully or partly hollow body and at least one electromagnetic pickup. [1]

  4. Gibson ES Series - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gibson_ES_Series

    The Gibson ES series of semi-acoustic guitars (hollow body electric guitars) are manufactured by the Gibson Guitar Corporation. The letters ES stand for Electric Spanish, to distinguish them from Hawaiian-style lap steel guitars which are played flat on the lap. Many of the original numbers referred to the price, in dollars, of the model.

  5. Gretsch 6120 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gretsch_6120

    The Gretsch 6120 is a hollow body electric guitar with f-holes, manufactured by Gretsch and first appearing in the mid-1950s with the endorsement of Chet Atkins.It was quickly adopted by rockabilly artists Eddie Cochran, Duane Eddy, and later by Eric Clapton, Brian Setzer, Reverend Horton Heat, and many others.

  6. Gibson Barney Kessel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gibson_Barney_Kessel

    The guitar was a hollow-body intended for Jazz music. The body featured a double cutaway design. [1] The guitar had a spruce top, maple sides and back, two Humbucker pickups, a mahogany neck and a Brazilian rosewood fretboard with double-parallelogram inlays on the regular version and bowtie inlays on the Custom model. [2]

  7. Gibson ES-125 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gibson_ES-125

    When reintroduced in 1946 it had the larger 16.25" wide body that the ES-150 had. The unbound rosewood fingerboard initially sported pearl trapezoid inlays; later, it would have dot inlays. In the mid-1950s, the ES-125T was introduced, which was an entry-level thinline archtop electric guitar based on the original ES-125.