For years,
Walter Carter was the in-house historian at
Gibson Guitars, before serving a similar
function for well-known vintage guitar dealer
George Gruhn. He has a new book out this month published by
Backbeat Books, called The Epiphone
Guitar Book:
A Complete History of
Epiphone Guitars. Its slick, glossy, 160-pages are heavily illustrated, with many photos in color.
With a legacy dating back to the
1870s and
Greek luthier Anastasios Stathopoulos, the Epiphone brand name takes its name from two components -- the nickname of Anastasios' son,
Epaminondas, and the word "phone," which, in the
1920s when the brand Epiphone was launched, competed with the word "radio" to symbolize high-tech and modernity. (See also:
Gramophone, the
Radio Flyer, etc.)
Epiphone has had several twists and turns in its history. Until the mid-1950s, it competed neck and neck (pardon the pun) with
Gibson for sales of arch-top jazz guitars.
Ted McCarty, who built up Gibson as a music instrument powerhouse in the mid-2oth century, said that "When I came to Gibson, the biggest competition we had was Epiphone." But the death of Epi in 1943, followed by squabbles among the surviving Stathopoulos family during the following decade caused the value of their business to plummet. McCarty acquired Epiphone for Gibson's parent company at a bargain rate, and production of Epiphone guitars switched in-house to Gibson's
Kalamazoo, MI plant, during the
1960s.
The new brand name gave Gibson certain advantages: they could protect the exclusive arrangements their dealers had with Gibson, but sell Epiphone to nearby music dealers, positioning it as a slightly lower brand -- the
Buick or Oldsmobile to Gibson's
Cadillac.
In the mid-1960s, Epiphone models were played by a little-known cult act called the
Beatles -- "
Everybody but
Ringo," as
Carter told me. McCartney played an
Epiphone Texan acoustic on "
Yesterday,"
George Harrison played his
Epiphone Casino on
Sgt. Pepper, and
John Lennon played his own
Casino on the rooftop of
Apple Records during their legendary last concert at the conclusion of
Let It Be.
In the early
1970s, Gibson sent production of Epiphone guitars overseas.
Today, it exists, in part, as an entry-level brand for new guitarists, and there's some controversy between those who own traditional made-in-America
Gibson guitars such as the
Les Paul, and those who own Les Pauls and other models also sold under the Epiphone name.
Carter discusses all that and much more in our 21-minute interview.
Click on video to listen.
- published: 11 Jan 2013
- views: 2146