Steve Craw
Formerly Lefty Elmo
- Joined
- Sep 9, 2004
- Messages
- 5,302
Nice! Good to see you lefties get some good models.
A '64 reissue, I take it? I'm guessing a late model Memphis special order?
I presume you mean an original '64? Those reissues are the "real deal" too, trust me!Real deal... albeit rare. Clean machine! :salude
Steve - looking forward to your report, as I am sure you are looking forward to getting it in your hands. And if you stop in to HoG please apprise of any lefty sightings :jim<header class="entry-header" style="caret-color: rgb(0, 0, 0); color: rgb(0, 0, 0); font-family: -webkit-standard; box-sizing: inherit;">1964 Gibson ES-345TDC, Cherry Red, Extremely Rare Lefty!
</header>This is a Left Handed 1964 Gibson ES-345TDC. I have only seen 4 other Left Handed Golden Era(pre-1965) ES-345s: 2 from 1960(I currently own one), 1961, and 1962(which I previously owned). I have not seen any from 1964 – this is probably the only left handed 1964 ES-345.
The original owner had his name inlayed into the original fretboard, which was replaced with an Ebony board at that time. Recently, the guitar was shipped to Lay’s Guitar Shop and the fretboard was replaced with a historically-correct Brazilian Rosewood fingerboard with Double Parallelogram inlays(receipt from Lay’s included in the case). The fingerboard binding and nut were also replaced at the same time. There are side dot markers on both sides, which is historically correct for a vintage left handed Gibson. Lay’s also did a refret and complete setup – the guitar feels and plays great. Dan Shinn does great work at Lay’s!
In addition, the following parts have been replaced; Varitone switch, position indicator plate and control knob, choke coils, tuners, truss-rod cover. Most of the wiring harness has been replaced with cloth-covered Fender-style leads, the selector switch has been re-wired, the cans have been removed, heat shrink has been added on the pickup output leads, the bridge ground lead has been cut from the bridge pickup output lead and re-soldered in a different location on that lead. The bridge is currently oriented for right-handed compensation, leaving visible fill and finish touch-up at the original left-handed locations of the mounting studs, the neck position pickup cover has previously been removed and subsequently re-installed and the position of the pickup magnet has been reversed. There is visible finish overspray on the neck rear and around the fingerboard extension.
Overall, the original finish shows typical deterioration with lacquer checking, small dings, compression marks and edge-chipping (peghead). The metal hardware displays gold-plating loss due to friction rubbing. In other respects, this instrument conforms to the typical specifications of the model for the period in which it was made with double cutaway thinline semi-hollow archtop left-handed body, F-holes, laminated maple top, back, and sides, cherry red finish, elevated multi-ply beveled-edge black plastic left-handed pickguard, two humbucking pickups (both “patent #”) with metal covers and black plastic mounting rings, tune-o-matic bridge with metal string saddles, Maestro vibrato tailpiece with embossed lyre & logo, Varitone switch with gold-colored indicator ring, four black “reflector cap” control knobs, toggle-type pickup selector switch, mahogany neck with adjustable truss-rod, classic “open-book” shape peghead, pearloid Gibson logo and “crown” peghead inlays, multi-ply white & black binding on body top edge, single-ply white binding on body rear edges, and gold-plated metal hardware. The instrument is currently housed in a replacement (Harptone) hard-shell case with black Tolex exterior covering and burgundy plush interior lining.
So while the guitar has changed parts and modifications, it is a factory Left Handed 1964 Gibson ES-345, probably the only one. And it is one of a total of only 5 Left Handed Golden Era Gibson ES-345s known to exist. The guitar has a great look – the ES-345 is the coolest looking ES model IMO. And if you play the Blues, a Cherry ES-345 was the guitar of choice of the great Freddie King. This is an opportunity to own an extremely rare Left handed 1964 Gibson ES-345 at significant savings!
Please reassure me they didn't appoint it as a lefty then drill the ABR for a righty?
Looks gorgeous nonetheless.
Quite interesting, thanks. Extremely cool piece of history. And a very cool model, even lefty aside.Yes, original to '64 not reissue. Here's detail from Alex if you are interested... Maybe Alex will chime in some point to elaborate.
http://www.leftyvintageguitars.com/1964-gibson-es-345tdc-cherry-red-extremely-rare-lefty
Steve - looking forward to your report, as I am sure you are looking forward to getting it in your hands. And if you stop in to HoG please apprise of any lefty sightings :jim
Quite interesting, thanks. Extremely cool piece of history. And a very cool model, even lefty aside.
This is the *exact* model that was a reissue in 2016, the "Gibson ES-345 TDC 1964 Maestro VOS Sixties Cherry". I was excited to be able to get one, supposedly one of 60 made for worldwide distribution.
So it really is a thrill for me to see an original! What a story to follow!!
"The original owner had his name inlayed into the original fretboard, which was replaced with an Ebony board at that time. Recently, the guitar was shipped to Lay’s Guitar Shop and the fretboard was replaced with a historically-correct Brazilian Rosewood fingerboard..."
Can you get the original fretboard? That would be awesome.
Thanks for asking this question. It inspired me to ask Alex that question. He asked Lays, and it seems that they still have the board, so hopefully I'll be able to get my hands on it.