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		<title>Ugly Mugs No. 3: Walk, Don’t Run (Vintage 1967 Guyatone LG-160T Electric Guitar)</title>
		<link>https://www.myrareguitars.com/vintage-1967-guyatone-lg160t-electric-guitar</link>
		<comments>https://www.myrareguitars.com/vintage-1967-guyatone-lg160t-electric-guitar#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 01 Feb 2015 10:00:57 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Michael Wright]]></dc:creator>
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		<category><![CDATA[Vintage 1967 Guyatone LG-160T Electric Guitar]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.myrareguitars.com/?p=7416</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p>For this last musing on ugly duckling guitars, let us turn our attention to this example from Japan, this Guyatone LG-160T. The Fenton-Weill Tux-master we contemplated was pretty much unrelentingly ugly, only redeemable if you fondly remember it from your youth. The Burns UK Flyte was more of a space oddity than especially ugly, but it sure didn’t grow on me, at least. However, some unusual guitars do eventually win your heart over the more you stare at them. I think that this is the case here.</p>
<p><a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.myrareguitars.com/vintage-1967-guyatone-lg160t-electric-guitar">Ugly Mugs No. 3: Walk, Don’t Run (Vintage 1967 Guyatone LG-160T Electric Guitar)</a> from <a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.myrareguitars.com">MyRareGuitars.com</a></p>
]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>For this last musing on ugly duckling guitars, let us turn our attention to this example from Japan, this Guyatone LG-160T. The Fenton-Weill Tux-master we contemplated was pretty much unrelentingly ugly, only redeemable if you fondly remember it from your youth. The Burns UK Flyte was more of a space oddity than especially ugly, but it sure didn’t grow on me, at least. However, some unusual guitars do eventually win your heart over the more you stare at them. I think that this is the case here.</p>
<div id="attachment_7422" style="width: 710px" class="wp-caption aligncenter"><img class="size-full wp-image-7422" src="http://www.myrareguitars.com/guitar-pictures/vintage-1967-guyatone-lg-160t-electric-guitar-featured.jpg" alt="Vintage 1967 Guyatone LG-160T Electric Guitar" width="700" height="401" srcset="https://www.myrareguitars.com/guitar-pictures/vintage-1967-guyatone-lg-160t-electric-guitar-featured.jpg 700w, https://www.myrareguitars.com/guitar-pictures/vintage-1967-guyatone-lg-160t-electric-guitar-featured-600x344.jpg 600w, https://www.myrareguitars.com/guitar-pictures/vintage-1967-guyatone-lg-160t-electric-guitar-featured-300x171.jpg 300w, https://www.myrareguitars.com/guitar-pictures/vintage-1967-guyatone-lg-160t-electric-guitar-featured-332x190.jpg 332w" sizes="(max-width: 700px) 100vw, 700px" /><p class="wp-caption-text">Vintage 1967 Guyatone LG-160T Electric Guitar</p></div>
<p>Japanese guitar makers made their names by emulating their competition largely for the American market. That strategy ultimately led to copy guitars, of which this is vaguely an example, although reflective of the peculiarities of Japanese aesthetics.</p>
<p>“Lutes,” in which family guitars reside, made their way pretty much everywhere in antiquity, including Japan, which favors the samisen. The first Europeans to “discover” Japan were the Portuguese, who were granted favored trading status by the Emperor. With the caveat that they couldn’t enter Japan proper, lest they pollute the sacred culture. They had to do their business from Okinawa.</p>
<p>Whether the Portuguese ever brought guitars with them is unknown, but Commodore Perry and the Americans certainly did when they arrived in 1853 on a mission to horn in on the Portuguese monopoly. Perry plied the Japanese ministers with tons of champagne and put on several blackface minstrel shows that featured both guitars and banjos. Perhaps it was the affinity between whiteface kabuki theater and the sailors’ burnt cork (more likely it was the huge stores of bubbly), but in any case Perry returned in 1854 with an open trade agreement with Japan.</p>
<div id="attachment_7419" style="width: 292px" class="wp-caption aligncenter"><img class="size-full wp-image-7419" src="http://www.myrareguitars.com/guitar-pictures/vintage-1967-guyatone-lg-160t-electric-guitar-01.jpg" alt="Vintage 1967 Guyatone LG-160T Electric Guitar" width="282" height="424" srcset="https://www.myrareguitars.com/guitar-pictures/vintage-1967-guyatone-lg-160t-electric-guitar-01.jpg 282w, https://www.myrareguitars.com/guitar-pictures/vintage-1967-guyatone-lg-160t-electric-guitar-01-199x300.jpg 199w" sizes="(max-width: 282px) 100vw, 282px" /><p class="wp-caption-text">Vintage 1967 Guyatone LG-160T Electric Guitar</p></div>
<p>No, the Japanese didn’t convert to playing guitars (or banjos) on the spot. In fact, Westernization didn’t really begin until the 1920s. One of the main vectors was Hawaiian music. This was big in the U.S. from the early 20th Century on, but it really wasn’t coming to Japan from the Continental U.S. There was a huge Japanese population living in Hawaii and the taste for Hawaiian music—admittedly informed by American (and, ironically, Portuguese!!) influences—came from the original source in Hawaii. It was also in the 1920s that Andres Segovia toured Japan, igniting a passionate embrace of classical guitar playing. And, the 1920s saw the triumph of radio, so all sorts of Western music became available.</p>
<p>The problem was that Japanese music had not yet adopted the “tempered” scale that Western music has used since the 18th Century. That style makes minor compromises in the mathematical intervals of the modes codified by Pythagoras. In the old system you could play in maybe 1 or 2 modes during a piece, but any further modulation sounded out of tune, because it was. By “tempering” those scales, you can essentially switch from any key to another at any time. Anyhow, this process of adopting the tempered scale began in the 1920s, with a lot of interesting hybrid music being created. And making it possible to adopt Western instruments, such as the guitar and Hawaiian guitar…especially once it was electrified in the early 1930s.</p>
<div id="attachment_7420" style="width: 295px" class="wp-caption aligncenter"><img class="size-full wp-image-7420" src="http://www.myrareguitars.com/guitar-pictures/vintage-1967-guyatone-lg-160t-electric-guitar-02.jpg" alt="Vintage 1967 Guyatone LG-160T Electric Guitar" width="285" height="424" srcset="https://www.myrareguitars.com/guitar-pictures/vintage-1967-guyatone-lg-160t-electric-guitar-02.jpg 285w, https://www.myrareguitars.com/guitar-pictures/vintage-1967-guyatone-lg-160t-electric-guitar-02-201x300.jpg 201w" sizes="(max-width: 285px) 100vw, 285px" /><p class="wp-caption-text">Vintage 1967 Guyatone LG-160T Electric Guitar</p></div>
<p>Guyatone was one of the earliest guitar manufacturers in Japan, having begun making electric Hawaiian lap steels in 1933. It was founded by Mitsuo Matsuki and Atsuo Kaneko (who would later found Teisco after the War).</p>
<p>Once Japanese guitar-makers entered the American market, they kind of gravitated naturally toward the copy strategy. First they produced guitars vaguely based on Fender’s Jazzmaster/Jaguar. Soon in the trenches with European makers, they began to emulate them (think Burns Bison). Then, The Ventures, having grown a bit stale in the U.S., began to tour Japan. The went over extremely well and acquired a legion of lifetime fans. By around the time this guitar was made, various Japanese makers were producing loose Mosrite inspirations. Or “copies,” if you like.</p>
<div id="attachment_7421" style="width: 293px" class="wp-caption aligncenter"><img class="size-full wp-image-7421" src="http://www.myrareguitars.com/guitar-pictures/vintage-1967-guyatone-lg-160t-electric-guitar-03.jpg" alt="Vintage 1967 Guyatone LG-160T Electric Guitar" width="283" height="422" srcset="https://www.myrareguitars.com/guitar-pictures/vintage-1967-guyatone-lg-160t-electric-guitar-03.jpg 283w, https://www.myrareguitars.com/guitar-pictures/vintage-1967-guyatone-lg-160t-electric-guitar-03-201x300.jpg 201w" sizes="(max-width: 283px) 100vw, 283px" /><p class="wp-caption-text">Vintage 1967 Guyatone LG-160T Electric Guitar</p></div>
<p>This 1967 Guyatone LG-160T is actually pretty sophisticated. The body is mahogany, and features a German carve relief, like a Mosrite. Pairing two single-coil pickups back at the bridge, like a humbucker, emulates Guyatone’s domestic competition Yamaha. These two pickups can function as a humbucker or, using the sliding switch, one single-coil. Ain’t no DiMarzio but pretty clever. This bridge actually has roller saddles to make the vibrato very effective.</p>
<p>By 1969 the true “copy era” had been launched with the first Les Paul and Tele copies, however crude at first.</p>
<p>When you first glimpse this guitar, it looks like a somewhat awkward Mosrite copy. Gaze a bit longer and it almost takes on the look of a Japanese orthographic character. Elegant, not so ugly. Consider it more and your heart begins to warm toward it’s symmetrical asymmetry for sure! Beautiful!</p>
<p>The copy strategy was good marketing (and helped learning to come more quickly), but it tended to obscure how much Japanese culture—how much whiteface kabuki—really contributed to the guitar equation.</p>
<p><a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.myrareguitars.com/vintage-1967-guyatone-lg160t-electric-guitar">Ugly Mugs No. 3: Walk, Don’t Run (Vintage 1967 Guyatone LG-160T Electric Guitar)</a> from <a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.myrareguitars.com">MyRareGuitars.com</a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		<slash:comments>8</slash:comments>
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		<title>A Sharp Venture (1968 Guyatone LG-350T Sharp 5 Electric Guitar)</title>
		<link>https://www.myrareguitars.com/1968-guyatone-lg-350t-sharp-t-electric-guitar</link>
		<comments>https://www.myrareguitars.com/1968-guyatone-lg-350t-sharp-t-electric-guitar#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 02 Dec 2010 15:00:15 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Michael Wright]]></dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[1960's Vintage Guitars]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Guitar History]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[1968 Guyatone LG-350T]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.myrareguitars.com/?p=3108</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p>Well, well, well. What have we here? On the surface, of course, it’s a 1968 Guyatone LG-350T Sharp 5. A sight little seen in North America, but not uncommon in Japan, at least once upon a time. And if it makes you think of a little bit of a Mosrite on drugs, well then you’re not too far off the mark! Welcome to a bit about the Ventures and the early world of copy guitars!</p>
<p><a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.myrareguitars.com/1968-guyatone-lg-350t-sharp-t-electric-guitar">A Sharp Venture (1968 Guyatone LG-350T Sharp 5 Electric Guitar)</a> from <a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.myrareguitars.com">MyRareGuitars.com</a></p>
]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Well, well, well. What have we here? On the surface, of course, it’s a 1968 Guyatone LG-350T Sharp 5. A sight little seen in North America, but not uncommon in Japan, at least once upon a time. And if it makes you think of a little bit of a Mosrite on drugs, well then you’re not too far off the mark! Welcome to a bit about the Ventures and the early world of copy guitars!</p>
<div id="attachment_3110" style="width: 375px" class="wp-caption aligncenter"><img class="size-full wp-image-3110" title="1968 Guyatone LG-350T Sharp 5 Vintage Electric Guitar" src="http://www.myrareguitars.com/guitar-pictures/1968-guyatone-lg-350t-sharp-t-electric-guitar-01.jpg" alt="1968 Guyatone LG-350T Sharp 5 Vintage Electric Guitar" width="365" height="130" srcset="https://www.myrareguitars.com/guitar-pictures/1968-guyatone-lg-350t-sharp-t-electric-guitar-01.jpg 365w, https://www.myrareguitars.com/guitar-pictures/1968-guyatone-lg-350t-sharp-t-electric-guitar-01-300x106.jpg 300w" sizes="(max-width: 365px) 100vw, 365px" /><p class="wp-caption-text">1968 Guyatone LG-350T Sharp 5 Vintage Electric Guitar</p></div>
<p>It shows my age (everything does now anyway), but around the time I was hitting my teenage years, I discovered what was then still a fairly obscure band called The Ventures and their record called Another Smash. At least they were obscure for northern Michigan. This was also about the same time that I figured out I wasn’t going to be either the next Johnny Unitas or Al Kaline (a famous slugger with the Tigers). My dream became to learn those songs, which I eventually did more or less and I still play some of them to this day. The Ventures went on to have a bunch of hits, perhaps the most famous of which was their streamlined version of Johnny Smith’s “Walk, Don’t Run.” Their popularity eventually led to a relationship with Semie Moseley and yielded the Mosrite Ventures guitars, which was literally based on a tracing of a flipped-over Strat! Plus the groovy German carve around the edge that Semie had learned from Roger Rossmeisl.</p>
<p>Even though the Ventures seemed to keep increasing their record output, their popularity didn’t quite keep pace. In the US, that is. At a time when Jimi Hendrix and Fresh Cream were all the rage, the Ventures just didn’t seem relevant. What saved the Ventures’ career during those lean years when they were eclipsed by Bob Dylan and the Beatles was an astonishingly virile popularity in Japan. The Japanese obsession with the band extended to everything Ventures including Mosrite guitars. By the mid-‘60s, when Japanese guitarmakers finally began to become competitive in the American market, they hit upon a strategy of imitating the competition. Which, at the time, was European guitars. Among the early Japanese imitations were the violin-bodied copies of EKO’s popular copies (of Hofner’s copies of Gibson’s…well, you get the picture).</p>
<div id="attachment_3111" style="width: 390px" class="wp-caption aligncenter"><img class="size-full wp-image-3111" title="1968 Guyatone LG-350T Sharp 5 Vintage Electric Guitar" src="http://www.myrareguitars.com/guitar-pictures/1968-guyatone-lg-350t-sharp-t-electric-guitar-02.jpg" alt="1968 Guyatone LG-350T Sharp 5 Vintage Electric Guitar" width="380" height="184" srcset="https://www.myrareguitars.com/guitar-pictures/1968-guyatone-lg-350t-sharp-t-electric-guitar-02.jpg 380w, https://www.myrareguitars.com/guitar-pictures/1968-guyatone-lg-350t-sharp-t-electric-guitar-02-300x145.jpg 300w" sizes="(max-width: 380px) 100vw, 380px" /><p class="wp-caption-text">1968 Guyatone LG-350T Sharp 5 Vintage Electric Guitar</p></div>
<p>Wholesale copying of American guitars would come later, but the honor of the first American design to be copied probably goes to the Mosrite Ventures. By 1966 or ’67 many Japanese guitarmakers were building guitars inspired by Mosrites, with extended lower horns and/or German carves and/or slanted neck pickups, etc. Among the earliest and goofier of these in Japan were these Guyatones.</p>
<p>Guyatone was one of the first guitar manufacturers in Japan. It was founded in 1933 by Mitsuo Matsuki and Atsuo Kaneko and began selling Hawaiian guitars with the Guya brand name. After the War, in 1951, the company switched to using the Guyatone brand. Guyatones were among the earliest Japanese electrics to come to the US, imported by Buegeleisen and Jacobson with the Kent brand name.</p>
<div id="attachment_3112" style="width: 405px" class="wp-caption aligncenter"><img class="size-full wp-image-3112" title="1968 Guyatone LG-350T Sharp 5 Vintage Electric Guitar" src="http://www.myrareguitars.com/guitar-pictures/1968-guyatone-lg-350t-sharp-t-electric-guitar-03.jpg" alt="1968 Guyatone LG-350T Sharp 5 Vintage Electric Guitar" width="395" height="180" srcset="https://www.myrareguitars.com/guitar-pictures/1968-guyatone-lg-350t-sharp-t-electric-guitar-03.jpg 395w, https://www.myrareguitars.com/guitar-pictures/1968-guyatone-lg-350t-sharp-t-electric-guitar-03-300x136.jpg 300w" sizes="(max-width: 395px) 100vw, 395px" /><p class="wp-caption-text">1968 Guyatone LG-350T Sharp 5 Vintage Electric Guitar</p></div>
<p>This 1968 Guyatone LG-350 Sharp 5 is actually kind of a flipped-over Mosrite, ironically enough! It’s hard to tell from the photos, but it’s finished in a really cool dark metallic blue color. The pickguard is also blue. Its single coil pickups are not typical of most Guyatone guitars that made it to the US. This was a pretty high-end guitar for Japan at the time. The edges aren’t exactly German carve, but they are beveled. The vibrato is a pretty interesting in-body design that emulates the feather-touch of a Mosrite. An unusual feature for the time is covered tuners, sort of like European Van Ghents. And you gotta love that headstock! This is a sweet guitar way ahead of the usual quality you find in Japanese guitars of this era.</p>
<p>By the time this guitar was made, other guitars closer to Mosrite were beginning to appear made by Teisco, Kawai, Firstman, Aria, Zen-On, Humming Bird, Suzuki, Minister, Audition, Monica and others. And the first near-copy had made it to America in the Noble EG 686-2HT, a variant on the Mosrite Combo, marketed by Chicago’s Strum &amp; Drum. By the early 1970s Mosrite knock-offs had become standard, like one of the most famous, the Univox Hi Flyer. But as sharp as those are, that’s another story!</p>
<p><a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.myrareguitars.com/1968-guyatone-lg-350t-sharp-t-electric-guitar">A Sharp Venture (1968 Guyatone LG-350T Sharp 5 Electric Guitar)</a> from <a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.myrareguitars.com">MyRareGuitars.com</a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		<slash:comments>7</slash:comments>
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		<title>Is more better? (1967 Kent Model 742 Electric Guitar)</title>
		<link>https://www.myrareguitars.com/1967-kent-model-742-electric-guitar</link>
		<comments>https://www.myrareguitars.com/1967-kent-model-742-electric-guitar#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 01 Mar 2005 13:00:17 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Michael Wright]]></dc:creator>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.myrareguitars.com/?p=500</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p>Who among us doesn't relate to Nigel Tufnel in This Is Spinal Tap when he tried to explain to "Meathead" that having an 11 on his amp made it louder than - and hence superior to - one having a mere 10? That's just how I felt back in the day when, after nearly two decades of owning one - that's only one - guitar, a classical, I decided I ought to get an electric guitar again. Who could have known how slippery that slope would turn out to be?!</p>
<p><a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.myrareguitars.com/1967-kent-model-742-electric-guitar">Is more better? (1967 Kent Model 742 Electric Guitar)</a> from <a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.myrareguitars.com">MyRareGuitars.com</a></p>
]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Who among us doesn&#8217;t relate to Nigel Tufnel in This Is Spinal Tap when he tried to explain to &#8220;Meathead&#8221; that having an 11 on his amp made it louder than &#8211; and hence superior to &#8211; one having a mere 10? That&#8217;s just how I felt back in the day when, after nearly two decades of owning one &#8211; that&#8217;s only one &#8211; guitar, a classical, I decided I ought to get an electric guitar again. Who could have known how slippery that slope would turn out to be?! This was back in the days before the internet and eBay, when there were little shops in out-of-the-way places where you could find used (they weren&#8217;t even &#8220;vintage&#8221; yet) guitars. In the front would be nice, expensive guitars by Martin or Gibson or some other premier company. Then tucked away at the back of the rack would be the goofballs, guitars of unknown origin with strange names and often stranger looks. That was where I got hooked, at the back of the rack.</p>
<div id="attachment_501" style="width: 379px" class="wp-caption aligncenter"><img class="size-full wp-image-501" title="Vintage 1967 Kent Model 742 Electric Guitar" src="http://www.myrareguitars.com/guitar-pictures/1967-kent-model-742-electric-guitar-01.jpg" alt="Vintage 1967 Kent Model 742 Electric Guitar" width="369" height="135" srcset="https://www.myrareguitars.com/guitar-pictures/1967-kent-model-742-electric-guitar-01.jpg 369w, https://www.myrareguitars.com/guitar-pictures/1967-kent-model-742-electric-guitar-01-300x109.jpg 300w" sizes="(max-width: 369px) 100vw, 369px" /><p class="wp-caption-text">Vintage 1967 Kent Model 742 Electric Guitar</p></div>
<p>I met my Waterloo at a place called The Trading Post at the Pennsauken Mart, one of those East Coast predecessors to the modern mall, made of cinderblock and full of exotic stalls. But instead of Penney&#8217;s and Victoria&#8217;s Secret, you would find a butcher, gun shop, Polish imports, dollar stores, short-order counters, and the Trading Post, a kind of quasi pawn shop where you sold stuff, but couldn&#8217;t retrieve it unless you bought it back. Almost by instinct I threaded my way past the Fender Strats to the back where I saw this Kent guitar. It had a gorgeous burled maple front and back and really cool black and white celluloid on the sides, giving it the cachet of an ancient Baroque guitar. It even had a real Bigsby. But best of all, it had 4 &#8211; count &#8217;em, four &#8211; pickups! It had to be better than one with just three! And, at $89, it was priced right.</p>
<div id="attachment_502" style="width: 391px" class="wp-caption aligncenter"><img class="size-full wp-image-502" title="Vintage 1967 Kent Model 742 Electric Guitar" src="http://www.myrareguitars.com/guitar-pictures/1967-kent-model-742-electric-guitar-02.jpg" alt="Vintage 1967 Kent Model 742 Electric Guitar" width="381" height="234" srcset="https://www.myrareguitars.com/guitar-pictures/1967-kent-model-742-electric-guitar-02.jpg 381w, https://www.myrareguitars.com/guitar-pictures/1967-kent-model-742-electric-guitar-02-300x184.jpg 300w" sizes="(max-width: 381px) 100vw, 381px" /><p class="wp-caption-text">Vintage 1967 Kent Model 742 Electric Guitar</p></div>
<p>But where the heck did this guitar come from? I learned later it was a Kent Model 742, made in Japan in 1967. Kent was the brand name used by Buegeleisen &amp; Jacobson (B&amp;J), once a major music distributor in New York City. B&amp;J was one of the early companies to begin importing musical goods from Japan in 1960, starting with microphones and aftermarket pickups, and adding guitars in 1962. By the time this Model 742 was built the guitars had graduated from relatively primitive mahogany planks to sophisticated laminates and trim. Earlier Kents were made by Guyatone, but it&#8217;s unknown who created this glam job.</p>
<div id="attachment_503" style="width: 370px" class="wp-caption aligncenter"><img class="size-full wp-image-503" title="Vintage 1967 Kent Model 742 Electric Guitar" src="http://www.myrareguitars.com/guitar-pictures/1967-kent-model-742-electric-guitar-03.jpg" alt="Vintage 1967 Kent Model 742 Electric Guitar" width="360" height="136" srcset="https://www.myrareguitars.com/guitar-pictures/1967-kent-model-742-electric-guitar-03.jpg 360w, https://www.myrareguitars.com/guitar-pictures/1967-kent-model-742-electric-guitar-03-300x113.jpg 300w" sizes="(max-width: 360px) 100vw, 360px" /><p class="wp-caption-text">Vintage 1967 Kent Model 742 Electric Guitar</p></div>
<p>The Model 742 is a beaut. But do the four pickups make it better? Well, alas, poor Nigel, more is not necessarily better, except maybe in the looks department. Indeed, these admittedly handsome pickup units just may have been the worst ever produced! Plus the guitar is wired so that playing all of them decreases further the already crappy output, making the onboard mute switch kind of superfluous! And, maybe they could have used some help on the truss rod design. Ok, so the Kent won&#8217;t power my Ventures tribute band. But if its fancy burl, Baroque rally stripes, and especially four pickups hadn&#8217;t grabbed me from the back of the rack that day in Pennsauken, New Jersey, I&#8217;d never have discovered my love for bizarre guitars and begun my long journey into the dark recesses of guitar history. That makes this Kent an 11 on my list!</p>
<p><a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.myrareguitars.com/1967-kent-model-742-electric-guitar">Is more better? (1967 Kent Model 742 Electric Guitar)</a> from <a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.myrareguitars.com">MyRareGuitars.com</a></p>
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