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		<title>Searching for Spock (Vintage 1984 Riverhead Unicorn Electric Guitar)</title>
		<link>https://www.myrareguitars.com/vintage-1984-riverhead-unicorn-electric-guitar</link>
		<comments>https://www.myrareguitars.com/vintage-1984-riverhead-unicorn-electric-guitar#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 02 Mar 2014 15:30:03 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Michael Wright]]></dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[1980's Vintage Guitars]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Vintage 1984 Riverhead Unicorn Electric Guitar]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[<p>In a Trekkean view of the electric guitar universe, space is populated by all sorts of exotic and unique tribes and creations. You got your Fendermen and Gibsonians and other assorted “normal” beings. Then you have a whole bunch of guitars related to potatoes, like Micro-Frets and Ibanez Musicians, frequently from the 1970s, as it [&#8230;]</p>
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]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>In a Trekkean view of the electric guitar universe, space is populated by all sorts of exotic and unique tribes and creations. You got your Fendermen and Gibsonians and other assorted “normal” beings. Then you have a whole bunch of guitars related to potatoes, like Micro-Frets and Ibanez Musicians, frequently from the 1970s, as it happens. You have your usual run of space weapons, like Vees and Explorers. And then you have assorted vehicles, like Dave Bunker’s guitars, the Burns Flyte, or the Riverhead Unicorn seen here.</p>
<div id="attachment_6560" style="width: 385px" class="wp-caption aligncenter"><img class="size-full wp-image-6560" alt="Vintage 1984 Riverhead Unicorn Electric Guitar" src="http://www.myrareguitars.com/guitar-pictures/vintage-1984-riverhead-unicorn-electric-guitar-headless-02.jpg" width="375" height="279" srcset="https://www.myrareguitars.com/guitar-pictures/vintage-1984-riverhead-unicorn-electric-guitar-headless-02.jpg 375w, https://www.myrareguitars.com/guitar-pictures/vintage-1984-riverhead-unicorn-electric-guitar-headless-02-300x223.jpg 300w" sizes="(max-width: 375px) 100vw, 375px" /><p class="wp-caption-text">Vintage 1984 Riverhead Unicorn Electric Guitar</p></div>
<p>You can probably justifiably consider certain lap steel guitar designs to be the forerunners of the headless guitar. Oh, like all guitars they need some basic structural components and they need some sort of tuning mechanism, but they kind of reduce the guitar to a plank with strings. You even orient to them in a different way that kind of negates the idea of a head.</p>
<p>Whether or not you buy that argument, probably the first headless guitar I’m aware of was Dave Bunker’s appropriately named Astral Series Sunstar, which debuted in around 1966. Dave rather brilliantly stripped the guitar down to its essence, then appended all these removable pods and appendages (including detachable head), making it truly a Starship Enterprise! I don’t know exactly when New York guitarist Alan Gittler began his experiments on minimalist guitars, but I think it was after Bunker.</p>
<p>It was, of course, Ned Steinberger (and his principal disciple, as it were, Andy Summers of The Police) who codified the headless guitar concept right around the end of the 1970s. Cort in Korea licensed the design and produced a number of brands popular in the early 1980s. I have one that I used to be able to cram on top of the family’s shore supplies when we vacationed. It’s in the context of those New Wavey guitars of the early 1980s that this rather fetching Riverhead belongs.</p>
<div id="attachment_6559" style="width: 460px" class="wp-caption aligncenter"><img class="size-full wp-image-6559" alt="Vintage 1984 Riverhead Unicorn Electric Guitar" src="http://www.myrareguitars.com/guitar-pictures/vintage-1984-riverhead-unicorn-electric-guitar-headless-01.jpg" width="450" height="303" srcset="https://www.myrareguitars.com/guitar-pictures/vintage-1984-riverhead-unicorn-electric-guitar-headless-01.jpg 450w, https://www.myrareguitars.com/guitar-pictures/vintage-1984-riverhead-unicorn-electric-guitar-headless-01-300x202.jpg 300w" sizes="(max-width: 450px) 100vw, 450px" /><p class="wp-caption-text">Vintage 1984 Riverhead Unicorn Electric Guitar</p></div>
<p>The Riverhead story is a little hard to piece together coherently. They were primarily made in Japan by the Headway company and briefly in the mid-1980s were imported into the U.S. and actively marketed. Headway, it appears, began as a high end acoustic guitar maker in around 1977 in Matsumoto City, basically the epicenter of Japanese guitarmaking. In 1981 Headway made the transition to electric solidbody guitars. Information is sketchy, but it seems they began with Fender-style copy guitars, but I wouldn’t bet the farm on it. They seemed to have used the Headway name, as well as the brands Bacchus and Momose, named for the luthier and Headway founder Yasuo Momose, who’d learned his art at Fujigen Gakki, builder of Ibanez and Greco electrics. There have been other brand variations, including, obviously, Riverhead.</p>
<p>Online sources (which seem credible) suggest that Headway experienced two factory fires in 1983, which ended in the construction of the Asuka electric guitar factory in Matsumoto in 1983, coincidental with the launch of the Riverhead brand. Unlike the Bacchus copies, Riverheads seem to have been Headway’s “high tech” line. Another source suggests that Headway made all (or most) of its own components. Certainly its guitars had many unique and innovative features, like vibratos designed to pivot two ways.</p>
<p>Riverhead’s Unicorn Series was distributed in the U.S. by a company called Prime, Inc., of Marlboro, MA, the same outfit that imported those curious Quest guitars. Designed somewhat after the fashion of the Burns Flyte guitars, Unicorns came with either two single-coil or, as here, two humbuckers. These were probably a unibody construction, with a mahogany core, though the wings might have been added on. Their advertising in late 1984 touted the fact that the pickups were mounted directly on top of the body for maximum tone. The heavy duty cast adjustable bridge/tuner assembly is very similar to a Steinberger, though I’m sure it was Headway’s own innovation. For such a high tech looking axe, it’s actually pretty basic, with a simple threeway select, one volume and two tone controls. Still, you’d look pretty darned cool in your orange and black Starship Trooper jumpsuit, eh?!</p>
<p>The Riverhead Unicorns were promoted in 1984 and ’85, so they were around at least in that time frame, probably 1983-85 or ’86 at the latest. They’re not exactly plentiful. Prime seems to have had a presence in the Northeastern U.S. I don’t know if they achieved much national distribution. The online sources suggest that Riverhead brand guitars were produced until 1997, after which Japanese production stopped. Japanese guitar production recommenced in 1999 and continued at least into 2009, although the company operates factories elsewhere in Asia. At this writing, Headway’s web site was not active.</p>
<p>I’ve always thought the headless technology was cool, but I was never a New Agey kind of guy, and I wouldn’t look good in an orange and black jump suit. I always found I liked a head to help me know where I should stop. Guess I occupy more of that boring normal part of the guitar universe than I care to admit!</p>
<div id="attachment_6561" style="width: 710px" class="wp-caption aligncenter"><img class="size-full wp-image-6561" alt="Riverhead Unicorn Series Guitar Ad" src="http://www.myrareguitars.com/guitar-pictures/vintage-1984-riverhead-unicorn-electric-guitar-headless-ad.jpg" width="700" height="901" srcset="https://www.myrareguitars.com/guitar-pictures/vintage-1984-riverhead-unicorn-electric-guitar-headless-ad.jpg 700w, https://www.myrareguitars.com/guitar-pictures/vintage-1984-riverhead-unicorn-electric-guitar-headless-ad-600x772.jpg 600w, https://www.myrareguitars.com/guitar-pictures/vintage-1984-riverhead-unicorn-electric-guitar-headless-ad-233x300.jpg 233w" sizes="(max-width: 700px) 100vw, 700px" /><p class="wp-caption-text">Riverhead Unicorn Series Guitar Ad</p></div>
<div id="attachment_6563" style="width: 660px" class="wp-caption aligncenter"><img class="size-full wp-image-6563" alt="1985 Riverhead Unicorn Series Driving Force" src="http://www.myrareguitars.com/guitar-pictures/1985-riverhead-unicorn-series-driving-force.jpg" width="650" height="647" srcset="https://www.myrareguitars.com/guitar-pictures/1985-riverhead-unicorn-series-driving-force.jpg 650w, https://www.myrareguitars.com/guitar-pictures/1985-riverhead-unicorn-series-driving-force-300x298.jpg 300w, https://www.myrareguitars.com/guitar-pictures/1985-riverhead-unicorn-series-driving-force-100x100.jpg 100w, https://www.myrareguitars.com/guitar-pictures/1985-riverhead-unicorn-series-driving-force-600x597.jpg 600w, https://www.myrareguitars.com/guitar-pictures/1985-riverhead-unicorn-series-driving-force-150x150.jpg 150w, https://www.myrareguitars.com/guitar-pictures/1985-riverhead-unicorn-series-driving-force-50x50.jpg 50w, https://www.myrareguitars.com/guitar-pictures/1985-riverhead-unicorn-series-driving-force-75x75.jpg 75w" sizes="(max-width: 650px) 100vw, 650px" /><p class="wp-caption-text">1985 Riverhead Unicorn Series Driving Force</p></div>
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		<title>Off With Her Head (Vintage 1985 Austin Hatchet Electric Guitar)</title>
		<link>https://www.myrareguitars.com/vintage-1985-austin-hatchet-electric-guitar</link>
		<comments>https://www.myrareguitars.com/vintage-1985-austin-hatchet-electric-guitar#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 29 Jan 2013 15:42:07 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Michael Wright]]></dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[1980's Vintage Guitars]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.myrareguitars.com/?p=5158</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p>As a rule, I’ve never been too enamored of “pop” music, if you define pop as largely vocal-oriented music with catchy melodies and easy-to-remember lyrics, almost always love-themed. So, ordinarily, a pop band like The Police would be off my radar. Still, Andy Summers was able to weave some pretty interesting guitar textures—without traditional flash solos—behind Sting’s singing, so I paid attention. Besides, it was Andy Summers who almost single-handedly created a market for minimalist guitars like this c. 1985 Austin Hatchet.</p>
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]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>As a rule, I’ve never been too enamored of “pop” music, if you define pop as largely vocal-oriented music with catchy melodies and easy-to-remember lyrics, almost always love-themed. So, ordinarily, a pop band like The Police would be off my radar. Still, Andy Summers was able to weave some pretty interesting guitar textures—without traditional flash solos—behind Sting’s singing, so I paid attention. Besides, it was Andy Summers who almost single-handedly created a market for minimalist guitars like this c. 1985 Austin Hatchet.</p>
<div id="attachment_5165" style="width: 291px" class="wp-caption aligncenter"><img class="size-full wp-image-5165" title="Vintage 1985 Austin Hatchet Electric Guitar" src="http://www.myrareguitars.com/guitar-pictures/vintage-1985-austin-hatchet-electric-guitar-04.jpg" alt="Vintage 1985 Austin Hatchet Electric Guitar" width="281" height="426" srcset="https://www.myrareguitars.com/guitar-pictures/vintage-1985-austin-hatchet-electric-guitar-04.jpg 281w, https://www.myrareguitars.com/guitar-pictures/vintage-1985-austin-hatchet-electric-guitar-04-197x300.jpg 197w" sizes="(max-width: 281px) 100vw, 281px" /><p class="wp-caption-text">Vintage 1985 Austin Hatchet Electric Guitar</p></div>
<p>Summers famously played a headless Steinberger guitar, which is probably the best known minimalist guitar among guitar fanatics. But it certainly wasn’t the first. I suppose the earliest in the category were the first successful electric guitars, the first Hawaiian lap steels. The legendary Ro-Pat-In Electro “frying pan” had a body, neck, and head, but it sure was minimalist! Most electric laps had these elements, but by the 1940s these were pretty perfunctory. How many lap steels are basically a slab of wood with some pickups, a “fingerboard,” and some tuners, reducing a guitar to its bare minimum?</p>
<div id="attachment_5164" style="width: 292px" class="wp-caption aligncenter"><img class="size-full wp-image-5164" title="Vintage 1985 Austin Hatchet Electric Guitar" src="http://www.myrareguitars.com/guitar-pictures/vintage-1985-austin-hatchet-electric-guitar-01.jpg" alt="Vintage 1985 Austin Hatchet Electric Guitar" width="282" height="425" srcset="https://www.myrareguitars.com/guitar-pictures/vintage-1985-austin-hatchet-electric-guitar-01.jpg 282w, https://www.myrareguitars.com/guitar-pictures/vintage-1985-austin-hatchet-electric-guitar-01-199x300.jpg 199w" sizes="(max-width: 282px) 100vw, 282px" /><p class="wp-caption-text">Vintage 1985 Austin Hatchet Electric Guitar</p></div>
<p>I’m not sure who gets credit for building the first minimalist “Spanish” guitar. It pretty much had to be an electric guitar, since acoustics depend on having an acoustic chamber to produce their sound. In 1967 Dave Helland, then a music teacher in Green Bay, Wisconsin, got the idea that an electric guitar needed to be nothing more than a 2&#215;4 with a neck. He had a couple dozen of the legendary La Baye guitars built.</p>
<p>Around the same time Dave Bunker, a guitar player and luthier came up with his Astral guitar designs. These looked like a cross between a Star Trek starship and a guitar. However, many of the parts were screwed onto a minimalist core, so you could customize the way it looked when you performed.</p>
<p>Neither the La Baye nor the Astral guitars were particularly successful, so you’ll be lucky to ever play one. The ultimate in minimalist guitars were probably the so-called “fishbone” jobs built by Alan Gittler in New York during the mid-1970s. These reduced the guitar to a tubular spine and tubular “frets.” Indeed, Andy Summers played one of these for one of his Synchronicity videos. Only 60 of these were ever made before Gittler moved to Israel, where he became Avraham Bar Rashi and contracted out another 240 or so of a slightly more substantial version, still remarkably minimalist.</p>
<div id="attachment_5166" style="width: 293px" class="wp-caption aligncenter"><img class="size-full wp-image-5166" title="Vintage 1985 Austin Hatchet Electric Guitar" src="http://www.myrareguitars.com/guitar-pictures/vintage-1985-austin-hatchet-electric-guitar-02.jpg" alt="Vintage 1985 Austin Hatchet Electric Guitar" width="283" height="426" srcset="https://www.myrareguitars.com/guitar-pictures/vintage-1985-austin-hatchet-electric-guitar-02.jpg 283w, https://www.myrareguitars.com/guitar-pictures/vintage-1985-austin-hatchet-electric-guitar-02-199x300.jpg 199w" sizes="(max-width: 283px) 100vw, 283px" /><p class="wp-caption-text">Vintage 1985 Austin Hatchet Electric Guitar</p></div>
<p>Around the same time that Gittler was building his fishbones, Ned Steinberger was coming up with his small-bodied, headless design, which was produced by Stuart Spector. These went on to become the most famous of minimalists, thanks, in large part to The Police. Steinbergers were, however, expensive. To help fill the void, Cort licensed the design and began producing cheaper versions, bearing the Cort name as well as others, including models for Hohner and Washburn. I have one called Blake that used to be my “shore guitar.” In 1981 Kramer threw its hat in the ring with its aluminum-necked, headless Duke guitar.</p>
<p>None of the guitars mentioned so far were “travel guitars,” strictly speaking, though it was nice that you could pop your little minimalist guitar into the overhead compartment or on top of all your vacation luggage. There were travel guitars in the game at the time, including the little yellow Hondo Chiquita Banana. They were only minimalist in the same sense as the early lap steels in that they were small.</p>
<p>In any case, this was the environment in 1984 when Jack Westheimer of Cort got the idea to come up with his own cross between a minimalist and a travel guitar and designed this guitar. Actually, Westheimer’s inspiration was less the Steinberger or Duke or Chiquita and more the Colt 45 handgun. Yung Park tweaked Jack’s design and in 1985 the Cort 45 debuted. Jack used to laugh that he was the only one who ever connected either the name or the shape of the guitar to a pistol! Obviously the big distributor Targ &amp; Dinner didn’t because they called their version the Austin Hatchet, seen here.</p>
<div id="attachment_5167" style="width: 294px" class="wp-caption aligncenter"><img class="size-full wp-image-5167" title="Vintage 1985 Austin Hatchet Electric Guitar" src="http://www.myrareguitars.com/guitar-pictures/vintage-1985-austin-hatchet-electric-guitar-03.jpg" alt="Vintage 1985 Austin Hatchet Electric Guitar" width="284" height="427" srcset="https://www.myrareguitars.com/guitar-pictures/vintage-1985-austin-hatchet-electric-guitar-03.jpg 284w, https://www.myrareguitars.com/guitar-pictures/vintage-1985-austin-hatchet-electric-guitar-03-199x300.jpg 199w" sizes="(max-width: 284px) 100vw, 284px" /><p class="wp-caption-text">Vintage 1985 Austin Hatchet Electric Guitar</p></div>
<p>If you like playing minimalist guitars, this actually isn’t too bad. The neck-through construction gives it a solid feel. It’s powered by a pair of Korean Powersound humbuckers that are actually pretty darned hot. One of the mini-toggles is a threeway while the other reverses phasing. The headstock and tuners do make it a little top-heavy since there’s not much body to act as a counterweight.</p>
<p>I’ve never seen a Cort 45 and only a couple Austin Hatchets. That’s no evidence, but I don’t think these were too popular! They seem to have been gone by 1986. While other minimalist guitars like the Steinberger soldiered on (even they started getting bigger bodies), the craze for minimalist guitars had pretty much run its course. Which, come to think of it, pretty much also describes The Police, who broke up that same year. I can’t recall listening to any other “pop” bands since then either.</p>
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		<title>Skeletons in the Closet (1980&#8217;s Astron Gittler II Electric Guitar)</title>
		<link>https://www.myrareguitars.com/1980s-astron-gittler-ii-electric-guitar</link>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 01 Feb 2008 13:00:18 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Michael Wright]]></dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[1980's Vintage Guitars]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[<p>Whatever you call this instrument, the Gittler certainly pushes the envelope of what is a guitar! Alan Gittler (born in 1928) was originally a jazz guitarist in New York, heavily influenced by Remo Palmieri. He played music, composed, and even wrote and produced a film called Parachute to Paradise. He worked as a film editor for many years, invented a number of photographic-related devices, and even wrote a novel.</p>
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				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>There have been many times when I&#8217;ve asked myself, &#8220;What is a guitar?&#8221; Sometimes I ask this question when I&#8217;m considering &#8220;originality.&#8221; Does it matter if the pickups have been replaced? Tuners? A refin? Usually the answer is It depends, based upon how rare an instrument is. Sometimes it&#8217;s more philosophical. Like how basic can a guitar be? I&#8217;m not the first or only person to ask such a question. One who asked such a question and acted on it was an American luthier named Alan Gittler, who created perhaps the ultimate minimalist guitar. Or is it? So when the opportunity arrived to loan some guitars to the Museum of Fine Arts exhibition &#8220;Dangerous Curves&#8221; in Boston in 2000 and this Gittler appeared on eBay, how could I resist? It ended up in the show. Art. Gittlers and museums go together, as we shall see.</p>
<div id="attachment_620" style="width: 290px" class="wp-caption aligncenter"><img class="size-full wp-image-620" title="1980s Astron Gittler II Electric Guitar" src="http://www.myrareguitars.com/guitar-pictures/1980s-astron-gittler-II-electric-guitar.jpg" alt="1980s Astron Gittler II Electric Guitar" width="280" height="77" /><p class="wp-caption-text">1980s Astron Gittler II Electric Guitar</p></div>
<p>Whatever you call this instrument, the Gittler certainly pushes the envelope of what is a guitar! Alan Gittler (born in 1928) was originally a jazz guitarist in New York, heavily influenced by Remo Palmieri. He played music, composed, and even wrote and produced a film called Parachute to Paradise. He worked as a film editor for many years, invented a number of photographic-related devices, and even wrote a novel. At one point he was performing on New York streets with a Velasquez classical guitar run through a battery-powered amplifier. Gittler, by preference, only ever owned one guitar at a time. But he knew that the classical through a battery amp wasn&#8217;t right. So he began thinking about designing a guitar.</p>
<p>It was through this process that Gittler began paring down what a guitar was. While he acknowledged that a guitar&#8217;s shape and materials did affect the sound, he arrived at the conclusion that the primary mechanism that determines how a guitarist sounds are his flesh, his fingers, contacting the strings. Anyone who&#8217;s played guitar for a long time knows that your sound comes more from your &#8220;touch&#8221; than your equipment. All he needed to remind him he was playing a guitar was the sound of the strings. So he began stripping away as much as possible and arrived at his minimalist concept of the guitar. He took away as much as he could while still having a &#8220;guitar.&#8221;</p>
<p>The original American Gittlers were constructed of three sizes of milled stainless steel, with a master jack for output to a single amp plus individual jacks for each string. Plug into a string output and you disconnected it from the others for sending to another amp. They had a specially designed tuner concept that was later &#8220;borrowed&#8221; by Ned Steinberger. Andy Summers of The Police played one. Other musicians told Gittler that his guitar belonged in a museum. The Museum of Modern Art bought one. These two were among the few. Around 60 guitars and three basses were built in New York.</p>
<p>Gittler eventually moved to Israel and changed his name to Avaraham Bar Rashi. In Israel he was contacted by Astron Engineering Enterprises in Kinat Bialik, Israel, about licensing and manufacturing his design. Bar Rashi agreed. Unfortunately, he should have been more actively involved with Astron early on, because they took some shortcuts that ended up producing guitars that were not sufficiently up to specifications for Bar Rashi&#8217;s way of thinking. Bar Rashi even went so far as to send letters to dealers who bought them disavowing the instruments.</p>
<p>But not before they made 500 of them. The Astron Gittlers were known as the Gittler II. They were made of a mix of coated metal and stainless steel. Unlike the original Gittlers, the Israeli guitars have output via a single 1/4&#8243; jack and/or a DIN plug. These also have a little metal spar you can screw on the body for holding the guitar in your lap. The Astron Gittler IIs started with serial number 61. The one shown here is #134. Just when these guitars were produced is uncertain, but it was probably mid- to late-&#8217;80s.</p>
<p>So, in the end, I guess you have to say this Gittler II is a guitar, or at least a skeleton of one! It&#8217;s fairly comfortable to play and once you get used to the weird frets (which feel almost scalloped), it works fine. Nevertheless, as you might guess, it doesn&#8217;t get played very often! When I go to pickup a guitar, I&#8217;m a bit more conservative, I guess. I guess this guitar does belong in a museum, after all!</p>
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