Epiphone

Epiphone
Logo of Epiphone
Epiphone Emperor

The Epiphone Company is a musical instrument manufacturer founded in 1873 by Anastasios Stathopoulos. Epiphone was bought by Chicago Musical Instrument Company, which also owned Gibson Guitar Corporation, in 1957. Epiphone was Gibson's main rival in the archtop market[citation needed]. Their professional archtops, including the Emperor, Deluxe, Broadway and Triumph, rivaled (and some contend surpassed) those of Gibson[citation needed]. Aside from their guitars, Epiphone also made upright basses, banjos, and other stringed instruments. However, the company's weakness in the aftermath of World War II allowed Gibson to absorb it[citation needed]. 

The name "Epiphone" is a combination of proprietor Epaminondas Stathopoulos' nickname "Epi" and "phone"[citation needed] (from Greek phon-, "sound"/"voice"), as well as a play on one meaning of the word "epiphany," namely a sudden inspiration frequently presenting itself as supernatural in origin.[1]

Contents

History

1945 Epiphone Blackstone archtop guitar, made in New York

Epiphone started in 1873, in Smyrna, Ottoman Empire (now İzmir, Turkey), where Greek founder Anastasios Stathopoulos made his own fiddles and lutes (oud, laouto). Stathopoulos moved to the United States of America in 1903, and continued to make his original instruments, as well as mandolins, from Long Island City in Queens, New York. Anastasios died in 1915, and his son, Epaminondas, took over. After two years, the company was known as The House Of Stathopoulos. Just after the end of World War I, the company started to make banjos. The company produced its Recording Line of Banjos in 1924, and, four years later, took on the name of the "Epiphone Banjo Company". They produced their first guitars in 1928. Epi Stathopoulos died in 1943. Control of the company went to his brothers, Orphie and Frixo. In 1951, a four month long strike forced a relocation of Epiphone from New York to Philadelphia. The company was bought out by their main rival, Gibson in 1957.

Epiphone instruments made between 1957 and 1969 were made in the Gibson factory at 225 Parsons Street and on Elenor Street. Only solid guitars with flat tops and backs were made at the Elenor Street plant (both Gibson and Epiphone) in Kalamazoo, Michigan. These Epiphone instruments were effectively identical to the relevant Gibson versions, made with same timber, materials and components, and by the same people as the contemporary equivallent Gibson guitars. They shared the Gibson serial-number sequence.

Some specific examples of Gibson-made Epiphone instruments from this period includes the Epiphone Casino (similar to the Gibson ES-330), the Epiphone Cortez (similar to the Gibson B-25), the Epiphone Olympic Special (similar to the Gibson Melody Maker), the Epiphone Sorrento (similar to the Gibson ES-125TC, except for a few cosmetic changes), and the Epiphone Texan (similar to the Gibson J-45, apart from a change in scale-length). The other Kalamazoo-made Epiphones had technical or cosmetic relationship with the similar Gibson version.

Casino

Epiphone Casino VT

The most famous Epiphone model introduced by Gibson after taking over was the Casino[citation needed]. The Casino was made in the same shape and configuration as a Gibson ES-330 guitar. It has a very heavy sound[citation needed] and is a very good rhythm guitar due to its fairly thick sound when strummed[citation needed]. It is a genuine hollow body electric guitar with single coil P90 pickups. The Casino is famous for being used by The Beatles. Paul McCartney was the first to acquire one and John Lennon and George Harrison followed suit soon after. Paul McCartney used his for the solo in "Taxman" and the Casino sound is very prevalent throughout Revolver and their later albums. John Lennon made his Casino one of his main guitars and used it for the rest of his time with the Beatles and into the '70s. Paul still uses his Casino, which has a Bigsby vibrato tailpiece, in concert and studio today.

1970–present

In the early 1970s, Epiphone began to manufacture instruments in Japan. From the 1980s, Epiphones were manufactured mainly in Korea but also in Japan by contractors licensed by Gibson[citation needed]. One of these contractors was Samick[citation needed], which also built instruments under license for other brands and in its own name. The brand was primarily used to issue less expensive versions of classic Gibson models[citation needed].

These guitars were constructed using different woods (usually Nyatoh[citation needed], for example, instead of Mahogany), were fastened with epoxies rather than wood-glues[citation needed], and were finished in hard, quick-to-apply polyester resin rather than the traditional nitro-cellulose lacquer used by Gibson[citation needed]. Nitro-cellulose lacquers are applied very thinly, and as a result, do not impede the resonance of the instrument as much as resin finishes do. Nitro-cellulose, being a solvent-based lacquer , requires many more very thin coats, resulting in a lighter thinner finish because of much more hand-applied cutting and polishing. It is therefore much more time-consuming and consequently expensive to apply. Resin finishes are much quicker and cheaper to apply. These particular budget considerations, along with others such as plastic nuts and cheaper hardware and pickups, allow for a more affordable instrument.

Samick has stopped[when?] manufacturing guitars in Korea[citation needed]. In 2002, Gibson opened a factory in Qingdao, China, which manufactures Epiphone guitars[citation needed]. With few exceptions, Epiphones are now built only in the Qingdao factory[citation needed].

Unique Epiphone models, including the Emperor, Zephyr, Riviera and Sheraton, are built to higher quality standards than the company's "Gibson copy" line[citation needed]. Epiphone also produces a range of higher quality instruments under the "Elitist Series" moniker, which are built in Japan[citation needed]. The "Masterbuilt" acoustics are manufactured in Qingdao[citation needed].

Current Epiphone serial numbers give the following information[citation needed]:

Korea

  • I = Saein
  • U = Unsung
  • S = Samick
  • P or R = Peerless
  • K = Korea

China

  • DW = DeaWon
  • EA = Gibson/QingDao
  • EE = Gibson/QingDao
  • MC = Muse
  • SJ = SaeJung
  • Z = Zaozhuang Saehan
  • BW = China

Japan

  • No letter or F = FujiGen
  • J or T = Terada

Czech Republic

  • B = Bohêmia Musico-Delicia

Indonesia

  • SI = Samick Indonesia

Example: SI09034853 SI = Samick Indonesia, 09 = 2009, 03 = March, 4853 = manufacturing number.

Several Epiphone guitars have been produced in the United States since 1971. The Epiphone Spirit and Special were produced in the early 1980s in Kalamazoo[citation needed]. In 1993, three historic Epiphone acoustic guitars, the Texan, Frontier, and Excellente, were produced by Gibson Acoustic in Montana[citation needed]. The Paul McCartney Texan was produced in 2005, and in 2009, the Epiphone Historic Collection was created, beginning with the 1962 Wilshire, built by Gibson Custom. Several other models, such as the Sheraton and John Lennon Casinos, were built in Japan and assembled and finished by Gibson USA[citation needed].

YYMMFF12345

  • YY year
  • MM month
  • FF factory-code
  • 12345 production#
  • FACTORY NUMBER CODES -- for some models starting in 2008, if serial # begins w/numbers
  • [NOTE: The factories identified by these codes are based on patterns which forum members have observed. The numbers appear as the 5th and sixth digits in the serial number.]
  • 11 = MIC sticker on a '08 Masterbuilt
  • 12 = DeaWon or Unsung (China -- uncertainty remains as to which factory)
  • 15 = Qingdao (China) -- electric
  • 16 = Qingdao (China) -- acoustic
  • 17 = China - factory unknown MIC sticker on a J160E
  • 18 = China - factory unknown found on one 2009 model bass
  • 20 = DaeWon or Unsung (China -- uncertainty remains as to which factory)
  • 21 = Unsung, Korea
  • 22 = ??? Korea (factory still unknown)
  • 23 = ??? Indonesia (factory still unknown, probably Samick,)
  • I = Indonesia (this letter has appeared as the 5th digit on two authentic new models made in Indonesia

Imperial Series and Elitist

During the mid 1990s Epiphone released a series called the Imperial Series. These were remakes of the classic Epiphone archtops of the 1930s and '40s. Each instrument was hand made in the Fujigen Workshop in Japan[citation needed]. This short lived series was discontinued in 1993, after only 42 Emperors were made[citation needed]. Several other models, including De Luxe, Broadway and Triumph models, were also produced in varying quantities.

Production was moved back to Nashville and Bozeman for a similar limited run of instruments (250 each of Emperors, Sheratons, Rivieras and Texans)[citation needed]. These guitars were the "Centennial Series" in honor of one hundred years of Gibson, and were the last significant number of American made Epiphone guitars.

Current status

Epiphone is now a subsidiary of Gibson. Because of this subsidiary relationship, many of the instruments look the same as the more expensive Gibson versions. However Epiphone still maintains its own line of archtop guitars.

Epiphone also manufactures its own line of amplifiers.

Current products

Amplifiers

Gibson produced Epiphone amplifiers in the 1960s which were basically copies or variations of Gibson and Fender amplifiers[citation needed]. These amplifiers were of a tube design and some had reverb and tremolo. Gibson decided to launch a new line of Epiphone amplifiers in 2005 with many different models including the "So Cal", "Blues Custom" and the Epiphone Valve Junior. The Valve Hot Rod and Valve Senior were released in 2009. The Valve Hot Rod is a 5 W amp like the Valve Junior, but has a gain and reverb control. The Valve Senior offers 20 W of power, with a full eq, gain, volume, reverb, and presence control.

Guitars

The following guitars are currently[when?] made by Epiphone:

Gibson copies

An Epiphone Les Paul.

Epiphone models

  • Several versions of the Sheraton
  • Several versions of the Casino
  • Several versions of the Epiphone Texan
  • The Dot
  • The Riviera in 6- and 12-string versions
  • The Broadway
  • Masterbilt
  • The Emperor Regent
  • Several versions of the Zephyr:
    • Zephyr Blues Deluxe
    • Zephyr Regent
  • The Wildkat
  • The EM-2
  • The Thunderbird IV Bass
  • The Wilshire
  • The Alleykat
  • Nick Valensi Riviera P-94
  • The Viola Bass
  • Jack Casady Bass
  • The Coronet
  • Epiphone Wilshire
  • Graveyard Disciple
  • The Prophecy Series
  • The Zenith Bass

In recent years[when?] Epiphone introduced a series of acoustic guitars named Masterbilt after a line of guitars of the 1930s. Today's Masterbilt guitars are manufactured in China[citation needed].

Discontinued models

  • Epiphone Demon
  • Epiphone Genesis
  • Epiphone Slasher
  • Epiphone Supernova
  • Gibson/Epiphone Spirit
  • Epiphone Crestwood
  • Epiphone Coronet
  • Epiphone Olympic
  • Epiphone Pro
  • Epiphone Fat-210
  • Epiphone Fat-310
  • Epiphone T-310
  • Epiphone Rivoli bass
  • Epiphone Sorrento
  • Epiphone Scroll (three models)
  • Epiphone Evolution
  • Epiphone 1939 Emperor Reissue
  • Epiphone EM-1
  • Epiphone Flamekat
  • Epiphone ES-295
  • Epiphone Zephyr Regent
  • Epiphone El Segundo Bass
  • Epiphone Embassy Special IV Bass
  • Epiphone Embassy Standard IV Bass
  • Epiphone Embassy Standard V Bass
  • Epiphone Biscuit
  • Epiphone MD-100
  • Epiphone 1962 Wilshire Reissue (Limited production run to 100 copies)
  • Epiphone Paul McCartney 1964 Texan
  • Epiphone Les Paul Custom Plus
  • Epiphone Les Paul Studio Chameleon
  • Epiphone Les Paul '56 Gold Top Reissue
  • Epiphone John Conolly (Sevendust) signature Les Paul
  • Epiphone AJ-500RC 12 Fret
  • Epiphone EN-546CE
  • Epiphone MB-500
  • Epiphone Mahogany Ukulele
  • Epiphone Nighthawk
  • Epiphone Les Paul Junior '57 reissue
  • Epiphone Acoustic
  • Epiphone Joe Bonamassa Signature Goldtop Les Paul
  • Epiphone Spotlight

Players of Epiphone

References

  1. ^ "Epiphany [3]", Webster's Third New International Dictionary (online version), available at http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/epiphany (last visited 2010 June 7).

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