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1935 Rickenbacker Electro Spanish
$4,800.00
Retrofret Vintage Guitars
718 237 6092 or 718 237 2532
contact dealer
dealer's inventory
Retrofret.com
Musurgia.com
Year: 1935
Manufacturer: Rickenbacker
Model: Electro Spanish
Case: Original Hard
Color:
Condition: Excellent
Description: Retrfofret Stock # 3799. Rickenbacker Electro Spanish Model Solid Body Electric Guitar (1935), made in Los Angeles, serial # B 88, molded Bakelite body and neck, original black tolex hard shell case. This is an especially nice example of one of the most historically interesting American guitars ever built, The Electro Spanish is the first commercially important electric standard guitar. Introduced in 1935 at the same time as the famed Bakelite Model B Electro Hawaiian Guitar, the Electro Spanish Guitar was not nearly as successful and only in limited production for a few years. Rickenbacker offered several wooden-bodied Spanish electrics during the same era but this is their most radical, earliest and purest attempt at a solid body fully electric Spanish guitar, issued well before there was a market for such an instrument. The plain Electro spanish was followed several years later by the even more radical Vibrola Spanish, essentially the same guitar with an internal motorized vibrato device. Clayton Orr "Doc" Kauffman was the inventor of this system, and interestingly the FenderĀ® Broadcaster designed a few years after Kauffman's partnership with FenderĀ® carries on several features of the Electro-Spanish guitar including the bolt-on neck (considered an easily replaceable part) the thru-body stringing and the bridge-mounted steel-guitar position pickup. The Electro-Spanish can be seen as the progenitor of the entire California family of solidbody guitars to come.This guitar is a particularly early version dating to the introductary year with a serial number in the first series, a single octagonal volume knob and output jack on the bass side. The molded black bakelite body has five cavities covered by decorative chrome plates and a solid aluminum bridge. The strings run thru the body and emerge from a molded block just behind the bridge. The horseshoe magnet pickup wraps over the strings and has the famed pre-war 1-1/2" wide magnets, the mounting bracket is the forst variation and has no patent markings at all. Patent number 1881229 is molded in raised letters on the body below the bridge. The round-profile detachable neck joins the body at the fourteenth fret, has twenty-three integral molded fret ridges and an integral nut and is bolted on by two large screws. Tuners are original chrome-plated strip Grovers with metal buttons. The metal nameplate screwed to the headstock carries the company logo with the old-style spelling "Rickenbacher Electro, Los Angeles". The Electro-Spanish is far rarer than the more familiar Hawaiian variation, which uses some of the same components but a different body and neck. Few players today have ever even handled one. While some of the design features now seem awkward (especially the molded bakelite frets and the short steel-guitar like scale length) the astounding thing about this little guitar is how good it sounds. The heavy bakelite body and horseshoe magnet pickup combine to produce an extremely powerful singing tone familiar to steel guitarists who still prize the bakelite Hawaiian guitar, but virtually unique in a Spanish guitar. Although today primarily seen as a museum-grade collectors piece, this Electro-Spanish Guitar is also a wonderful musical instrument, albeit an eccentric one. This example includes an extremely rare deluxe model original rectangular case, with a deep red plush lining and formed inserts surrounding the guitar.Overall length is 32 7/16 in. (82.4 cm.), 9 1/4 in. (23.5 cm.) wide at lower bout, and 1 3/4 in. (4.4 cm.) in depth, measured at side of rim. Scale length is 22 1/2 in. (572 mm.). Width of nut is 1 3/4 in. (44 mm.). This is an all original and very clean example; apart from some scuffing through the chrome on the plate near the fingerboard there is very little wear. The very tips of the bakelite fingerboard show a repaired crack; this is very cleanly done and and only noticeable on close inspection. Structurally and cosmetically this is a spectacular early example of a very historic guitar. Excellent Condition.