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Description

Here is a clean and original early 1960s Maestro Echoplex EP-2. Sounds incredible, just as a preamp and as a delay. Unit has been serviced and works great.With the arrival of the Echoplex, circa 1959, tape echo finally became easily accessible, and if you wanted to rock like Elvis, it was just the spin of dial and a tape loop away. And that doesn’t begin to describe the sonic adventures Led Zeppelin or Pink Floyd would take the Echoplex on. Its sounds are still being experimented with today, some 30 years after the assembly lines rolled to a halt with the last solidstate version.True, there were many others playing with tape echo years (even decades) before the Echoplex. Les Paul, of course, was trying everything, but his recordings featuring his homebrewed delay were not as influential on rock. Ray Butts crafted his landmark EccoSonic amp in 1953 with built-in echo – first via wire, then tape. The Ecco-Fonic effect followed circa ’59 with a spinning tape head. But neither offered the flexibility of an adjustable playback head to fine-tune the spacing of the echo. Ditto the English Binson Echorec, which used magnetic recording discs. And the Italian-made Meazzi/Vox Echomatic was hard to come by – plus notoriously temperamental.That adjustable playback head was the key to success for the Echoplex. It was also one of the hardest technical elements to get right during the long gestation of the machine.The Echoplex story starts with Akron, Ohio, guitarist Don Dixon, who began building his own tape echo effect in the mid ’50s, as he told VG’s John Teagle. Dixon wasn’t an engineer and couldn’t get the machine right, so he answered a newspaper ad for electrical repairs and met Mike Battle, also in Akron. Battle could fix or build anything electrical, and spent the next years perfecting Dixon’s creation.“It was three or four years before we really got it down where we wanted it,” Dixon told Teagle. “I’d say, ‘Put this back, take this out, a little more of this, a little less.’ And he said, ‘You’re just too damn particular!’ And I said, ‘Mike, if you don’t want to make the best one on the market, lets just quit.’ And he’d get mad, but, boy, he’d go in there and just do wonders with it.”The key was that adjustable playback head. Battle added, “A lot of the early machines… you couldn’t move the heads, you just played to fit that speed. I don’t know much about music, but how could you play all them songs to the same tempo?” He added a playback head that slid, allowing infinite adjustment to the echo spacing – within the machine’s physical dimensions, that is.Battle also enclosed the tape within a cartridge, which protected it and helped retain its sound quality. The cartridge’s patent-applied-for “endless loop magazine,” as early brochures hailed it, offered some two minute’s worth of tape.The duo also labored to get the tone just right, directed by Dixon with Battle again shaking his head over the constant revisions. “I worked on that for him for two years. He said, ‘It ain’t just quite right, Mike.’ I was getting kind of disgusted with it.”Battle’s brother, John, was a die maker, and he built the early cases and other metal parts in his basement. They first offered Echoplexes for sale in about 1959.“Surprised me,” said Battle, a confirmed non-musician. “These guys would come in, play it, and buy it! I’d build another. I thought these guys buying this piece of junk should have their heads examined, but they had a circus with it!”Soon, Dixon and the Battle brothers couldn’t keep up with demand. Battle showed the Echoplex to Chet Atkins, who tried and failed to interest Gretsch. Dixon and Battle connected with Market Electronics, a Cleveland company that produced Echoplexes and sold the first 500 to the Maestro division of Chicago Musical Instrument Company in 1959. Production was later taken over by Harris-Teller of Chicago.The first Echoplexes were retroactively known as the EP-1. The Echoplex here is a late-’60s EP-2, which added a combined instrument/echo volume-blend oscillator to its control panel alongside the Echo Repeats knob. It also featured Sound-on-Sound recording, allowing infinite looping – at least for the tape’s two-minute length.

Rivington Guitars

Rivington Guitars

~1962
Maestro
Excellent
Green
26 Years
Rivington Guitars
Howie Statland
212-505-5313
New York, NY
8:50 PM
We are open every day! Monday-Saturday 11p.m.-7p.m. Sunday 11pm-6pm

We accept Cash, Visa, Mastercard, American Express, money order, and personal check (items sent after check clears). Please be advised, all credit card orders are subject to a 3% re-stocking fee. Cash, check or money order is exempt from this fee.

We use UPS ground for shipping. We can work out overnight shipping on a case by case basis. Buyer pays all shipping charges.

All Sales Final. The only exception is internet sales. Please make sure you get an in-hand description for guitars purchased via the internet. 24 hour approval period on internet sales. After 24 hours, no returns. Buyer assumes all shipping charges. If we agree to a return, as in an internet sale, instruments must be returned in the condition they were sent. Shipping costs will be deducted from the return, and buyer will assume these costs. If we accept a return there will also be a 5% re-stocking fee. All merchandise sold is in used - as is condition. All sales final. If there is an exception made on any return over 24 hours, there will be a 15% re-stocking fee to the customer. No returns whatsoever on guitar parts.