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Assassin/ASM; Avenge and WMD SOB or Son Of Beast (Beast shape scaled down 10%) Beast (Designed by Brian Hoffman of Deicide in 1999); Big (Daddy) Beast (8 string Beast. Concept of James Siler and Heath Williamson; only one was ever built) Actual concept came from 7 string Guitarist Simon "Vk" and guitar tech David Owen originally from Lofat, original guitar was to be 27" scale, but BC RICH ...
The introduction of the Warlock model in 1981 helped push B.C. Rich into the heavy metal music genre. Notable early players included Mick Mars and Nikki Sixx of Mötley Crüe , Lita Ford , Paul Stanley of KISS (featuring a broken mirror top), Randy Jackson (Zebra) , Craig Goldy of Dio and Giuffria , and a young pre- Les Paul playing Slash .
The confluence of B.C. Rich's far-out designs and the emerging hair metal culture of the late '70s and early '80s helped cement the brand's place in the market". [ 3 ] The guitar was constructed similarly to other B.C. Rich models such as the Seagull, Eagle, and Mockingbird, with neck-through construction, two DiMarzio humbucker pick-ups, and a ...
The B.C. Rich Mockingbird is a solid body electric guitar manufactured by B.C. Rich in 1976. There have been several variations on the Mockingbird model throughout the years. As of 2016, the current models are the Mk1, Mk3, Mk5, Mk7, Mk9 and Mk11. [1]
The series is based on the company's 'platinum series' and was made over two years from January 2003 until December 2004. The classic B.C. Rich shapes were given a new look with various images. Each guitar in the series carries a unique serial number and a 'limited edition' plaque on the reverse of the guitar, incorporated into the bolt-on neck.
The guitar was briefly made by ESP Guitars when B.C. Rich closed down their custom shop during a period in the 1990s. When the company changed hands and reopened the custom shop, King returned to B.C. Rich. The ESP model featured a George Lynch style headstock and was finished in black, and black with a red splatter with eagle inlays. [2 ...
If a car has number matching major components it helps define how collectible a car is. Number matching cars typically will have a much greater value than non-number matching cars, because they are much rarer than non-number matching cars, [6] and are seen as a more accurate description of how the car was built. [7] [8]
A model/batch number of the form nnnnHmmmm where 'nnnn' is a batch number and 'mmmm' is a model number ('6072H950' for example would be an H950 model). They were also date stamped using an 'F' for instruments manufactured during the first half of the year and an 'S' for those built in the second half, and a 2 digit year code.