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In 1956, Danelectro introduced the six-string bass guitar. Though the model never became widely popular, it found an enduring niche in Nashville and Los Angeles for "tic-tac" bass lines, where the electric instrument doubled the line played by an upright acoustic bass. [3] [4] In 1966, Danelectro was sold to the Music Corporation of America. [5]
Nels Cline uses Silvertone and Danelectro guitars on his album Instrumentals [12] Bruce Cockburn; Ry Cooder plays slide guitar on Silvertone guitars. [13] Elvis Costello appeared in ads for Danelectro when the brand was relaunched in the late 1990s and plays Danelectro and Silvertone guitars on his album When I Was Cruel. [14] Gianluca ...
The Danelectro Amp-In-Case, properly known as a semi-hollow body due to its Masonite top and back, with pine outer structure. "All-in-one" Amplifier-Case or Silvertone 1448/1449/1451/1452/1457 is a line of guitar sets introduced from 1962 to 1968.
Danelectro Convertible reissue. The Danelectro Convertible was a hollow-bodied thinline acoustic/electric guitar based on the Shorthorn. It had a conventional round sound hole with a lipstick pickup mounted across the hole. The Convertible name came from the ability to play it unplugged as an acoustic guitar or plugged in as an electric guitar.
The lipstick-tube pickup was first introduced by Danelectro on their line of electric guitars. [1] The original lipstick-tube pickups were, in fact, manufactured using real lipstick tubes, [ 2 ] and were featured on Danelectro, Danelectro's Coral series, and guitars that were later marketed through Sears, Roebuck and Company department stores ...
The Danelectro Dano Pro is an electric guitar made by Danelectro in 1963 and 1964, [1] reissued in 2007 and again in 2012. Characteristics
The Danelectro U2 is a dual-pickup hollow bodied guitar made of Masonite and shaped similar to a Les Paul model guitar. It was originally made from the years 1956 to 1958 but was re-issued in the late 1990s, in 2006 in a slightly modified form as the '56 Pro, and again in 2010 as the '56 Single Cutaway.
The last of these was a custom pedal created for Vennart by GCP and subsequently brought out as a limited-edition signature range. According to Vennart, "you’ve got the Big Cheese on one side with four different settings of fuzz. I use that a lot for broken-up, Velcro-y shitty- sounding stuff.