Melody Maker (1959-1971)
The Gibson Melody Maker was first launched in 1959 and discontinued in 1971. It had a thin slab-style mahogany body and a one-piece mahogany neck. All the electronics, from the small single-coil pickups to the cable jack, were assembled on a scratchplate and installed in a rout in the front of the body. The strings ran from a straight-sided simplification of the traditional Gibson headstock at one end to a wraparound bridge/tailpiece unit at the other.
Body style
From 1959 until 1961, the Melody Maker had a single cutaway slab body style similar to the early Les Paul Junior model but thinner. In 1961 the body style changed to a double cutaway and the single cutaway model was discontinued. The body style was changed in 1966 to a style similar to the SG, with pointed "horns", a large white scratchplate, and white pickup covers instead of black. Note: Melody Maker "D" refers to the double pickup model of any vintage but is often mistakenly used for the double cutaway model.
Options
Options on the Melody Maker included two pickups, the "D" model and a short-scale 3/4 neck. In 1967 a twelve-string version and a three pickup version were introduced, the Melody Maker 12 and III respectively. A short length version of the Vibrola vibrato device was also available as an option.
Colors
From 1959 to 1962 the finish was a sunburst, from 1963 to 1965 it was cherry, from 1966 it was fire engine red or pelham blue, in 1967 red was replaced by sparkling burgandy and walnut became an option from 1968. Rare examples were made to order in other custom Gibson colors e.g. Inverness Green.
Melody Maker (1971-1972)
The Melody Maker was discontinued and replaced by the SG 100, 200 and 250.
Melody Maker (1977-1983)
The Melody Maker double-cutaway model was revived in 1977 and discontinued again in 1983. Some minor changes were introduced into the design including single coil pickups embossed with the Gibson logo, all metal tuning pegs and a later day Gibson stop tail piece and Tune-O-Matic bridge.
Melody Maker (1986-1988)
In 1986, Gibson issued a Melody Maker with a single-cutaway body. It had one humbucking pickup (P94), Grover tuners, a Tune-O-Matic bridge, and a stop tailpiece. Two humbucking pickup models with two thumb switches were also made but are hard to find.
Melody Maker Flyer/Pro II (1987-1992)
This rare model features an explorer neck, Grover tuners, Kahler tremolo system and dual humbuckers. The body is standard single-cutaway Melody Maker. The finish is black with a perloid pick guard.
All American II
The Gibson All American II was built in the mid-1990s as part of the company's "All American" line which also included The Hawk and The Paul II. It was inspired by the original Melody Maker, but differed from it in having chrome tuners, no scratchplate, controls rear-mounted in the traditional Gibson solid-body style, and a bridge/vibrola unit.
The All American line was discontinued in 1998.
Les Paul Melody Maker
Gibson Les Paul Melody Maker | |
---|---|
Manufacturer | Gibson |
Period | 2003 - 2006 |
Construction | |
Body type | Solid |
Neck joint | Set |
Scale | 24.75" |
Woods | |
Body | Santa Maria (Jacareuba) |
Neck | Spanish cedar |
Fretboard | Rosewood |
Hardware | |
Bridge | Tune-O-Matic |
Pickup(s) | 1 P-90 Single-coil |
Colors available | |
Satin Cherry, Satin Ebony and Satin Yellow (Pictured) |
The Melody Maker was returned to the Gibson line as a sub-model of the Les Paul model. It offered a mixture of traditional Melody Maker features (straight-sided headstock, white button tuners, jack positioned on the top) and traditional Les Paul Junior features (bridge-mounted dogear P-90 pickup, Junior-style control mounting and pattern).
Like both the original Melody Maker and the original Junior, the Les Paul Melody Maker featured dot inlays as fretboard markers and did not have a cap on its top. Unlike either the original Melody Maker or the original Junior, both of which used wraparaound bridge/tailpiece units, the Les Paul Melody Maker used a Tune-O-Matic bridge and separate stop tailpiece.
The Les Paul Melody Maker also differed from other Les Paul submodels in the width of the neck (20 millimeters thinner at the 1st fret, 25 millimeters thinner at the 12 fret) and the length of the heel (125 millimeters shorter).This model of the Melody Maker is considered a collecter's item now as it is discontinued and only limited uni
In 2007, the Melody Maker became a separate model. It now has a smaller single-coil pickup than the P-90, a wraparound bridge/tailpiece unit, a mahogany neck, and a pickguard similar to the original Melody Maker. The CEO of Gibson said in reference to the new Melody Maker that it could "almost be considered a reissue of a 1959 Gibson Melody Maker." The guitar is offered in satin finishes and is one of the most economical Gibson guitars in recent years. It was originally offered in single and dual pickup configurations. The dual pickup configuration was discontinued in 2008 and is now considered a collectors item on online auction sites. Its street price is currently $490.
2008 Joan Jett Signature Model
In 2008 Gibson released the Joan Jett Signature Melody Maker. It differs from the standard model by having a single burstbucker 3 humbucker pickup, an ebony fretboard and a double-cutaway body in white with a black vinyl pickguard. It also features a kill switch in place of a pickup selector. Jett has owned her Melody Maker since 1977 and has played it on all her hits. It retails for $839. There is now also a "Blackheart" version of this guitar introduced in 2010. All specs are the same, but it is finished in black, with red and pearl heart inlays.
2011 Melody Maker
In 2011 Gibson released the Flying V Melody Maker, Explorer Melody Maker, and the SG Melody Maker. All feature a humbucker and 1 volume knob, and they all cost $539. They are limited edition. Colors available are Blue, Satin White and Ebony.
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