code GI669
90's LES PAUL JIMMY PAGE SIGNATURE 'first-run' Les Paul Jimmy Page
This is the original run Jimmy Page Signature Les Paul, launched in 1995 and discontinued in 1998. Mint
Light Honeyburst finish.
Body: bookmatched AA-grade flamed maple top, mahogany back.
Neck: Compound radius neck based on Page's original Les
Paul, mahagony; 22-fret, rosewood fingerboard with trapezoid
position markers. Scale/nut width: 24 3/4" / 1.710". Binding: vintage-colored
cream. Bridge/Tailpiece: ABR/Stop Bar. Gold hardware. Pickups: 496R & 500T
ceramic magnet humbuckers. Controls: two volume and two tone (push/pull), three
way selector switch. Pickguard: Jimmy Page signature facsimile.The push/pull
knobs provide 21 variations of coil-taps and series/parallel combinations. The
pickups can be made to run in series or parallel, in phase or out of phase, so
you get tones ranging from full-bodied humbucker girth to the searing sound of
the Telecaster. To state the obvious, this is a very versatile guitar. The
switches and controls are: 2 Volume Controls With Push/Pull Pickup Splitting, 2
Tone Controls and 3-Way Pickup Selector Switch. On a normal Les Paul when the
toggle switch in the middle position the pickups are in parallel getting a
bright jangly sound, this is when it is just the inside coils of the pickups.
Then pull the pot out, you put it in series both pickups on together to give a
thick mid rangy tone.
'first-run' Les Paul Jimmy Page Signature guitar has a nice fat nut width of just over 1 11/16 inches and a standard Gibson scale length of 24 3/4 inches. Just like Jimmy Page's original '59 guitar, the neck is thick at the nut and at the neck heel, like a typical 1959 Les Paul, but it tapers to a super-slim depth in the middle. Solid mahogany body with a nice 'tiger-stripe' two-piece carved maple top with single-ply cream binding. One-piece mahogany neck, and rosewood fretboard with 22 medium-jumbo frets and inlaid pearl trapezoid position markers. Two Gibson Ceramic Magnet Humbuckers. ABR-1 Tune-O-Matic retainer bridge with metal saddles and separate stud tailpiece. All hardware gold-plated. Apart from some very slight rubbing to the gold signature on the pickguard
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xs2FoIzyn-c
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7jQlWA8bXb4
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xLSz5vD9Dho
Guitarist Jimmy Page (center) presents an autographed Gibson Custom Jimmy Page Signature Les Paul to Warner Music Group Chairman and CEO Edgar Bronfman (left) and New York Stock Exchange CEO John Thain.
In 1995, Gibson USA got together with Jimmy
Page to produce a guitar similar to the one he played with the band Led
Zeppelin. The production run was from 1995 through 1999. The guitar was a single
cutaway bound mahogany body, AA-figured maple top, 22-fret bound rosewood
fingerboard with trapezoid inlay, bound black peghead, gold hardware,
Tune-O-Matic bridge/stop tailpiece, cream pickguard with engraved and gold
painted "Jimmy Page" signature, a three-way selector toggle, volume and tone
knobs are push/pull pots that put the pickups in and out of phase, series or
parallel them and make the humbuckers single coil as well, in a Light Honeyburst
(LB) finish. The pickups were standard 4 conductor 496R and 500T and sound so-so
if you ask me. Seymour Duncan makes Page pickups at their Custom Shop for around
$300 but if you want to save the money, you can install Alnico II Pro Humbuckers.
They are a closer match to the custom wound pickups that Page used than the
stock 496R and 500T pickups. Prices for Page Les Paul range from $4000 for 100%
(mint) to $2100 for 90% (excellent) to $1495 for 60% (good). The original
manufacturer's price on this guitar was $6300.
The guitar came with a hardshell case with emerald green lining and Jimmy Page
signature shroud. By the end of 1995, Jimmy was not happy with the guitar and
sued Gibson to stop production. Rumor has it, only the first 421 guitars were
made with the custom shaped neck that Jimmy wanted and that later in the year
Gibson went to a standard neck and also changed the color from the Honey Burst
to a redder version as is evident in later '95s and up. Gibson denies this and
says the necks are the same throughout the production run and that the color
variations are due to the fact that all the instruments are hand finished and
that variances are bound to occur. Normally, I wouldn't report a rumour, as that
is exactly what they are...rumours. This rumour, however, is one that you will
hear if you research these guitars. I don't know where or how it started but I
have weighed the evidence and in my opinion, I believe Gibson on this one. After
many emails to Gibson Customer Support, I have learned that the first 500 made
in 1995 came with Grover tuners. Later, the Grover tuner buttons were switched
from "kidney bean" style to "tulip" style and the fret height was lowered to
.038" and a locking nut added to the bridge as per Jimmy's request. Maybe this
is where the rumour about the "special" necks and differences in color started.
The suit was settled and Gibson continued production. These guitars are not
Custom Shop models but rather are standard Gibson production models even though
they are Signature models. They sound good but are not really that special
unless you are a "Led Head". The reason I say this is because Gibson really didn't
make this guitar an "electronic" duplicate of Jimmy's own Les Paul. They should
have gone the extra step and reproduced his pickups as well.
The Great '58/'59 Debate. Was Jimmy Page's Les Paul that he got from Joe Walsh a
'58 or a '59? Well, I had the pleasure of speaking on the phone to Roger Giffin.
Roger Giffin ran Gibson's West Coast Custom Shop in 1991 and personally built a
Les Paul for Jimmy Page replicated from his #1 (there was a #1 and a #2). This
guitar became the prototype for the Jimmy Page Signature Les Paul released in
the '90s. Back in 1991, #1 was dated as being built in 1958. However, Roger
Giffin told me personally that he recalls the guitar he replicated as being a
'59. Now, to tell you the truth, he seemed a bit....well...unclear in his memory.
If I had him on the witness stand I would rip him to shreds on that point, but,
the man told me he remembers it as being a '59 because "it wasn't as ornate as a
'58"...his words. He did tell me (for you '90s JPLP owners) that the pickups he
installed on the replica were Gibson '57 classic zebra humbuckers and that the
496R and 500T pickups that came on these sigs were all wrong. So there you have
it. Clear as mud. The debate continues.
In 2004, Gibson went all out. They borrowed Jimmy's original and produced a
pilot run of only 26. These guitars were made as historically accurate
reproductions, from the electronics to the strings Jimmy used. The Custom Shop
sent these guitars to Tom Murphy, who aged them and even added the dents and
dings that were on Jimmy's guitar. Jimmy's original was sold to him by Joe Walsh
(James Gang, Eagles) and the original Kluson tuners were removed and replaced
with Grover tuners. The screw holes of the Kluson and Grovers didn't match up
and Tom Murphy even put them in just like Jimmy's guitar. They were then sent
home with Jimmy who played, signed and numbered them all. He kept number 1, so
there are theoretically 25 more out there. These guitars had a carved maple top,
solid mahogany back and one-piece neck, and duplicates Jimmy's original 'Burst,
including eliptical neck profile and single push/pull pot. They come with a
certificate of authenticity (COA) signed by Jimmy and a display case with a
violin bow like the one used by Jimmy most famously on Dazed And Confused. The
manufacturer's retail price was $23,669. They range in price now from $18,500
for 100% (mint) to $8000 for 90% (excellent) to $4000 for 60% (good). This is
THE Jimmy Page Les Paul to get. I've seen one sold from Australia offered for
$25,000. You don't want to play these guitars...you want to put them in a
display case and count your blessings that you own it. None of the Custom Shop
models come with a Jimmy Page signature stamped pickguard. The inside of the
cases are red instead of emerald green like the Gibson USA cases.
The second Custom Shop release was identical to the first except that there were
150 of these guitars produced and none were sent home with Jimmy, though they
were all aged by Tom Murphy. Also a 2004-only release. They range in price from
$11000 for 100% (mint) to $6250 for 90% (excellent) to $4000 for 60% (good). The
manufacturer's retail price was $16556.
The third Custom Shop release was the same as the first two but none were sent
home with Jimmy and none were aged by Tom Murphy. They are a Custom Authentic
version and were manufactered from 2004 to present. They range in price from
$6150 for 100% (mint) to $2750 for 90% (excellent) to $1500 for 60% (good). The
manufacturer's price was $9401.
BTW, 100% mint means that the guitar was never played. Most guitars are going to
be 90% and lower condition.
Gibson serial numbers on the original models are deciphered as such: using my
guitar's serial number for example...92425417...9= the 9 in 1995...242= 242nd
day of the year...5= the 5 in 1995...417= either the 17th or the 417th
instrument stamped that day. They were made in Nashville and the stamping refers
to ALL instruments stamped that day at that factory (To avoid further confusion
I feel like I have to add that there were other instruments made at the
Nashville factory, not just JPLPs so if your '95 JPLP is stamped 92425001....it
doesn't mean that your guitar is the first JPLP ever manufactured.). The Custom
Shop models that Jimmy Page played are numbered 1-25 by hand by Jimmy. The
Second Custom Shop Release models are numbered starting with Page...and then the
serial number. The other Custom Shop models are numbered starting with the
letters JPP.