I bought a brand-new Fender P Bass in Englewood Colorado in 1977. I walked into the store, and it was the only Bass in a natural finish hanging on the wall amongst all of the others. When I inquired about buying it, I was told that I couldn't buy it because it was a special order (it was built with a Jazz neck, which made it even more appealing to me). Salesperson says, hold on a minute, and disappears... after one more attempt to make contact (and I was told there were many), they agreed to sell it to me. After many, many, many gigs.. I still own it to this day!
For being who he is and all he’s accomplished - it’s a beautiful thing how accessible he is and down to earth! The world is a better place with Bukovac living in it!!
He is a total class act. One the best players I've seen, period. Tasty, melodic, inventive, versatile. And humble. I guess the only other master player who can play like that is Tim Pierce, especially in improvising. Such tasty playing, damn. Been a fan of his channel for years.
We don’t know people not even ones we interact with. He backstabbed some guy online and that guy wants to whoop,his ass. The way you are easily fooled is how horrible politicians and leaders come into power.
10:40 I remember when I bought my first brand new Gibson, it was a 1977 Les Paul Deluxe, cost was $485 w/HSC. I had worked multiple Summer Jobs to save up enough to make the purchase, I was only 15 years old. A big thanks to my Parents for driving me back and forth from all my jobs that year.
@@reverandscales Oh yeah, the infamous Super Distortion, back in the late '70s a few of my guitars had those (I'd been consuming way to much Ace Frehley). I ended up trading my '77 Les Paul Deluxe because I didn't want to route it for a humbucker. I wish I'd known back then what I know now.
@@sneifert1968 I wish I'd kept my '77 Deluxe. I've had regrets trading away my '77 Deluxe ever since. Because of that I've kept every guitar I've acquired and stopped selling/trading them. Since 1985 I've kept every guitar I've purchased.
This is why I don't watch much television these days. So much better content on RUclips. This will be a great series to look forward to, Robert. This Deluxe is beautiful. I enjoyed his story and love for his instrument
Omg I have the exact same Gibson - LP, black, deluxe, but built 139 days earlier (8-11-1978)! My bathroom scale says she weighs 11.4 lbs. The only thing wrong with mine is belt buckle rash on the back and I broke the toggle switch cap doing the Ace Freeley jitter sound! I’m the same age as Tom but nowhere near as talented as either of you two. What an awesome surprise- thank you for thinking of doing this series. I’m already looking forward to the next one.
I'm getting in to electric guitar now plus taking guitar lessons at the local music store. I purchased a used les paul Studio 16 years ago & USA Stratocaster, 2 acoustics ( Taylor and or Ovation) Leaning the scales pentatonic A minor and A major
What's so cool about music is that it brings people of different backgrounds, ages, and abilities together. This is a great series idea, there's no shortage of stories around Nashville.
Ha! Same here. 20th anniversary custom. Black. I’ll never sell it. Still gig it sometimes. I still remember the day when I bought it and brought it home .
The best part of this interview is when Tom speaks about his son and his love for the guitar I’m 63 years old and have a son who is 34 who just didn’t connect to instruments so he is very proud and lucky to have his son who shares his passion. But as i also say the harder a dad works with his son the luckier he seems to get .
A few years ago I came to realize that I wasn't a guitarist, but just a guy that owns a few nice-looking guitars. But I still plug along and manage a few nice sounds here and there. But, once in a while, I'll be playing something and think, "Man, I've never heard anyone do this. The world needs to hear!" Then reality sinks in, and I'm just glad a guy like Tom feels like sharing his world to a plug like me! Appreciate you, Tom.
This man’s amazing- he owns 2 of the finest examples of Les Pauls ever made, a 60 ‘burst and 57 gold top and then he has his deluxe. By his own admission, not their finest era of LP production (Norlin era). I have a 70’s and it’s indeed a boat anchor. But he’ll hang on it as it means something. Been following him since laid up with Covid and I’m convinced anything he does has meaning. This dude has accidentally become so much to so many. I continue to follow him for what he’ll do or say next as much as his guitar prowess. Great guest and video!
I have an '81 Standard, same exact color scheme. The binding is turning orange. I have the same exact same neck paint wear off, the inlays are not consistent in size, and sometime in the late 80s I somewhat foolishly swapped out the original pickups for (don't laugh) a George Lynch "Screamin Demon" n the bridge and some sort of "Pearly Gates" in the neck (both Seymour Duncan), trading the original pickups for the wiring job, lol. It has a replacement tailpiece and bridge, and has been refretted, oh yeah, also replacement tuning keys. It is total boat anchor for sure. But...people love it, it plays great! And I'll never sell it, never even considered it.
@@joelhague5515 I’ve done equally foolish things with guitars over the years too. How about routing out a 62 original Strat for a Floyd Rose, and doing such a bad job that it made the guitar useless!
I knew from the thumbnail it would be a Deluxe. I have a wine red '76 , which I love dearly. Uncle Larry was talking about Filtertrons the other day, which I'm also a big fan of, and those minis sound closer than anything.
That was such an intimate and great interview. Just sitting in the kitchen with a six pack on the counter. Felt like I was with buddies. Keep em coming. Excellent 👍 and relaxed
How can you not love Uncle Larry. My first real guitar was a 1985 MIJ contemporary strat I got for my 18th birthday. That was my main guitar for 30 years until I gave it to my youngest daughter on her 21st birthday.
Hi Rob, great story on Tom with the black Les Paul. I actually was giving a 1979 Les Paul Tobacco Burst for my 16th birthday by my parents. I still have the guitar today, and is as close to mint as you can get. Never changed a thing, very rarely used live. I actually have a very similar purple case like Tom has in this video. My guitar however is a one piece body, not a pancake. Mini Humbuckers, big head stock, literally nothing ever change it's beautiful. The music story we got it from did not have an original gibson case and sold me a black case w/ purple inside just like Toms. The list price and the Store was 1,000. It sat for quite awhile and my parents got is for 500 on a sale and 75 for the case. This was a giant purchase by my parents, we did not have the money, but they managed somehow. To this day I still play and have been in many bands, so I made sure it didn't go to waste....
What a great story. I watch Tom's channel all of the time......love the guy. He's played with everyone who is anyone and has a great reputation in the industry. He doesn't have an arrogant bone in his body.
I’m 55 as well and still own the first really good guitar I ever bought. My wine red ‘87 Les Paul Standard. Bought it in Jan ‘88 with all the money I got that Christmas. Still love playing it whenever I can. Love the vid, really takes me back. 😊
This was phenomenal - when I saw you had a crossover with Uncle Larry it was a must-click. Loved hearing all about this guitar, the stories surrounding it, and the songs and rigs from the "Boy Wonder" years - I'm 36 but thought my classic rock knowledge was decent - I couldn't name a couple of those riffs though and have to go back to school. I remember I too was obsessed with Les Pauls, having spammed the Song Remains the Same videos all through my early teens. My first electric was a Korean-made Tokai Les Paul Custom "Black Beauty" style, sans the white binding and with a presumably rosewood fretboard instead of Ebony as it was a lower-end model. Looking back, a pretty underwhelming instrument, but to me it meant the world when my dad (who passed in 2009) accompanied me to the music store and surprised me by talking the salesman down in price then said we would buy it, him "topping up" my pitiful savings to pay the cost. I'm not ashamed to say I cried like a baby that day, remembering how when I first told him I was going to take guitar lessons he thought I'd never stick with it and would drop out when my "fingers got sore". I knew he'd seen how persistent and dedicated I'd become after years of borrowing other peoples guitars, and I knew I had made my old man proud. Thanks for this and much love to both you and Uncle Larry!
This hits super close to home for me. We're a year apart, I also grew up being absolutely mesmerized by The Song Remains the Same. I watched it more times than probably any single live concert I've seen, and Jimmy was such a huge inspiration and motivation for me to practice endlessly on my Dad's old acoustic. My first electric was a Lemon Drop Epiphone Les Paul I saved up for, and by the end of high school I saved up enough money from mowing lawns and selling my childhood game collection that I got myself a real, Honey Burst Gibson Les Paul Standard. My Dad also passed away since then, have his old BOSS Super Overdrive. To this day it sits on my pedalboard. I've grown more accustomed to playing Super Strats since those days, but I will always cherish the Les Paul and everything it represents. Thanks for sharing your story man, keep on playing!
Cool to see an Norlin-era LP getting some love. My first guitar was the one he was talking about, a '78 Pro Deluxe in the same black, with the cream P90s. I got it in 1987 at the age of 7. My dad actually bought it for the family, but I was the only one who took interest. It is still my main guitar today, almost 40 years later. Today, it sports DiMarzio PAF '59s and medium jumbo frets.
Hi Tom, great story of a great guitarist, thanks Robert. Once we get older that's all we have and remember and that's our life, amazing man. Peace guys, thanks again 🙏
Bro, I totally appreciate this episode. We all have that 1 guitar that means something even if it isn't the best, it's sentimental. Keep these stories coming and well done on this episode.
I worked at Gibson from 1976 to 1979 and likely had my hands on that guitar in final assembly. Our plant manager's background was managing a furniture factory, and Norlin's goal was profit, thus the quality drop off. The body of that guitar is mahogany with a maple top. The body blanks with slight cosmetic imperfections got painted black. I liked the black and creme color scheme, some creme P90's would make that piece of furniture honk! Hearing you play that guitar takes me back there, thanks for sharing.
Amazing my 1979 Les Paul deluxe is my one first guitar I got it from Cairo Egypt 2007 from the original owner, the guitar can tell stories something about it, even though I have done changed the pots refret 50s wiring and 1961 mini PAF from Epiphone sorrento now in the bridge, great episode
Great episode. I actually bought one of Tom's amp years ago, a Dr Z Carmen Ghia combo. We met at a hotel in Nashville and did the deal. BTW, I am 6'1", but I was looking up to Tom; he is a big guy.
The first studio I recorded in Heartwood Studios I used a 3203 Marshall. Still have it with the matching 4 x 10 cab, recorded with an old Kramer, all bought used. Worked great and did a pile of gigs with it and never let me down. I don't play it often but one amp I will never sell because of so many memories. Tom is so great, just love his videos too. Great video, thanks for posting!
Man, I really enjoyed this video! Loved seeing the sentimental memories, the humor, the great stories. It's awesome that Tom asked you about living in Nashville 🙂 Rock on Robert!
I just saw a mirror of my childhood. Even your bands name. I called us “Vengence” because I had just seen the Judas Priest/Iron Maiden concert in the fall of 1982, and Screaming for Vengence was their big song then. I spelled it this way even though it’s wrong. My first good guitar was an early 80’s White les Paul custom. I played 75% of all those songs you just played. It’s amazing how infectious guitar was back then, the music was great. An entire generation of new young sprouting guitar players came out of that late 70’s/early 80’s era. Robert, Love your new series and Uncle Larry was the perfect person for your first episode. I think Tom took the Vengence name just before us, Dang! Thanks you guys.
Great story. Christmas 1984. I was taking lessons at Royal Music in suburban Detroit. They had a bunch of Heritage guitars and I would lust after a cherry H150. I was playing acoustic at the time and didn't own an electric and would point out the guitar to my mother after every lesson. Christmas came and I was disappointed there was no guitar when my mother asked to get my father his work coat. This perplexed me as it was Christmas day. I went to the laundry room and grabbed it not noticing it was somehow floating in mid air against the side door. Underneath it was an electric guitar case and a Gorilla Amp. It wasn't the Heritage, too much money, but decent Laguna LP copy. I still have both. Best Christmas.
Thank you Robert ! That was an awesome start ! Tom is a fantastic player and very cool cat. I’m also from northeast Ohio and I was particularly amazed when he mentioned Mike Szuter and plugging him … I’m 51, but used to go watch Mike and his brother CJ in their band Outta the Blue …
I moved to Nashville from Ohio myself and being a 4+ decades now guitarist and living here and following your channel for long time and love your channel and honesty & now you started this and exciting to see who you found for this as I have meet some incredible musicians since living here. Awesome dude and can’t wait for the next one! Keep rocking Robert🤘🎸🤘
Love the set list. All Those tunes flooded the rock and roll airwaves. Glad you hung onto the deluxe. Great stuff. Like your guru bubba story. Nice to get the ship pointed in the right direction. Again great stuff.😎✌️
Totally normal-looking kitchen... except for the half-stack tucked behind the island/counter. That gave me a chuckle. Fun visit overall, too. Keep up the good work.
I love these chill environments of 2 dudes talking shop. We all love this. Keep this going Robert. We are all music lovers at the end and that shines through in this format.
Ever since discovering Tom from some of his incredible gear videos, I've grown to have a massive respect for Uncle Larry. So awesome to see you guys hanging out here!
Beautiful, Robert! Like you and Buk, I was a rocker who came to Nashville in 1998 from California and was welcomed and got a lot of work - road and studio in no time. I'm glad your experience has been positive. I had a black 1977 Les Paul Standard that I paid $600 for with case with money from my first job at Pizza Hut. Wish I still had it.
I enjoyed this video and can relate to it. My dad bought me a 76 Les Paul Deluxe when I was 14. Mine is a cherry sunburst model with a maple neck. It weighs 11 lbs! I remember having lots of microphonic squeal feedback with the original mini-humbuckers. I had mine routed eventually to accommodate regular sized humbuckers. These days the guitar has Fishman Fluence Classic humbuckers in it. It was my first good guitar. I don’t ever want to sell it. Mine could really use a fret job.
Gosh this brings back another memory as I was learning guitar, I needed a distortion because I wanted to play metal and not rock. And I by then was studying electronics and working at a music store, setting up guitars and sales. And a BOSS distortion was the equivalent of 300 bucks now. In I was like why? And I actually liked a combination of the tube screamer for rhythm and BOSS distortion for lead. And so the owner said I could buy them against cost which was about 33% less. So I asked if I could borrow them over the weekend. And he was like “sure” and I disassembled them and reversed engineered them. Hooked them up on my scope to see how they’d work. And I was like: “there’s not more than 6 bucks of electronics in this crap!”. You pay for the cast iron case. So I set out to design a clone of these two pedals. But also made them “digital” I would have 255 step “pots” so I could recall settings. And with a single pedal go lead, rhythm heavy, rhythm light. It took me 6 or 8 weeks to design an make the PCB in college. I showed my then boss and he was like! This is great! Except it needs a good case! That’s where his metal and wood work came in. And we started selling those for 250 a piece so a third of the price of all the distortion pedals we sold. And we would earn 200 bucks on each we created. We could do “specials” where we’d engrave the aluminium case with the name of the player. And added some pre configured settings on EPROM. Because it was initially only in SRAM with a battery backup. At a point we were so busy, that we had literally a stack of 20 PCBs that we now let make in a factory. The components we could get even cheaper because we bought so much in bulk. Because literally every guitarist we saw during gigs wanted one. We almost succumbed at our own success because the volumes weren’t big enough to factory make them, but too many to keep up with the demand. Luckily we were getting out of the metal era into the crunch and so demand slowed down 😂 Oh yeah we also had a Tremelo and a pulsed cut out “switch” in later models.
So many parallels here. My first real guitar was a ‘69 Les Paul Deluxe goldtop. I got it for Christmas is 1975, when I was 12. It was $500. I initially started playing because of my brother Doug. I am the youngest of 6. There are 6 years between me and the next youngest.
I have a 1979 Gibson RD Artist bass. The neck is about 3 miles long and has that giant Volute. With the Moog electronics, it is still the best sounding bass I've ever played.
That was AWESOME! I could have listened to that all day long! Nothing better than sitting and talking gear, gear stories and sharing memories with someone who appreciates it as much as you do! As you look over to see your significant other sound asleep on the couch....LOL! Loved this.
Thanks guys ! I totally get the back ache thing (less the wallet in the right back pocket) ! Proud owner of 2 x 1972 Cherry Sunburst LP Deluxes, both have been modded, one by me (hey, I was 19, wth did I know) and the other used to have a Bigsby on it from a previous owner. Thank you guys again ! Cheers from Thailand ! 😎🇺🇸🇹🇭🇺🇸⚓️🎸✅☕️🤠😎
I got into Tom relatively late, well REALLY late. But the guy just exudes class and normality. He brings everything down to earth. Great interview Robert.
Oh my God ... did you take me back with the Fayreweather antidote. Me and my girl would never miss that band when they came to Chicago. That band was so good .. their version of Squonk was worth the price of admission. This was in '77 and '78 when our number one pastime was going to see live music. Cheap Trick was a bar band. Any way thanks for the trip down memory lane. On another note ... did either one of you know Mark Selby?? He used to play my blues club and he was one of the sweetest people to ever come through my club. Thanks again .... awesome idea for a youtube show.
I have a '74 Deluxe in cherry burst that was passed down to me by my uncle who recently passed away. It was bought new back then and stayed in the family. I've owned/sold dozens of guitars and worked on hundreds more, but I've never seen a black finish. These models are truly special LPs, love the pancaked body and mini humbuckers.
I have a 79 blck lp standard, w/reg sized Humbuckers, and its heavy as well, but it's a great guitar. Nothing wrong with that year. I love the mini buckers! Sounds great!
Ahhh man! Love Uncle Larry! Great stories and awesome vid! And I've got one of those 77 LP pro Deluxe with soapbars I bought brand new on my 18th birthday! I went to the big city (3 hours away) and spent every cent I had and had to hitchhike home!
At 7:13, I recognized that aqua blue/orange box immediately! That's a Rema Tip Top bicycle innertube patch kit. Went through many of those, over the years... Funny, Uncle Larry and I are the same age, and I'm also the youngest of five kids. Never got a Les Paul for Christmas, though...
A Big thank you to Unc Larry for being in Episode one . What was your first real guitar?
such a great series to start maan, i got my first 85' strat given to me by my mentor. and i still loved it until now.
My first real guitar was a 77 tobacco sunburst... And of course I had to hack the bridge pick up for a PAF.
Hahaha Jackson Randy rhoads white pinstripe 😂
80's kramer Striker
I bought a brand-new Fender P Bass in Englewood Colorado in 1977. I walked into the store, and it was the only Bass in a natural finish hanging on the wall amongst all of the others. When I inquired about buying it, I was told that I couldn't buy it because it was a special order (it was built with a Jazz neck, which made it even more appealing to me). Salesperson says, hold on a minute, and disappears... after one more attempt to make contact (and I was told there were many), they agreed to sell it to me. After many, many, many gigs.. I still own it to this day!
For being who he is and all he’s accomplished - it’s a beautiful thing how accessible he is and down to earth! The world is a better place with Bukovac living in it!!
He is a total class act. One the best players I've seen, period. Tasty, melodic, inventive, versatile. And humble. I guess the only other master player who can play like that is Tim Pierce, especially in improvising. Such tasty playing, damn. Been a fan of his channel for years.
@@EdBender like way bacl since 2009 wayyy back lol
We don’t know people not even ones we interact with. He backstabbed some guy online and that guy wants to whoop,his ass. The way you are easily fooled is how horrible politicians and leaders come into power.
10:40 I remember when I bought my first brand new Gibson, it was a 1977 Les Paul Deluxe, cost was $485 w/HSC.
I had worked multiple Summer Jobs to save up enough to make the purchase, I was only 15 years old.
A big thanks to my Parents for driving me back and forth from all my jobs that year.
Had a shot at a 79 deluxe in tobacco burst. Passed on it for $2500 😢
I had one like his except someone installed a DiMarzio Super distortion in the bridge. It had a switch to make it single coil.
@@reverandscales Oh yeah, the infamous Super Distortion, back in the late '70s a few of my guitars had those (I'd been consuming way to much Ace Frehley).
I ended up trading my '77 Les Paul Deluxe because I didn't want to route it for a humbucker. I wish I'd known back then what I know now.
@@sneifert1968 I wish I'd kept my '77 Deluxe. I've had regrets trading away my '77 Deluxe ever since. Because of that I've kept every guitar I've acquired and stopped selling/trading them. Since 1985 I've kept every guitar I've purchased.
i'll give ya $500 for it
Just the look on his face doing this. Man, you made him feel like a kid again. Awesome.
Tom is the ultimate sweetheart and a pro’s pro. Thank you for featuring Uncle Larry.
This is why I don't watch much television these days. So much better content on RUclips. This will be a great series to look forward to, Robert.
This Deluxe is beautiful. I enjoyed his story and love for his instrument
Tom Bukovac is an historical musical treasure. May he live forever!!! 🙏😁 Great series Robert. This should be fun!! 🎸
Omg I have the exact same Gibson - LP, black, deluxe, but built 139 days earlier (8-11-1978)! My bathroom scale says she weighs 11.4 lbs. The only thing wrong with mine is belt buckle rash on the back and I broke the toggle switch cap doing the Ace Freeley jitter sound! I’m the same age as Tom but nowhere near as talented as either of you two.
What an awesome surprise- thank you for thinking of doing this series. I’m already looking forward to the next one.
I'm getting in to electric guitar now plus taking guitar lessons at the local music store. I purchased a used les paul Studio 16 years ago & USA Stratocaster, 2 acoustics ( Taylor and or Ovation)
Leaning the scales pentatonic A minor and A major
Great hang with Tom. That story about his son treasuring that guitar is beyond classic.
It’s weird seeing Uncle Larry’s kitchen from a different angle! 😂
What's so cool about music is that it brings people of different backgrounds, ages, and abilities together. This is a great series idea, there's no shortage of stories around Nashville.
I see Tom I click the thumbs up. You gotta love the guy.
I still have a 1974 Goldtop Deluxe I bought new for $354 when I was 16yo. All original except the tuners.
Ha! Same here. 20th anniversary custom. Black. I’ll never sell it. Still gig it sometimes. I still remember the day when I bought it and brought it home .
Got mine used for $125 at Buckhead Pawn. It was a mess but had all the electronics. Just missing a pick guard and needed a setup.
The best part of this interview is when Tom speaks about his son and his love for the guitar I’m 63 years old and have a son who is 34 who just didn’t connect to instruments so he is very proud and lucky to have his son who shares his passion. But as i also say the harder a dad works with his son the luckier he seems to get .
love that guy and his Yuenglings
A few years ago I came to realize that I wasn't a guitarist, but just a guy that owns a few nice-looking guitars. But I still plug along and manage a few nice sounds here and there. But, once in a while, I'll be playing something and think, "Man, I've never heard anyone do this. The world needs to hear!" Then reality sinks in, and I'm just glad a guy like Tom feels like sharing his world to a plug like me! Appreciate you, Tom.
This man’s amazing- he owns 2 of the finest examples of Les Pauls ever made, a 60 ‘burst and 57 gold top and then he has his deluxe. By his own admission, not their finest era of LP production (Norlin era). I have a 70’s and it’s indeed a boat anchor. But he’ll hang on it as it means something. Been following him since laid up with Covid and I’m convinced anything he does has meaning. This dude has accidentally become so much to so many. I continue to follow him for what he’ll do or say next as much as his guitar prowess. Great guest and video!
I have an '81 Standard, same exact color scheme. The binding is turning orange. I have the same exact same neck paint wear off, the inlays are not consistent in size, and sometime in the late 80s I somewhat foolishly swapped out the original pickups for (don't laugh) a George Lynch "Screamin Demon" n the bridge and some sort of "Pearly Gates" in the neck (both Seymour Duncan), trading the original pickups for the wiring job, lol. It has a replacement tailpiece and bridge, and has been refretted, oh yeah, also replacement tuning keys. It is total boat anchor for sure. But...people love it, it plays great! And I'll never sell it, never even considered it.
@@joelhague5515 I’ve done equally foolish things with guitars over the years too. How about routing out a 62 original Strat for a Floyd Rose, and doing such a bad job that it made the guitar useless!
🤩YES! I have my uncle's 1971 Les Paul Deluxe - still rocking it!
Enjoy it
he is our mentor about guitars and amps and music and the humanity in between
I knew from the thumbnail it would be a Deluxe. I have a wine red '76 , which I love dearly. Uncle Larry was talking about Filtertrons the other day, which I'm also a big fan of, and those minis sound closer than anything.
That was such an intimate and great interview. Just sitting in the kitchen with a six pack on the counter. Felt like I was with buddies. Keep em coming. Excellent 👍 and relaxed
i'm 1 year younger than Tom...i wish i could go back to the 80's and 90's knowing how special that time was.
How can you not love Uncle Larry. My first real guitar was a 1985 MIJ contemporary strat I got for my 18th birthday. That was my main guitar for 30 years until I gave it to my youngest daughter on her 21st birthday.
That's cool, man. I love how the stories of instruments are the stories of their players
Awesome video, Robert. Tom’s set the bar high for your next interviews. Amazing to see his first real guitar. Looking forward to seeing more of these.
So cool how an instrument brings out so many memories!
Hi Rob, great story on Tom with the black Les Paul. I actually was giving a 1979 Les Paul Tobacco Burst for my 16th birthday by my parents. I still have the guitar today, and is as close to mint as you can get. Never changed a thing, very rarely used live. I actually have a very similar purple case like Tom has in this video. My guitar however is a one piece body, not a pancake. Mini Humbuckers, big head stock, literally nothing ever change it's beautiful. The music story we got it from did not have an original gibson case and sold me a black case w/ purple inside just like Toms. The list price and the Store was 1,000. It sat for quite awhile and my parents got is for 500 on a sale and 75 for the case. This was a giant purchase by my parents, we did not have the money, but they managed somehow. To this day I still play and have been in many bands, so I made sure it didn't go to waste....
What a great story. I watch Tom's channel all of the time......love the guy. He's played with everyone who is anyone and has a great reputation in the industry. He doesn't have an arrogant bone in his body.
How effing cool was that! Sensational vid and great to see Uncle Larry's LP and hear the story. Love your work man.
This is the series that people never knew they needed! Yes!
I’m 55 as well and still own the first really good guitar I ever bought. My wine red ‘87 Les Paul Standard. Bought it in Jan ‘88 with all the money I got that Christmas. Still love playing it whenever I can. Love the vid, really takes me back. 😊
This was phenomenal - when I saw you had a crossover with Uncle Larry it was a must-click. Loved hearing all about this guitar, the stories surrounding it, and the songs and rigs from the "Boy Wonder" years - I'm 36 but thought my classic rock knowledge was decent - I couldn't name a couple of those riffs though and have to go back to school.
I remember I too was obsessed with Les Pauls, having spammed the Song Remains the Same videos all through my early teens. My first electric was a Korean-made Tokai Les Paul Custom "Black Beauty" style, sans the white binding and with a presumably rosewood fretboard instead of Ebony as it was a lower-end model. Looking back, a pretty underwhelming instrument, but to me it meant the world when my dad (who passed in 2009) accompanied me to the music store and surprised me by talking the salesman down in price then said we would buy it, him "topping up" my pitiful savings to pay the cost. I'm not ashamed to say I cried like a baby that day, remembering how when I first told him I was going to take guitar lessons he thought I'd never stick with it and would drop out when my "fingers got sore". I knew he'd seen how persistent and dedicated I'd become after years of borrowing other peoples guitars, and I knew I had made my old man proud.
Thanks for this and much love to both you and Uncle Larry!
This hits super close to home for me. We're a year apart, I also grew up being absolutely mesmerized by The Song Remains the Same. I watched it more times than probably any single live concert I've seen, and Jimmy was such a huge inspiration and motivation for me to practice endlessly on my Dad's old acoustic. My first electric was a Lemon Drop Epiphone Les Paul I saved up for, and by the end of high school I saved up enough money from mowing lawns and selling my childhood game collection that I got myself a real, Honey Burst Gibson Les Paul Standard.
My Dad also passed away since then, have his old BOSS Super Overdrive. To this day it sits on my pedalboard. I've grown more accustomed to playing Super Strats since those days, but I will always cherish the Les Paul and everything it represents. Thanks for sharing your story man, keep on playing!
And I got to learn Stop Draggin’ my Heart Around from the maestro, fantastic. You’re onto a winner with this serious lad, outstanding.
So glad Uncle Larry is your #1 Episode.
Are you going to have Austin submit a story?
Great Content Robert, Thank You
What's awesome is that he's playing guitar in the kitchen....next to the fridge! The half-stack is in the kitchen!! Fantastic.
I bought a LP deluxe in 1973 new in 73. That thing has been solid and traveled all over the northwest and into Canada.
Cool to see an Norlin-era LP getting some love. My first guitar was the one he was talking about, a '78 Pro Deluxe in the same black, with the cream P90s. I got it in 1987 at the age of 7. My dad actually bought it for the family, but I was the only one who took interest. It is still my main guitar today, almost 40 years later. Today, it sports DiMarzio PAF '59s and medium jumbo frets.
Thank you @RobertBakerGuitar! I have the utmost respect for @501ChorusEcho and you, so it is wonderful to see you feature Uncle Larry.
Have owned a 1979 custom for 30+ yeas now. Love that guitar. Amazing pickups and feel.
I’ve got a black ‘78 Deluxe just like this. It’s my favorite guitar.
i knew it was stop draggin my heart around instantly. good shit man. love the channel. The uncle i never had but always needed hahaha. cheers!
Hi Tom, great story of a great guitarist, thanks Robert. Once we get older that's all we have and remember and that's our life, amazing man. Peace guys, thanks again 🙏
Wow. What a shocker. I have a 1977 model exactly like that one.
Great interview .. love the kitchen setting .. Tom is so chill .. great guy
Bro, I totally appreciate this episode. We all have that 1 guitar that means something even if it isn't the best, it's sentimental. Keep these stories coming and well done on this episode.
I worked at Gibson from 1976 to 1979 and likely had my hands on that guitar in final assembly. Our plant manager's background was managing a furniture factory, and Norlin's goal was profit, thus the quality drop off. The body of that guitar is mahogany with a maple top. The body blanks with slight cosmetic imperfections got painted black. I liked the black and creme color scheme, some creme P90's would make that piece of furniture honk! Hearing you play that guitar takes me back there, thanks for sharing.
❤ this is a wonderful comment
Amazing my 1979 Les Paul deluxe is my one first guitar I got it from Cairo Egypt 2007 from the original owner, the guitar can tell stories something about it, even though I have done changed the pots refret 50s wiring and 1961 mini PAF from Epiphone sorrento now in the bridge, great episode
Great episode. I actually bought one of Tom's amp years ago, a Dr Z Carmen Ghia combo. We met at a hotel in Nashville and did the deal. BTW, I am 6'1", but I was looking up to Tom; he is a big guy.
That’s a great story, thanks for sharing. My ‘77 Special double cut came with a case just like that.
“He wanted to get me in a band playing at my mom’s bar.” That is the most rock ‘n’ roll thing I’ve heard all day! 😎
The first studio I recorded in Heartwood Studios I used a 3203 Marshall. Still have it with the matching 4 x 10 cab, recorded with an old Kramer, all bought used. Worked great and did a pile of gigs with it and never let me down. I don't play it often but one amp I will never sell because of so many memories. Tom is so great, just love his videos too. Great video, thanks for posting!
Man, I really enjoyed this video! Loved seeing the sentimental memories, the humor, the great stories. It's awesome that Tom asked you about living in Nashville 🙂 Rock on Robert!
I just saw a mirror of my childhood. Even your bands name. I called us “Vengence” because I had just seen the Judas Priest/Iron Maiden concert in the fall of 1982, and Screaming for Vengence was their big song then. I spelled it this way even though it’s wrong. My first good guitar was an early 80’s White les Paul custom. I played 75% of all those songs you just played. It’s amazing how infectious guitar was back then, the music was great. An entire generation of new young sprouting guitar players came out of that late 70’s/early 80’s era. Robert, Love your new series and Uncle Larry was the perfect person for your first episode. I think Tom took the Vengence name just before us, Dang! Thanks you guys.
‘My son Marshall’ caught me off guard. This man is a legend.
Great first episode! And God Bless Uncle Larry, what a wonderful Christmas story for 12 year old Tommy B.
Oh man please please please keep this series going. Love the stories and guitar knowledge, it's a privilege to be able to listen.
Great story. Christmas 1984. I was taking lessons at Royal Music in suburban Detroit. They had a bunch of Heritage guitars and I would lust after a cherry H150. I was playing acoustic at the time and didn't own an electric and would point out the guitar to my mother after every lesson. Christmas came and I was disappointed there was no guitar when my mother asked to get my father his work coat. This perplexed me as it was Christmas day. I went to the laundry room and grabbed it not noticing it was somehow floating in mid air against the side door. Underneath it was an electric guitar case and a Gorilla Amp. It wasn't the Heritage, too much money, but decent Laguna LP copy. I still have both. Best Christmas.
Thank you Robert ! That was an awesome start ! Tom is a fantastic player and very cool cat. I’m also from northeast Ohio and I was particularly amazed when he mentioned Mike Szuter and plugging him … I’m 51, but used to go watch Mike and his brother CJ in their band Outta the Blue …
I moved to Nashville from Ohio myself and being a 4+ decades now guitarist and living here and following your channel for long time and love your channel and honesty & now you started this and exciting to see who you found for this as I have meet some incredible musicians since living here. Awesome dude and can’t wait for the next one! Keep rocking Robert🤘🎸🤘
Love hearing these stories.we all wish we still had are 1st guitar.
Love the set list. All Those tunes flooded the rock and roll airwaves. Glad you hung onto the deluxe.
Great stuff. Like your guru bubba story. Nice to get the ship pointed in the right direction. Again great stuff.😎✌️
Totally normal-looking kitchen... except for the half-stack tucked behind the island/counter. That gave me a chuckle.
Fun visit overall, too. Keep up the good work.
GUITAR SOUNDS GREAT....!! GREAT VIBE BECAUSE TOM AND ROBERT ARE REALLY GOOD PEOPLE. I love my early to mid 70's LP Customs....they sound killer!
This was great, Love Uncle Larry and having him on your channel is awesome.
I love that he kept that one guitar! Thanks for sharing
I love these chill environments of 2 dudes talking shop. We all love this. Keep this going Robert. We are all music lovers at the end and that shines through in this format.
Ever since discovering Tom from some of his incredible gear videos, I've grown to have a massive respect for Uncle Larry. So awesome to see you guys hanging out here!
Great video! I love Tom and it was great to hear the story about his guitar! I can't wait to see more of these Guitar Stories videos!! 🙂
What a great idea. This was really good. Good luck on this Robert.
This was great! Good guitar talk, and getting to know Tom!
This video is how I found Tom's channel, Thank You, great theme...
Beautiful, Robert! Like you and Buk, I was a rocker who came to Nashville in 1998 from California and was welcomed and got a lot of work - road and studio in no time. I'm glad your experience has been positive. I had a black 1977 Les Paul Standard that I paid $600 for with case with money from my first job at Pizza Hut. Wish I still had it.
That sounds great !!!!
Love this! Casual and honest Interview. Also alot of info in there also 💪
Off to a great start! Cheers Robert and Tom!!
I enjoyed this video and can relate to it. My dad bought me a 76 Les Paul Deluxe when I was 14. Mine is a cherry sunburst model with a maple neck. It weighs 11 lbs! I remember having lots of microphonic squeal feedback with the original mini-humbuckers. I had mine routed eventually to accommodate regular sized humbuckers. These days the guitar has Fishman Fluence Classic humbuckers in it. It was my first good guitar. I don’t ever want to sell it. Mine could really use a fret job.
Very cool concept! Looking forward to next ones.
Gosh this brings back another memory as I was learning guitar, I needed a distortion because I wanted to play metal and not rock. And I by then was studying electronics and working at a music store, setting up guitars and sales. And a BOSS distortion was the equivalent of 300 bucks now. In I was like why? And I actually liked a combination of the tube screamer for rhythm and BOSS distortion for lead. And so the owner said I could buy them against cost which was about 33% less. So I asked if I could borrow them over the weekend. And he was like “sure” and I disassembled them and reversed engineered them. Hooked them up on my scope to see how they’d work. And I was like: “there’s not more than 6 bucks of electronics in this crap!”. You pay for the cast iron case. So I set out to design a clone of these two pedals. But also made them “digital” I would have 255 step “pots” so I could recall settings. And with a single pedal go lead, rhythm heavy, rhythm light. It took me 6 or 8 weeks to design an make the PCB in college. I showed my then boss and he was like! This is great! Except it needs a good case! That’s where his metal and wood work came in. And we started selling those for 250 a piece so a third of the price of all the distortion pedals we sold. And we would earn 200 bucks on each we created. We could do “specials” where we’d engrave the aluminium case with the name of the player. And added some pre configured settings on EPROM. Because it was initially only in SRAM with a battery backup. At a point we were so busy, that we had literally a stack of 20 PCBs that we now let make in a factory. The components we could get even cheaper because we bought so much in bulk. Because literally every guitarist we saw during gigs wanted one. We almost succumbed at our own success because the volumes weren’t big enough to factory make them, but too many to keep up with the demand. Luckily we were getting out of the metal era into the crunch and so demand slowed down 😂
Oh yeah we also had a Tremelo and a pulsed cut out “switch” in later models.
So many parallels here. My first real guitar was a ‘69 Les Paul Deluxe goldtop. I got it for Christmas is 1975, when I was 12. It was $500. I initially started playing because of my brother Doug. I am the youngest of 6. There are 6 years between me and the next youngest.
I have a 1979 Gibson RD Artist bass. The neck is about 3 miles long and has that giant Volute. With the Moog electronics, it is still the best sounding bass I've ever played.
Guitar Stories is a great format / idea 💡
That was AWESOME! I could have listened to that all day long! Nothing better than sitting and talking gear, gear stories and sharing memories with someone who appreciates it as much as you do! As you look over to see your significant other sound asleep on the couch....LOL! Loved this.
Thanks guys ! I totally get the back ache thing (less the wallet in the right back pocket) ! Proud owner of 2 x 1972 Cherry Sunburst LP Deluxes, both have been modded, one by me (hey, I was 19, wth did I know) and the other used to have a Bigsby on it from a previous owner. Thank you guys again ! Cheers from Thailand ! 😎🇺🇸🇹🇭🇺🇸⚓️🎸✅☕️🤠😎
Yes great idea! Keep them coming
Robert,
This series is going to explode! Thank You very much.
Thanks for the quick lesson on playing All Right Now the correct way!
This is awesome. Love stories like these, and how can you not love Uncle Larry? Looking forward to more in this series!
I got into Tom relatively late, well REALLY late. But the guy just exudes class and normality. He brings everything down to earth. Great interview Robert.
Love hearing Toms stories and his lessons always look forward to any video with him in it
The joy on Uncle Larry’s face when playing those old riffs…takes him back!
Hell yes! Can’t wait to see this series evolve.
Great vid Robert! Tom Bukovac (and the host of this vid) is a class act. Thank you!
Oh my God ... did you take me back with the Fayreweather antidote. Me and my girl would never miss that band when they came to Chicago. That band was so good .. their version of Squonk was worth the price of admission. This was in '77 and '78 when our number one pastime was going to see live music. Cheap Trick was a bar band. Any way thanks for the trip down memory lane. On another note ... did either one of you know Mark Selby?? He used to play my blues club and he was one of the sweetest people to ever come through my club. Thanks again .... awesome idea for a youtube show.
Awesome series Robert👏🏻👏🏻🤘🏻🤘🏻 Bukovav is so amazing!! Thank you for this !!
I have a '74 Deluxe in cherry burst that was passed down to me by my uncle who recently passed away. It was bought new back then and stayed in the family. I've owned/sold dozens of guitars and worked on hundreds more, but I've never seen a black finish. These models are truly special LPs, love the pancaked body and mini humbuckers.
I have a '71 Cherry Burst LP Deluxe from my uncle too. These old Deluxes are like an accidental masterpiece!
I have a 79 blck lp standard, w/reg sized Humbuckers, and its heavy as well, but it's a great guitar. Nothing wrong with that year. I love the mini buckers! Sounds great!
Ahhh man! Love Uncle Larry! Great stories and awesome vid!
And I've got one of those 77 LP pro Deluxe with soapbars I bought brand new on my 18th birthday! I went to the big city (3 hours away) and spent every cent I had and had to hitchhike home!
I got a 78 Pro Deluxe. Its a back breaker!
@@christophervaldez8746oh yeah, they most definitely are!
Thx guys very cool. Memories of my LP black custom in '79. Nothing like it.
Great new series and you hit a home run with ep1!! 👍👍🤘
At 7:13, I recognized that aqua blue/orange box immediately! That's a Rema Tip Top bicycle innertube patch kit. Went through many of those, over the years...
Funny, Uncle Larry and I are the same age, and I'm also the youngest of five kids. Never got a Les Paul for Christmas, though...