Martha Carson's BIGSBY Neck 1950 Martin D-28

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  • Опубликовано: 7 дек 2022
  • Today we're back in the repair shop with Tyler because we have a incredible one-of-a-kind instrument with a ton of history! We'll let Tyler get into the details but long story short, this 1950 Martin D-28 has a customized Paul Bigsby maple neck with Martha's name inlayed into the fretboard. This beautiful piece of history has been played and loved for decades, and we're so excited that it has spent a brief time in our shop!
    emeraldcityguitars.com/
  • ВидеоклипыВидеоклипы

Комментарии • 85

  • @earlsinstrumentsandtunes9732
    @earlsinstrumentsandtunes9732 Год назад +24

    It is good to hear Paul Bigsby getting the credit and recognition that he deserves in guitar history.

  • @chris-kp3xg
    @chris-kp3xg Год назад +3

    Martha told me herself that the reason the neck was changed, is she kept breaking strings touring. She played really hard and uptempo songs. I’ve had this guitar in my hand as well. Martha was one of my favorites and she was so unique

  • @duke4172
    @duke4172 11 месяцев назад +1

    This guitar belongs in the Country Music Hall Of Fame!

  • @chrisdebarge7138
    @chrisdebarge7138 Год назад +7

    Nice to see someone with real knowledge and sincere enthusiasm for this era of music, its instruments, and especially Paul Bigsby. Thanks Tyler!

  • @honeywoodpilot
    @honeywoodpilot Год назад +11

    Thanks for posting this very well researched story. I was fortunate to have met men and women in my lifetime with talent that bridged many needs. They always seemed undaunted by the challenges they faced. What a world we live in.

  • @bennahughes836
    @bennahughes836 Год назад +2

    Martha was wonderful with a heart for God. She was my ex-mother in law and she played it on the Opry when her grand daughter, Michelle, was a baby 27 years ago. The guitar was promised to my daughter, but she found out through this video her dad sold it. Very sad to see he did that. Hopefully the new owners will treasure it.

  • @gregmonk9037
    @gregmonk9037 Год назад +8

    Think thsts the best sounding acoustic ive ever heard, a treasure!

    • @panzerlieb
      @panzerlieb Год назад

      Well maybe not the best. But it sure does have tons of character

    • @LPKJFHIS
      @LPKJFHIS 9 месяцев назад

      I was gonna say. This sounds epic

  • @picksalot1
    @picksalot1 Год назад +4

    Fascinating history and story. I'll have to find some Martha Carson recordings. Thanks

  • @tonydeaton1967
    @tonydeaton1967 Год назад +3

    Guitars, in general, are an amazing thing. I have guitars in my collection that I've been beating on for over a half-century. They become, almost, living things, part of you.

  • @hkguitar1984
    @hkguitar1984 Год назад +5

    AMAZING
    Thank You for taking the time to produce and share this instrument video with us.
    Congrats to the new owner and a big thanks to you as well for allowing this historically significant instrument to be documented.

    • @TylerECG
      @TylerECG Год назад +2

      Thanks for watching!

  • @birdsfabulous
    @birdsfabulous Год назад +4

    Love this history lesson. The bridge on that guitar is amazing

  • @jrwojo9195
    @jrwojo9195 Год назад +2

    I really need to see one of those pre-war D-45's ........

  • @grandudetonesnob7107
    @grandudetonesnob7107 Год назад +5

    As a fella whom has played a LOT of gospel gigs over the years, I'd like to thank Skylar for lovingly playing that guitar as it should be played. ✌️

  • @GarySeabreeze
    @GarySeabreeze Год назад

    Idk what’s more cool. The Bob Wills “Bad Brains” style shirt, or the guitar.

  • @TheJacklwilliams
    @TheJacklwilliams Год назад +3

    Absolutely incredible. Beyond reproach and thank you for such a thorough history on the instrumment. It’s amazing how deep the art goes and it’s evolution through the years. You realize, the ability to create rich , whole, complete tone, has been there, for so long. So so long.

    • @TylerECG
      @TylerECG Год назад +2

      Thanks so much!

  • @likeakite
    @likeakite Год назад +4

    Absolutely fantastic, what a story.

  • @petiewheat82
    @petiewheat82 Год назад +5

    I like a bridge where you don't have to stick the pegs in there...wish they made more like that.

  • @chris2fur401
    @chris2fur401 Год назад +2

    Martha was born in my little coal town of Neon, Ky. Our only “home of…..” sign in our town.

  • @frantisca
    @frantisca Год назад +5

    Paul Bigsby and Ray Butts were probably the most underrated inventors in the history of Electric guitar. Leo Fender and Les Paul can be praised for their work and evolution of the instrument, but they were certainly favoured by the marketing machine of their brands (Fender and Gibson), particularly with Freddy Tavares and Ted MC Carty. The electric guitar wouldn't have been the same without them, but Bigsby and Butts were undoubtedly the founders of what modern electrified solid body guitar is today.

    • @TylerECG
      @TylerECG Год назад +1

      Ray Butts is another interesting figure. As you might know, Ray once built a special ordered set of humbuckers to fit inside Bigsby-sized enclosures. In 1961 he charged $100 apiece for them, I would love to know where those things are now!

    • @panzerlieb
      @panzerlieb Год назад

      Hey let’s not forget about Seth Lover. There would be no much revered PAF’s without him

  • @elsqueezer
    @elsqueezer Год назад

    Way to go Tyler! It's Legs from Guitar town, AZ.

  • @paul_sebastian1154
    @paul_sebastian1154 Год назад +2

    Fascinating history lesson, really interesting, thanks for the video

    • @TylerECG
      @TylerECG Год назад

      Thanks for watching Paul!

  • @chrisva4268
    @chrisva4268 Год назад +6

    Wowee! What a special instrument, P.A. Bigsby's work is immaculate, and Fagan's bridge adds an extra layer of interest to the customized masterpiece.
    I've had the immense luck to have played a Bigsby instrument and can confirm that the neck was stunningly comfortable, makes you wonder how he knew to make them so well from the start!

  • @Danilo8208SS
    @Danilo8208SS Год назад +10

    Awesome to hear the story on this one. I'm currently reading "The Birth of Loud" which is the story of Leo Fender, Les Paul, and Paul Bigsby all in the race to come out with the solid body guitar. I didn't know anything about Bigsby until yesterday.

    • @TylerECG
      @TylerECG Год назад +2

      That's an excellent read, if you're interested in this stuff I think you'll love it. Thanks for watching!

  • @rickcurtis2983
    @rickcurtis2983 Год назад

    Excellent video, thank you!!

  • @jrm2fla
    @jrm2fla Год назад +2

    Great guitar playing !

  • @Zeonoid
    @Zeonoid Год назад +2

    now we know where Leo Fender gets his headstock inspiration from

  • @jasonmyers3847
    @jasonmyers3847 Год назад +3

    Very cool! Just a side note. Crocker motorcycles are the rarest of the rare, and are worth a pretty penny.

  • @ElGatoCiego
    @ElGatoCiego Год назад

    I got shivers down my spine...

  • @DNA2000-8bit
    @DNA2000-8bit Год назад

    Nice to see Paul and Merle get their due. No matter how you slice it, those two men are uniquely responsible for the vast majority of what guitarists play and how they play it. Bigsby could make it happen, but Merle Travis appears to have invented the roadmap and idea for the modern solid-body guitar and the most famous style of playing. Ever. That's nuts when you think about it.

  • @nickspitzley8539
    @nickspitzley8539 Год назад +2

    I love my fender acoustic (mahogany special Newporter) and people are never sure what to make of the headstock but man the strings are so easy to change. The bigsby headstock is even weirder

  • @leonstancliff7218
    @leonstancliff7218 Год назад +6

    Only a guy in Seattle would not recognize the man holding the mic for Martha Carter on that "public access" show as Ralph Emery. He is a Country Music Hall of Fame member and hosted syndicated shows nationwide from 1963 until 2015. If you were a new act in Nashville his morning TV show was the way to break into the business.

    • @slicksnewonenow
      @slicksnewonenow Год назад +3

      Only that the guy holding the mic for her on the nationally televised public access show is Billy Walker and her name is Martha Carson.

  • @tomdevaney2
    @tomdevaney2 Год назад

    yes !

  • @cristobalcampos1513
    @cristobalcampos1513 Год назад +2

    The headstock on this guitar looks so close to the Fender strat.

  • @andrewbowen6875
    @andrewbowen6875 Год назад

    How strange I was only wondering why Left Frizells J200 had a Bigsby neck about a week ago after an Otis Gibbs video? I love seeing vids from that era just to see all the vintage gear and huge pick guards

  • @jerrymorganjr
    @jerrymorganjr Год назад +3

    Who made the cool pickguard? There were a lot of whacky custom pickguards in those days, and I've always wanted to know who made them.

  • @oscarsantos2608
    @oscarsantos2608 Год назад +3

    Seems to me Fender kinda copied the head stock... What an amazing sound that guitar has! 🤩

  • @gamjammer
    @gamjammer Год назад +4

    One has to wonder how much that huge pick guard hurt the resonance of that guitar.

  • @jay5467
    @jay5467 Год назад

    Shout out to the mighty Bob Wills 💪

  • @DubMartin
    @DubMartin Год назад

    Thank you sooo much for this video. It’s wonderfully done. Did you precisely measure every aspect of the Bigsby neck? I’ve been fascinated by these for many decades but I’ve never seen published specs for the necks. Things like nut width, width at the twelfth fret, string spacing neck thickness and taper, fretboard radius, etc. Was the Broadcaster/Telecaster neck made to the same specs? I realize that info is beyond the scope of this video about an historically important guitar but I’d guess a lot of us would like the technical details.

  • @JobyP
    @JobyP Год назад +10

    Sad part is Skylars likely the Last person who will truly play that guitar. You know it’s headed for a glass case and that’s fine but it sure sounds nice.

  • @mclark42
    @mclark42 Год назад

    I understood Bigsby's significance in creating the first modern solid body electric, but I never knew why Merle Travis and others wanted Bigsby necks on their acoustics.. Thanks for explaining that. I just wish I understood why so many performers in the 50s and 60s glued those big whopping pickguards to their acoustic tops. I guess the visual statement meant more than the sound quality(?)

  • @johnsmith-bk4ps
    @johnsmith-bk4ps Год назад

    I missed one of these around 1990. For 200 dollars. My pal called me said the guy was trying to but a bus ticket. I told him i would pay a thousand for it. He couldnt find the guy again. This one prolly went to dirk.

  • @gluteusmaximus1657
    @gluteusmaximus1657 Год назад +1

    Stauffer style six-on-a-side headstocks are pretty common on early Martin guitars. Could it be that Christian Friedrich Martin learned this from Johann Georg Stauffer? :-)

  • @jimmycollette9209
    @jimmycollette9209 Год назад

    Saw her playing this guitar in RUclips video. It has the Bigsby neck but a different pick guard. The white pick guard must have been put on later maybe.

  • @kinkfloydd
    @kinkfloydd Год назад +1

    being in Seattle you should know this, but Paul Bigsby is one of the early solid body guitar makers, but the father of electric guitar should go to Paul Tutmarc who lived right here in Seattle who was making solid body electric guitars before bigsby, paul also invented the electric bass guitar, but not the solid body electric guitar that distinction goes to leo fender

  • @UncleTadhg
    @UncleTadhg Год назад +1

    That shirt, though. Almost as amazing as the guitar!

    • @TylerECG
      @TylerECG Год назад +1

      Thanks so much! Check out the Emerald City channel to see a video I did all about Bob's personal 1941 Martin D-45!

    • @UncleTadhg
      @UncleTadhg Год назад

      @@TylerECG I'll certainly check out the video! And where can I get one of those shirts...?

  • @BaBaBaBenny
    @BaBaBaBenny Год назад

    The only person I can imagine doing this guitar justice is Jeff Tweedy.

  • @mariacardona2690
    @mariacardona2690 Год назад

    Kool

  • @mr.classicalmusic5607
    @mr.classicalmusic5607 Год назад

    Martha was a nice Christian lady. Loved her music. It would be fun to know what the guitar sold for.

  • @bigearl33
    @bigearl33 Год назад

    I want to see that "Bob Wills"/"Bad Brains" shirt He is wearing.

  • @crocks2871
    @crocks2871 Год назад

    What happened to the guitar now? Where is it?

  • @karlj.shields7645
    @karlj.shields7645 Год назад

    Very cool guitar!
    A technical question: Does that Bigsby neck have a truss rod?

    • @slicksnewonenow
      @slicksnewonenow Год назад

      Yes... They had truss rods.

    • @TylerECG
      @TylerECG Год назад +3

      Great question! This one does have an adjustable truss rod, but many of Bigsby's Spanish style guitars did not, and none of his mandolins did either. As far as I know, the first Bigsby with a truss rod was Grady Martin's famous double neck electric that was completed in October of 1952. Some clips of him playing it on the Ozark Jubilee are floating around RUclips and are worth a watch! To my knowledge, all Spanish style Bigsby guitars (excluding tenor guitars) and acoustic necks built after this time were equipped with adjustable truss rods, and all previously built instruments were without neck reinforcement. Thanks for watching!

    • @dekedickersonilikerecords2393
      @dekedickersonilikerecords2393 Год назад +2

      I would like to say this in the most helpful way possible: if anybody else has a Bigsby instrument and wants to produce a video like this, or write about a Bigsby instrument, please contact me first. I consider myself to be the number one Bigsby historian and am happy to share information. This video isn’t bad, it’s mostly correct, but I wish I could’ve been involved to help make it 100% correct. Just a few simple errors. Once again, I’m easy to find.

    • @dekedickersonilikerecords2393
      @dekedickersonilikerecords2393 Год назад +2

      All Bigsby necks had truss rods. Before 1952, all of his necks had a large, non-adjustable rectangular piece of tempered steel running underneath the fretboard and about an inch and a half or 2 inches into the head stock. After 1952, he adopted an adjustable truss rod.

    • @TylerECG
      @TylerECG Год назад +1

      Hi Deke, I just messaged you on Instagram regarding some corrections. Thanks!

  • @Dang...
    @Dang... Год назад

    That's a pickguard made for radio😆!

  • @ofershragay
    @ofershragay Год назад +1

    Crocker bikes are sold with higher prices then bursts ...

  • @jharvey433
    @jharvey433 Год назад

    Interested

  • @ladukie69
    @ladukie69 Год назад

    How much???

  • @jasonmyers3847
    @jasonmyers3847 Год назад +1

    Great sounding guitar. Aside from those annoying as hell commercials during his playing....sheesh!!

  • @stephenrobinson7945
    @stephenrobinson7945 Год назад +2

    Still a booming guitar. Typical for the Martin. Larry Briggs, who owned Strings West in Tulsa, owns a lot of Merl Travis' items, including the last Cadillac Travis bought.

  • @andorrasrevenge1683
    @andorrasrevenge1683 Год назад

    Did Joe get this?

  • @aaron_gossett
    @aaron_gossett Год назад

    I can’t imagine being the family and wanting to sell this. I’m sure she had many more guitars that were less sentimental that they could have sold.. no respect.

  • @leighcecil3322
    @leighcecil3322 Год назад

    That's what happens when you got no friends to dance with..! 🤷

  • @kensargent3817
    @kensargent3817 Год назад

    Dude needs to wash his hair. Well, both of them, actually. A little guitar tuning wouldn't hurt, either.

  • @BarronVonSchnoot
    @BarronVonSchnoot Год назад

    Boring!

  • @_Moses44
    @_Moses44 Год назад

    It’s exceptionally ugly

  • @timothywong4485
    @timothywong4485 Год назад

    I love the video!!! Become an online boss = *Promo sm*!