what is the deal with the back of this gretsch?

http://i23.ebayimg.com/02/i/01/c5/dd/14_1_s.JPG
apparently it's padding. i've never seen that before.
apparently it's padding. i've never seen that before.
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cooler than a new les paul or something though (if one was actually buying something).
Telesonic is right.
remember, it's a lot of country players play those and they wear stuff like this:
http://www.countrycalendar.com/Country_Store/Buckles/dancing.htm
That IS a really nice guitar!
Don't be mankind. ~Captain Beefheart
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I wonder if anyone here knows anything about old Gretsches? I'd be interested in knowing if this was stock or not.
By the way I recently did some trading for a 67-69(serial number hard to read) Gretsch single annversary. It's not mint but it's still cool. I'm having some work done on it now - fret work, binding - minor stuff. I can't wait to fire her up.
It is stock believe it or not. More than likely it is an option. It's buckle padding. to protect the finish. It was very popular with country and western guitar players and rock and roll people alike. Buckle padding kept the finish from being mauled by those big buckles.
you should love it man, Gretsch's are awesome, I love them. I really want one eventually. Those filter/hilotron pickups sound great and the hollowbody sound is just fantastic. Plus you have the classic looks. Have fun.
i found this page.
http://www.gretschpages.com
it might help you with yours too.
From the research I've done - things on the guitar, serial number placement, so forth - I've pretty much narrowed it down to a 67,8, or 9. They stopped making making single anniversaries around the first of 70 and with the serial number being on the back of the headstock with the made in the usa stamp back there it puts it in that time period. It also has a HI/lo tron pickup in it, which puts it in that time frame.
I just can't read the damn serial number though! I can barely make out the made in the usa and a few numbers, but it' hard to tell where they are in the total serial #. If I had to guess it's a 68, but I can't be sure.
What really sucks is that some mullet head refinished the top, which killed the market value. It will still be a great sounding guitar, but I can't help but be a little disappointed.
I think it was one of the two tone brown models before the top got screwed with. Would have been cool, because in my research I've seen very few of the 2 tone models like that. Most of them are the green ones.
Isn't it ironic, don't you think?
But it really looks stupid...and besides, I care more about what I think about the guitar than what somebody else does.....and I wouldn't want my baby to be full of holes.
Thus, new Gretsch's do not have the big lame pad on the back.
---Everyone lived happily ever after.
I prefer FULL protection for my guitar:
http://www.deanguitars.com/content/gallery/zztop/gallery/images/zz1_jpg.jpg
I actually, somewhere in my stock of guitars and memorabilia (ahem, crap), have a belt buckle that the back of the guitar hooks into so you can spin it like ZZ Top. I tried it on a strat once, but I guess I was too skinny, and it kept pulling my pants down!
Don't be mankind. ~Captain Beefheart
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I've never thought of that before, but you have a point. It could very well affect your sound. Thanks for pointing that out.
Of course my solution would be not to wear those stupid buckles.
Ha, I wonder if ZZ's guitar tech ever has to give that thing a hair cut before the show!