This is the same styling and dimensions as a normal Les Paul and these were made in Japan in the late 80s. Shop for the Epiphone Limited Edition Les Paul Traditional PRO Electric Guitar and receive free shipping on your order and the guaranteed lowest price.

Epiphone Limited Edition Les Paul Studio Deluxe Silver Burst Sg

Epiphone Les Paul Black Beauty 3 pickup Ebony with gold hardware.

Buying Guide: How to Choose a Les Paul Guitar. Finding the Gibson or Epiphone LP That’s Right for You and Your Budget. First, we’ll put the Les Paul in its historical context, then we’ll walk you through the many models available today. Use this guide to pinpoint the Les Paul that matches up with your music, your style, and your budget.

Table of Contents. The Les Paul Legacy—A Brief History. Epiphone Les Paul Series. Gibson USA Les Paul Series.

Les Pauls. Gibson Custom Shop Les Paul Models. Why Buy Your LP from Musician's Friend?

Need More Help? About Our Private Reserve Collection. Glossary of Les Paul Terms. The Les Paul Legacy—A Brief History. The guitar that bears Les Paul’s name is among the most iconic instruments that have helped shape the sound of popular music. Since its introduction in 1. Windows 7 64 Bit Professional Keygen Generator. LP’s rich, thick, midrange- focused tone, coupled with a prodigious ability to sustain notes has had a huge impact on the sound of rock, blues, metal, and those genres' modern offshoots.

Though there’s some controversy about exactly who contributed what elements, it’s clear that the LP was the result of a fateful collaboration between Gibson president Ted Mc. Carty and Les Paul, the brilliant country and jazz guitarist and compulsive inventor and tinkerer. The trajectory of Gibson’s product line and Paul’s search for an electric guitar with more sustain and less feedback made that collaboration more or less inevitable. First Came The Clunker. Les Paul had struggled for years with the feedback generated by electric hollowbody guitars when their volume was cranked up.

In the early 1. 94. Epiphone Broadway hollowbody and retrofitted it with his own hand- wound pickups and a rectangular steel bar body brace.

Though “The Clunker,” as Paul nicknamed it, partially overcame feedback, it wasn’t until he began experimenting with solidbody designs that feedback was fully tamed. Then Came The Log. His solidbody prototype called “The Log” had a body made from a solid chunk of pine that was just a bit wider than the neck and fretboard, and a little deeper than a standard hollowbody guitar.

Paul attached two wooden wings on either side of the slab giving The Log roughly the appearance of a conventional archtop guitar. Unlovely to look at, it delivered on Paul’s aim to get feedback under control. Around 1. 94. 6, he took his design to Gibson, but the company didn’t bite.

And Finally, the Les Paul was Born. It took several years and the introduction of a highly successful solidbody electric guitar by a certain California guitar company to bring Gibson around.

The result was the Les Paul introduced in 1. Unlike the upstart from the West Coast with it’s flashy, modernistic styling, slab body, bolt- on neck, and twangy tone, Gibson focused on building a solidbody instrument that retained the look of its carved- top hollowbody guitars, sharing their set- neck construction and trapeze tailpiece. The Les Paul would eventually be offered in four models during the . The LP took the guitar world by storm. Its solid mahogany body with a thin maple cap solved the age- old problem of feedback while producing remarkable sustain, and it’s ornate Florentine cutaway facilitated high- note soloing. Initially equipped with dual P- 9.

Gibson’s PAF (Patent Applied For) humbucking pickup eliminated the hum that plagued electric guitars with single- coil pickups while delivering the fat, thick tone that has become a sonic hallmark of the Les Paul. Paul continued to hold down a regular Monday night gig at New York’s Iridium Jazz Club well into his 8. Photo courtesy of Gibson Guitar Corp. In 1. 95. 7 the Les Paul Custom came to market with its dual PAFs. A three- pickup version followed.

Beginning in the early 1. Gibson has released dozens of variations of the LP, and the guitar has only grown in stature. Oddly though, in the early 1. Les Paul fell out of favor due to issues of weight and cost as well as a perception that it was a bit old- fashioned. But starting in the mid- ’6. British artists such as Keith Richards, Eric Clapton, Peter Green, and Jimmy Page, who all loved its thick, rock- and blues- friendly tone, rekindled interest in the LP. This resulted in the 1.

LP production. Everybody Loves the LPThe list of artists who have wielded Les Pauls is legion. As noted above, it was British blues rockers like Clapton who led the way to the LP’s resurgence.

They had been listening to LP- brandishing guitarists such as Texas bluesman Freddie King and his rollicking instrumental “Hideaway,” and to Howlin’ Wolf axman Hubert Sumlin’s stinging riffs on “Smokestack Lightning.” And they wanted some of that sound too! On this side of the Atlantic it was Michael Bloomfield who helped cement the LP’s position as the go- to electric among heavy rock and blues players. The phenomenally talented Chicago native first owned a 1. Les Paul goldtop, later trading up for the .

The fat yet clean sound of Bloomfield’s LP was an urgent driving force in the Paul Butterfield Blues Band—for a time Dylan’s electric backup band that caused a ruckus at the Newport Folk Festival. In 2. 00. 9 Gibson’s Custom Shop, recognizing Bloomfield’s contribution to LP lore, produced a painstaking limited- edition reproduction of his axe, replete with battle scars and Bloomfield’s mods. A list of the other signature and tribute Les Pauls that Gibson has built invoke some of the most stellar names in modern music.

They include Jimmy Page, Slash, Joe Perry, Ace Frehley, Marc Bolan, Jeff Beck, Pete Townshend, Billie Joe Armstrong, and dozens more. As we explore the many Les Paul models available today, we’ll touch on some of these special editions. In this . Photo courtesy of Gibson Guitar Corp. Epiphone Les Paul Series. The connection between inventor- musician Les Paul and Epiphone dates back to the late 1. In fact, Paul’s “The Log” was built during after- hours tinkering sessions in Epiphone’s New York plant, and the musician was a frequent consultant on designs, offering the insights of both a seasoned performer and audio innovator.

In 1. 95. 7 Gibson acquired Epiphone, a long- standing rival in the market for hollowbody electric guitars. After the buyout, Epiphone instruments were built in Gibson’s factories and shared many of the same woods and components used in Gibson’s product line. Many Epiphone guitars were essentially identical to their Gibson counterparts. Beginning in the 1. Epiphone instruments were built in Japan and later in Korea. Continuing today, Epiphone guitars are built in Asian plants to Gibson’s exacting specifications. Having less hand work and less costly woods, hardware, and finishes than their U.

S.- made counterparts, Epiphone versions of Gibson models offer excellent value for budget- conscious guitarists. Let’s look at the lineup of Epiphone Les Paul series and models: Epiphone Les Paul Standard Series. The Epiphone Les Paul Standard series extends the LP legacy with a number of models loaded with essential Paul features, but at a fraction of the cost of a Gibson. For instance, the Standard Plain Top features a mahogany body with a maple veneer top, a set mahogany neck, and a pair of Alnico Classic humbuckers, for plenty of rich, warm tones with tons of sustain.

There’s also a Standard Plus Top Pro a model with a breathtaking flamed maple carved top and dual Pro. Bucker pickups that offers amazing bang for the buck. The Epiphone Les Paul Standard Plain Top delivers classic, thick humbucker tone at a bargain price. Shop Musician’s Friend’s full selection of Epiphone Les Paul Standard models. Epiphone Les Paul Traditional Pro.

This LP is all about superb tonal versatility. The Les Paul Traditional Pro uses Epiphone's 4- wire, nickel/silver base humbuckers with newly tooled, USA- style bobbins. The Alnico Classic Pro humbucker with zebra coils in the neck is uniquely paired with a Pro. Bucker- 3. Both volume controls feature push/pull potentiometers allowing you to coil- split each pickup for single- coil sounds.

Using the 3- way toggle, you get six unique sounds.