Epiphone Casino Vs 330
However, this is no longer the case, and you Epiphone Casino Elitist Vs Gibson Es 330 can enjoy every casino game type at any top site through your desktop or mobile web browser of choice (i.e. Chrome, Edge, Safari, Firefox, Opera, etc.). First released in 1961, the Casino is arguably Epiphone's most well-known model. While the thinline Casino (and the nearly identical Gibson ES-330) bear a close resemblance to the Gibson ES-335 model, they have a few major differences that contribute to their significantly different sound.
Gibson ES-330 | |
---|---|
Manufacturer | Gibson |
Period | 1959 — present |
Construction | |
Body type | hollow |
Neck joint | Set |
Scale | 24.75' |
Woods | |
Body | maple (laminated) |
Neck | mahogany on most models in most periods; sometimes maple |
Fretboard | rosewood on most models, ebony on some |
Hardware | |
Bridge | Fixed |
Pickup(s) | 1 or 2 P-90s |
Colors available | |
Vintage Sunburst, Cherry, Black, Natural |
The Gibson ES-330 is a thinline hollow-body electric guitar model produced by the Gibson Guitar Corporation. It was first introduced in 1959.[1]
Though similar in appearance to the popular Gibson ES-335 guitar, the ES-330 is quite different: the 330 is a fully hollow thinline guitar, not a semi-hollow guitar with a center block. Also, the 330 has two single-coilP-90 pickups, in contrast with the two humbuckers on the 335.
Epiphone Casino Vs Gibson 330
On the USA Casino vs 330 issue.it'd be a tough call but I'm thinking 330 for me personally. I prefer the look of the plastic pup covers for the type and I could care less about the Beatles tie in on the Casino. I think the 330 would be more likely to be as I like it out of the box. So Gibson clearly doesn't recreate the 330 at any sort of affordable price, but Epiphone does in the Casino. I know a big part of the 330 was the full-hollow construction and the P-90s. Does anyone have experience with any of the Epi Casinos? What it does well, what it needs to improve it, how are the Epi pickups, ect?
The 330 neck originally joined the body at the 16th fret, not the 19th, like the 335.[2] In 1967/1968, Gibson changed it to join at the 19th fret. Current Gibson reissues are known at ES-330L to denote this longer ('L') feeling neck, and reissues of pre-68 330s have the 16th fret join as they would have originally. Note that the scale length of both models (16-fret and 19-fret) is the same, the body is just different (the 16-fret model has markedly taller upper bouts and thus more hollow body area).
Epiphone Casino Vs Gibson Es 330
The guitar has been produced both as a single-pickup instrument (ES-330T) and as a dual-pickup instrument (ES-330TD). Somewhat unusually, the ES-330T had its pickup mounted halfway between the bridge and the end of the neck, not in one of the usual neck or bridge positions. It has been available in sunburst, cherry, natural, walnut, and sparkling burgundy finishes. Tailpieces used are usually trapeze or Bigsby vibrato tailpieces. Due to its lack of popularity compared to the other Gibson thinline guitars (such as the ES-335, ES-345, and ES-355), the ES-330 was discontinued by Gibson in 1972. Since then, it has been reissued a few times by the Gibson Custom Shop division.
Famous ES-330 players include Emily Remler, B.B. King, Slim Harpo, Grant Green, William Reid, Roky Erickson, Chris Bell, Zoot Horn Rollo, Brian Jones, Brad Simpson of The Vamps, Elliott Smith and Mafuyu Sato.
It is notable that the ES-330 has a nearly identical cousin, the Epiphone Casino (Epiphone was and is a subsidiary of Gibson), which was played in particular by the Beatles’ John Lennon, George Harrison, and Paul McCartney, and The Rolling Stones’ Keith Richards.
Epiphone Casino Vs 335
References[edit]
- ^'Guitar Review: Gibson Custom ES-330' by Tom Beaujour. Guitar Aficionado, April 17th, 2013[1]
- ^Duchossoir, A. R. (1981). Gibson Electrics. Mediapresse. p. 158. ISBN9780881882698.