Buck Munger w/ Pete Townshend's Guitar 1975

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Uploaded by on Sep 22, 2009

In the 70's the Gibson guitars artist relations office was operated out of Buck Munger's home basement recording studio in northeast Portland, Oregon. When the first half-inch video cameras hit the market Buck grabbed one and started shooting low key back stage interviews with Gibson artists directed at the plant workers and field reps to boost morale and increase sales. This is an intro to the first Artist Relations field tape. Buck introduces a trashed Les Paul given to him backstage by Pete Townshend. The guitar was destroyed by Pete because he discovered it had a faulty neck. When he became convinced that something was wrong he bashed it against the wall and indeed the center core of the neck was rotted. So he told Alan Rogan the roadie to save it for that guy from Gibson. In this video Buck also touts the Bo Diddley "Mark Series" model acoustic. In truth, at the time, the Mark Series acoustics were the first costly boondoggle by Gibson's new owners the Norlin Corporation, having spent thousands to develop a whole new bridge concept outside the Gibson design team. Unfortunately, also outside the design team they added a plastic ring around the guitar's sound hole, which instantly turned off the players and killed sales. Munger picked up the little square guitar in the office of Gibson's Kalamazoo plant while visiting the factory with John Entwistle of the Who. After walking through the factory collecting instruments Entwistle were invited into Carl's office. A row of unfinished prototype instruments lined the wall. One instrument stood out. A little square guitar with the new Mark Series bridge. What in the heck is this. "Oh that, says Carl. The New York Norlin guys discovered Ovation guitars (with a plastic back) and they instructed us to build them a prototype so they could evaluate the acoustical properties of plastic." "I could see Carl was not comfortable telling this story, says Buck, these were his corporate bosses he was talking about and I was the corporate Artist Relations guy." "Carl said he looked all over for something plastic like the back of a guitar and all he could come up with was this refrigerator vegetable drawer." So the Gibson craftsmen, who had established the baseline for excellence in the guitar building business were forced to build a guitar on a refrigerator drawer. "I asked for it, and after all the Entwistle freebies I guess Carl was glad to get rid of it."

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  • kool! :)

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