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Les Paul Junior Guitars

1956 Gibson Les Paul Junior

Color: Sunburst, Rating: 9.00, Sold (ID# 01703)
Call to Inquire: (818) 222-4113


 

An Exceptionally Fine 1956 Les Paul Junior.

 

1956 Gibson Les Paul Junior.

 

This 13-inch-wide, electric solid body guitar weighs 8.30 lbs. Solid mahogany body with two-color brown-to-yellow sunburst finish on top and dark brown finish on back and sides. One-piece mahogany neck with a fat nut width of just over 1 11/16 inches, a standard Gibson scale length of 24 3/4 inches and a wonderful thick profile. Unbound Brazilian rosewood fretboard with 22 original thin frets and inlaid pearl dot markers. Headstock with "Gibson" logo and "Les Paul Junior" silk-screened in gold. Single-layer black plastic, bell-shaped truss-rod cover with two screws. Three-in-a-line Kluson Deluxe 'single-line' strip tuners with oval white plastic buttons. Serial number "6 6192" inked-on in yellow on the back of the headstock. Single-layer black plastic pickguard with three screws. One P-90 pickup in the bridge position with a 'hot' output of 7.88k. Black plastic pickup cover stamped on the underside "UC - 450-1 / 1". Two controls (one volume, one tone) on lower treble bout. The potentiometers are stamped "615 4731 XXX" (ROC ??? - the last three numbers are obscured by solder). Original "Bumble-Bee" capacitor. Gold plastic bell-shape "Bell" knobs. Original combination wrap-over bar bridge/tailpiece with two intonation screws. There is some very fine finish checking on the top and the back. There are a few very small and insignificant surface marks/indentations on the sides of the body and a few tiny indentations on the back of the neck. There are also some marks on the sides of the headstock (due to uncut strings). Overall this all original fifty-seven year old Les Paul Junior is in exceptionally fine (9.00) condition. Housed in the original Gibson three-latch softshell 'Aligator' case with purple felt lining (8.50).

Introduced in 1954, the "budget" Les Paul Junior "was designed for and aimed at beginners. It did not pretend to be anything other than a cheaper guitar. The outline shape of its body was the same as the gold-top and Custom, but the most obvious difference to its Les Paul partners was a flat-top solid mahogany body. It had a single P-90 pickup, governed by a volume and tone control, and there were simple dot-shaped position markers along the unbound rosewood fingerboard. It was finished in Gibson's traditional two-colour brown-to-yellow sunburst, and had the wrap-over bar-shape bridge/tailpiece like the one used on the latest gold-top. The September 1954 pricelist showed the Les Paul Custom at $325 and the Les Paul Junior at $99.50. The gold-top meanwhile had sneaked up to $225" (Tony Bacon, 50 Years of the Gibson Les Paul, p. 25).

"At the time they were intended for guitar-teaching schools...but have now become revered for their direct rock'n'roll spirit" (Tony Bacon, 50 Years of the Gibson Les Paul, p. 23). So successful was this model, that an astonishing 9,750 guitars were shipped from the factory during its production run between 1954 and the end of 1957.

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