An amateur builder-in-the-making headed online to source parts and, with the help of YouTube and guitar forums, taught himself how to build a Thinline-inspired beauty.
Name: Vinny Eadicicco
Location: Staten Island, New York
Guitar: Leslie 56
I'm a newbie amateur at building guitars. After trying out a friend's Thinline one day, I was hooked. I've always liked the looks and design of a Fender Thinline: the f-hole cutouts, the contours, semi-hollowbody, etc. So, I ventured online to search some DIY videos on how to build a guitar, and there were quite a lot on YouTube.
After taking in all the knowledge, I went searching for an unfinished guitar body and a neck. I came across a nice-looking Thinline-style body from a Canadian-based eBay seller called ToneBomb. The body was considerably affordable and attractive, especially the grain. After I made the initial purchase, I looked for ideas on paints and stains. One of the ideas I fancied was from a YouTuber who used a basic shoe dye instead of paint. I was truly amazed by how it came out, plus it looked rather easy to apply.
My next step was to pick a color. Blue was cool, but turquoise was terrific. A manufacturer called Angelus seemed to have a good reputation and good reviews, so I went with Angelus Leather Dye. When the guitar body arrived, I took some advice from a cousin on how to precondition it before applying dye. He said to wipe it down with a damp rag to raise the grain, and then after the grain is raised, use a tack cloth to remove any dust and particles from the body, which I did.
I then applied one coat of the dye and it took nicely. After it dried, I decided to be daring and gave it two more coats of shoe dye. When it all dried, I decided to utilize a finish called Tru-Oil. It's recommended to use at least eight coats minimum. I eventually applied 10 coats of Tru-Oil on the body over the span of three days or so. Tru-Oil dries quickly. However, I didn't want to rush the finish and wanted it to cure, so I took my time, applying it in stages.
After the body was good to go, I needed a Tele neck. With the way the body came out, I didn't want to skimp on a cheap neck. I bid on a Musikraft Tele-style neck, and eventually won it for around $200. I installed the neck, along with a set of Fender tuners. All the hardware was purchased from eBay. I used a Dragonfire Hot Rails pickup in the bridge and a Wilkinson neck pickup. I soldered everything up with much guidance from the internet. The Squier-Talk.com forum was a huge help: A big shout-out to you guys on that forum. After it was finished, I named her "Leslie 56," because my girlfriend shelled out the monies for this project as my 56th birthday present. Thanks Leslie!
The guitar is a beaut, with great action and nice tones. I had a lot of fun doing this project.
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With a modified and well-worn heavy metal Tele, a Jerry Jones 12-string, a couple banjos, some tape sounds, and a mountain of fast-picking chops, New Yorkās master of guitar mayhem delivers Object of Unknown Function.
āItās like time travel,ā says Brandon Seabrook, reflecting on the sonic whiplash of āObject of Unknown Function.ā The piece, which opens the composerās solo album of the same name, journeys jarringly from aggressive āearly banjo stuffā up through āmore 21st-century classical music,ā combined with electronic found sounds from a TASCAM 4-track cassette recorder. The end result approaches the disorientation of musique concrĆ©te.
āThe structure is kind of like hopping centuries or epochs,ā he adds. āI [wanted] all these different worlds to collide. Itās like a choose-your-own-adventure.ā
Itās a heady, thrilling ideaābut no one whoās followed his zigzagging career will be surprised at the gumption. As heās cycled through various projects (including the acclaimed power trio Seabrook Power Plant), heās become a resident chaos architect within the Brooklyn avant-garde sceneāexploring everything from jazz-fusion to brutal prog to other untamed strains of heavy rock, typically wielding his trusted 1928 tenor banjo and a modified āheavy metal Telecasterā acoustic-electric from 1989.
But Object of Unknown Function, his first solo album since 2014ās Sylphid Vitalizers, became his own real-life choose-your-own-adventureāa process of rejuvenation by playing with new toys. Along with his usual gear, Seabrookās main compositional tools this time were a 6-string 1920 William O. Schmick Lyric guitar banjo and a 1998 Jerry Jones Neptune electric 12-stringāboth of which became vibrant ānew relationships,ā even if, at first, he felt like he was āstepping out on his guitar.ā
āMy other guitar [his Telecaster] is the only thing Iāve been playing for the past 25 to 27 years,ā he says, laughing. āI was so afraid to try something else: āI canāt play another guitar because itās like an extension of my arm. I know the topography of this neck so well. Itās my sound.ā"
Brandon Seabrook's Gear
Seabrookās 1989 Fender HMT Thinline Telecaster has seen enough wear to rival Willie Nelsonās Trigger.
Photo by Scott Friedlander
Instruments
- 1928 Bacon & Day Silver Bell tenor banjo
- 1920 William O. Schmick Lyric guitar banjo
- 1989 Fender HMT Thinline Telecaster with Sheptone Pickups
- 1998 Jerry Jones Neptune 12-string electric
Amps
- 1962 Magnatone Custom 450
- 1971 Traynor YGM-3
Pedals
- Arion SAD-1 Stereo Delay
- Jam Pedals Dyna-ssoR compressor
- Jam Pedals Rattler distortion
Strings and Picks
- DāAddario XL Nickel Wound 10's
- Dunlop Tortex .88 mm
Accessories
- TASCAM PORTA 3 4-track cassette recorder
But Seabrook fell in love āright awayā with the Jerry Jones, and new ideas started flooding out. āThe 12-string is such a magic sound, and the Jerry Jones holds the intonation so well that you can detune some of the double-strings to make different intervals, kind of like a built-in harmonizer,ā he says. āWhen you play chords on that and they ring; itās some sort of majestic, angelic soundāor it can be.ā Photo by Scott Friedlander
Seabrook found the 6-string banjo at Brooklyn shop RetroFret Vintage Guitars, intending to shop for a mandolin. He was struck by William Schmickās construction (āIt uses slightly heavier strings, and the neck is wideā) and, more crucially, the surprising intensity it harnesses: āIt just sounded so metal to me or something,ā he recalls. āSo deep and rich and ominous, but beautiful.ā These discoveries came at a pivotal time: āI donāt know what happened last year, but I felt the need to get some new instruments. And that opened up a new sound world.ā
He eventually linked up with two key collaborators, producer David Breskin (John Zorn, Bill Frisell) and engineer Ben Greenberg (who plays guitar in noise-rock band Uniform), at the small Brooklyn studio Circular Ruin. That setting was ideal for the physical experience he hoped to capture: āI used contact mics on the guitar, and [sometimes on my body], to have a subtle sound design. Itās in thereāyou can kinda hear it [on the album] sometimes.ā
One reason for that impact: This is, by and large, the most intimate record of Seabrookās careerāa downshift from the wall-to-wall wildness that has defined so much of his work. That said, make no mistake. Almost no one else could create the pogoing guitar madness of āPerverted by Perseverance,ā which sounds like ā80s King Crimson being subjected to water torture. (āI actually was revisiting the ā80s King Crimson stuff while I was making this album,ā he says. āI just came back to it after years of not hearing it. Thatās straight-up Telecaster prepared with some alligator clips, and then I use my radio tape recorder on the pickups.ā)
Object sometimes leans into a more traditional āsoloā vibe, like on the dissonant, highly improvised banjo piece āUnbalanced Love Portfolioā; at other points, it piles instruments into towering overdub soundscapes, like on āGondola Freak,ā a heart-accelerating swirl of harmonized 12-strings.
Object of Unknown Functionis the guitaristās first solo record since 2014ās Sylphid Vitalizers.
āIāve been playing a lot of solo things over the past 10 years, and thatās on banjo and guitar,ā Seabrook says. āI was kinda hesitant to make an album of that stuff, although some pieces are totally stripped-down to just me. But I thought I could make a more compelling studio listening experience now that I have a little more of a palette that these instruments are offering. The solo album I did 10 years ago had lots of layers, but I wanted to be a bit more vulnerable on this record and have some songs stripped-down and some full.ā
The resulting project is a āblenderā of all the things Seabrook loves, thrown together in a way that sparks his imagination. āIām just trying to sound like the influences I have, whether itās ā80s King Crimson or Eugene Chadbourne or Van Halen or Joni Mitchellāall these things I hear certain fragments of, and maybe itās only for a measure or a section,ā he says. āI guess I am conscious of messing with form. I love the juxtaposition of certain things.ā
Seabrook is a long-time mainstay of the Brooklyn jazz and avant-garde scene, where, in addition to leading his own ensembles, heās worked with a wide range of artists that includes Nels Cline, Anthony Braxton, Mike Watt, and Mostly Other People Do the Killing.
Photo by Luke Marantz
āI used to be even more of a hailstorm on the audience psyche,ā he continues. āI just recorded a new album with this quartet of synthesizer, violin, bass, and guitar, and I want to bring more lyricism and less feeling of intentional surprise. Iām getting there slowly. A lot of the music I listen to is really lyrical, like folk music or soft rock. I try to put elements of that in here. I guess I do want to make weird twists and turns, but I do put a lot of thought into how to weave them and make them coherent.ā
Itās not like Seabrook has suddenly recorded an Eagles album, but these more refined moments signal a desire to keep challenging himselfāand his audience. āI think itās getting older and being more vulnerable, more confident in your choices,ā he says. āWhen I was younger, I never wanted one second of space. Now I just want to be more connected to the things I truly love. Itās a journey. I never want to think somebody wants to hear a certain thing from me.ā
YouTube It
Video Caption: In this mind-melting performance of ābrutalovechamp,ā captured May 20th, 2023 at Brooklynās Public Records, Seabrook is joined by the epic proportions octet, including everything from cello to recorder.
A forward-thinking, inventive, high-quality electro-acoustic design yields balance, playability, and performance flexibility.
High-quality construction. Flexible, responsive, and detailed-sounding pickup/mic system. Lots of bass resonance without feedback or mud.
Handsome, understated design may still estrange traditionalists.
$1,599
L.R. Baggs AEG-1
lrbaggs.com
Though acoustic amplification has improved by leaps, bounds, and light years, the challenges of making a flattop loud remain ā¦ challenging. L.R. Baggs has played no small part in improving the state of acoustic amplification, primarily via ultra-reliable pickups like the Anthem, Lyric, andHiFi Duet microphone and microphone/under-saddle systems, the overachieving, inexpensive Element Active System, and theM1 andM80 magnetic soundhole pickupsāall of which have become industry standards to one degree or another.
Lloyd Baggs got his start building guitars for the likes of Jackson Brown, Ry Cooder, Janis Ian, and Graham Nash. So he can tell you that building a good guitar from the ground up is no mean feat. Enter the AEG-1, L.R. Baggsā first flattopāa unique thin-hollowbody design that leverages the companyās copious experience with transducers of every kind to create a successful, holistically functional instrument. In some ways, it feels like an instrument built to match a great pickup systemāa cool way to consider guitar design if you think about it.
Gentle Deconstruction
Admittedly, Iām a flattop design traditionalistāthat jerk that thinks any acoustic sketched out after 1962 looks a bit yucky. So, the AEG-1ās looks were a bit jarring out of the case. That didnāt last. Though itās very shallow and soft curves sometimes evoked a swimming pool outline, that of a nice Scandinavian coffee table, and Gibsonās L6-S (these are highly positive associations in my opinion), the lovely body contours and shallow cutaway have a slimming effect and give the guitar a sense of forward lean at the aft endāalmost like a sprinkle of Fender Jaguar. The more you stare at it, the more it looks like a very artful deconstruction of a dreadnought shape, and a very natural one at that.
The construction itself is unique, too. The sides are CDC-machined poplar ply, oriented so you see the laminate in cross-section. The top is a very pretty torrefied Sitka spruce, which is braced in a traditional scalloped X pattern. The sides are also braced with arms that radiate toward the waist and heel at 120 degrees from each other, reinforcing the soundhole and the substantial neck heel. The back is critical to the AEG-1ās tone makeup, too. Rather than a merely ornamental bit of plywood, itās a lovely Indian rosewood that vibrates freely, enhancing resonance and the many organic facets of the AEG-1ās tone spectrum.
The 25.625"-scale mahogany neck is mated to the body by way of four substantial bolts and an equally substantial contoured heel and heel block. Sturdy, perhaps, undersells the secure feel of the neck/body union. In hand, the slim-C neck is lovely, too. The bound rosewood fretboard is beautiful, and the playability is fantastic as well. The action is snappy and fast, the 1.7" nut width is comfy and spacious. And, in general, the build quality of the Korea-made AEG-1 is excellent.
Resonant With Room To Roam
With the exception of country blues playersāand guitarists like Blake Mills andMadison Cunningham, who dabble in rubber bridges to prioritize focus over breadthāmost 6-stringers want a lot of resonance from their instruments. The AEG-1 resonates beautifully, particularly for a thin-bodied guitar. And the HiFi Duet, made up of the HiFi bridge plate pickup and the companyās Silo microphone, is deep and detailed, so the output is easily reshaped by the flexible volume, tone, and mic/pickup blend controls. But the balance of the constituent parts, and the deft way with which the design sacrifices a little body resonance for string detail, is smart and satisfying to interact with.
This is especially true when you use blend settings that favor the microphone. If you get the tone control on the AEG-1, and your amp, dialed in right (I used a mid-scoop and slight bump in the treble and bass from a Taylor Circa74), the extra bass resonance is warm but without being overbearing, adding mass to tones without slathering them in mud. But you donāt have to get too precious and precise about such settings to make the guitar sound great. Working together, the HiFi Duetās pickup/mic blend and tone controls provide the range and variation to shift bass emphasis or put sparkle to the fore. This range is helped in no small part by the guitarās basic feedback resistance. I spent a fair bit of this evaluation playing loud, plugged into the Circa74, which was tilted toward my head at a 30-degree angle. Only when I bent down to turn the amp off, situating the guitar about a foot-and-a-half from the speaker, did the AEG-1 start to feed back.
The Verdict
Inventive, attractive in form and function, playable, and above all forgiving, full-sounding, and balanced when amplified, the AEG-1 is an unexpected treat. The HiFi Duet pickup-and-microphone system is a star. But rather than feeling like an afterthought, it feels like an integral part of the whole. And itās the cohesiveness of this designāand the wholeness of the many sounds it createsāthat makes the AEG-1 different from many stage-oriented electro-acoustic guitars
During routine quality checks, Blackstar has identified a problem with specific Debut 100 Series amps.
Statement from Blackstar:
"Nothing is more important to Blackstar than the safety of our customers.
During routine quality checks, we have identified a problem with Debut 100R 112 and 212 Combos with date codes from 2403 to 2411.
Due to cabinet production errors, a larger than intended gap between wooden parts of the cabinet can cause some electronic components to be accessible or partially exposed. As a result, in some circumstances a user could come into contact with safety critical internal chassis components. This poses a risk of serious electric shock.
Given the circumstances and our commitment to absolute safety, Blackstar has therefore decided to recall these affected products to resolve the issue. No other Blackstar products or Debut 100R date codes are affected.
Blackstar asks all customers with a Debut 100R 112 or 212 Combo to visit the following link to determine whether their product is affected: https://blackstaramps.com/product-recall/
We wish to thank you for your cooperation and to apologise for any inconvenience caused.
If you have any questions or concerns, or need any support regarding the details of this Product Safety Recall, please contact our team in the UK via https://blackstaramps.com/contact-us/"
Excellent optical and harmonic tremolo circuitsāand the ability to blend them to wild, woozy effectādistinguish this modulation collaboration.
On the right, the Harmonic Trem (RED) delivers lush, swirling modulations, while the Optical Trem (BLUE) on the left provides smooth, traditional waves. Use them independently or combine them (MAGENTA) to create a layered, percussive sound that opens up new dimensions in your music. Both tremolos feature independent Speed, Depth, and Volume controls, giving you freedom to dial in each effect to your taste. Fully analog and crafted with precision, the Twin Trem blends history and innovation.