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Revisiting a Forgotten Hippie-Era 6-String

Revisiting a Forgotten Hippie-Era 6-String

A mix of futuristic concepts and DeArmond single-coil pickups, the Musicraft Messengerā€™s neck was tuned to resonate at 440 Hz.

All photos courtesy ofthe SS Vintage Shop on Reverb.com

The idiosyncratic, Summer of Love-era Musicraft Messenger had a short-lived run and some unusual appointments, but still has some appreciators out there.

Funky, mysterious, and rare as henā€™s teeth, the Musicraft Messenger is a far-out vintage guitar that emerged in the Summer of Love and, like so many heady ideas at the time, didnā€™t last too much longer.

The brainchild of Bert Casey and Arnold Curtis, Musicraft was a short-lived endeavor, beginning in San Francisco in 1967 and ending soon thereafter in Astoria, Oregon. Plans to expand their manufacturing in the new locale seemed to have fizzled out almost as soon as they started.


Until its untimely end, Musicraft made roughly 250 Messengers in various configurations: the mono-output Messenger and the flagship Messenger Stereophonic, both of which could come with the ā€œTone Messerā€ upgrade, a built-in distortion/fuzz circuit. The companyā€™s first catalog also featured a Messenger Bass, a wireless transmitter/receiver, and various models of its Messenger Envoy amplifier, very few of which have survived, if many were ever made at all.

ā€œTo this day, even fans will sometimes call the decision to use DeArmonds the Messengerā€™s ā€˜Achillesā€™ heel.ā€™ā€

Upon its release, the Messenger was a mix of futuristic concepts and DeArmond single-coil pickups that were more likely to be found on budget instruments than pricier guitars such as these. The Messengers often featured soapbar-style DeArmonds, though some sported a diamond grille. (To this day, even fans will sometimes call the decision to use DeArmonds the Messengerā€™s ā€œAchillesā€™ heel.ā€) The Stereophonic model, like the one featured in this edition of Vintage Vault, could be plugged into a single amplifier as normal, or you could split the bridge and neck pickup outputs to two separate amps.

One of the beloved hallmarks of the guitars are their magnesium-aluminum alloy necks, which continue as a center block straight through the tailpiece, making the guitars relatively lightweight and virtually immune to neck warping, while enhancing their playability. Thanks to the strength of that metal-neck design, thereā€™s no need for a thick heel where it meets the body, granting unprecedented access to the higher end of the fretboard.

This Stereophonic model could be plugged into a single amplifier as normal, or you could split the bridge and neck pickup outputs to two separate amps.

The neck was apparently also tuned to have a resonant frequency of 440 Hz, which, in all honesty, may be some of that 1967 ā€œwhoa, manā€ marketing continuing on through our modern-day guitar discourse, where this fact is still widely repeated on forums and in YouTube videos. (As one guitar aficionado to the next, what does this even mean in practice? Would an inaudible vibration at that frequency have any effect at all on the tone of the guitar?)

In any event, the combination of that metal center blockā€”resonant frequency or notā€”the apple-shaped hollow wooden body of the guitar, and the catā€™s-eye-style ā€œf-holesā€ did make it prone to gnarly fits of feedback, especially if you engaged the Tone Messer fuzz and blasted it all through the high-gain amp stacks favored by the eraā€™s hard rockers.

The most famous devotee of the Messenger was Grand Funk Railroadā€™s Mark Farner, who used the guitarā€”and its Tone Messer circuitryā€”extensively on the groupā€™s string of best-selling records and in their defining live shows, like the Atlanta Pop Festival 1970 and their sold-out run at New Yorkā€™s Shea Stadium in 1971. But even Farner had some misgivings.

The Messengers often featured soapbar-style DeArmonds, though some sported a diamond grille.

In a 2009 interview, he talked about his first test-run of the guitar: ā€œAfter I stuffed it full of foam and put masking tape over the f-holes to stop that squeal, I said, ā€˜I like it.ā€™ā€ He bought it for $200, on a $25-per-pop installment plan, a steal even at the time. (He also made it over with a psychedelic paint job, befitting the era, and experimented with different pickups over the years.)

When these guitars were new in 1967, the Messenger Stereophonic in morning sunburst, midnight sunburst, or mojo red would have run you $340. By 1968, new stereo models started at $469.50. Recent years have seen prices for vintage models steadily increase, as the joy of this rarity continues to thrill players and collectors. Ten years ago, you could still get them for about $1,500, but now prices range from $3,000 to $6,000, depending on condition.

Our Vintage Vault pick today is listed on Reverb by Chicagoā€™s own SS Vintage. Given that itā€™s the stereo model, in very good condition, and includes the Tone Messer upgrade, its asking price of $5,495 is near the top-end for these guitars today, but within the usual range. To those readers who appreciate the vintage vibe but donā€™t want the vintage price tag, Eastwood Guitars offers modern reissues, and eagle-eyed buyers can also find some very rare but less expensive vintage MIJ clones made in the late ā€™60s and early ā€™70s.

Sources: Reverb listing from SS Vintage, Reverb Price Guide sales data, Musicraft July 1, 1967 Price Schedule, 1968 Musicraft Catalog, Chicago Music Exchangeā€™s ā€œUncovering The Secret Sounds of the 1967 Musicraft Messenger Guitar,ā€ MusicPickups.com article on the Messenger.


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