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Showing posts with label Hoyer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hoyer. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 6, 2011

1970s Hoyer SG



Yes I'm a little bit obsessed by these vintage German trems lately - that is ironical for someone who has very little use for one when playing guitar (but I still have so much to learn!)

Look at the big chrome trem and rolling saddles bridge of this superb 1970s Hoyer SG in burgundy finish, isn't it he sexiest thing in the world? 

Bertram

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Thursday, February 3, 2011

Vintage Hoyer Telething


Tried hard but couldn't find anything about this bizarro Hoyer Tele-like guitar - actually it's maybe a one-off or a Frankenstein but it looks quite real - the control plate at least I saw or other (later) Hoyers - they have been releasing Tele inspired guitars for ever - still do.

The pickups feel really Japanese 60s products, the 3/3 big headstock is so out of place that it's attractive, the Silvertone-esque pickguard is pretty cool - I'm quite intrigued by this guitar, anybody knows more?

Bertram

Guitarz - The Original Guitar Blog - now in its 10th year!

Friday, September 10, 2010

A rather eccentric German electric from A. Hoyer

guitarz.blogspot.com:
Here's another German guitar currently being offered for sale on eBay. It's a very eccentric-looking instrument by Arnold Hoyer with such features as that huge neck plate, a super thin body, Hoyer-branded parallelogram-shaped pickups, crude-looking Bigsby-esque vibrato, antique-looking controls, and a 5-pin DIN output socket.

What's more, as is evidenced by this video, it plays rather nicely too!


G L Wilson

Guitarz - The Original Guitar Blog - now in its 9th year!

Sunday, May 9, 2010

Hoyer semi-hollow with walnut top

Hoyer walnut

The central beam of this ES-335-like mid-80s Hoyer ends in a short point, something unusual for this kind of semi-hollow guitars that ordinarily tend to be as uncreative as possible! The other noticeable feature is its beautiful walnut top that makes it quite a guitar...

BTW today on a flea market I saw an overly cool Daion Headhunter - a high end rare 80s Matsumoku ES-335 variation with a curve where this Hoyer has a point... But the seller knew well its value, that is far more than what I could afford, so I walked away, with my heart bleeding, but I didn't cry (I'll post about this guitar when the opportunity comes).

bertram

  Guitarz - The Original Guitar Blog - now in its 9th year!

Wednesday, March 17, 2010

70s Hoyer Explorer

Hoyer Explorer

Strangely, we haven't showed many Explorer models on this blog, though it's as a classical and avant-garde design as the acclaimed Flying V. Is it because it's associated to metal music (even if it's a design from the 50s) and therefore to often ridiculous guitars? Or just because you have either original Gibson or 80s copies and that narrows anecdotes?

Anyway, here we have a beautiful circa 1975 Hoyer Explorer that looks indeed to be a faithful copy of the Gibson original, maybe a little bit less angular, that is a improvement to me. It has the beautiful white binding contrasting with its black finish, always a guaranty of elegance, and something that particularly underlines the pure complexity of the Explorer design.
But I wish Explorers had Flying V triangle headstocks, that would fit much better than the banana ones.

I had thought about making a post about the Gibson 7-string Explorer when it was released but I don't like the idea of doing advertisement for a dominant brand novelty, though to be honest I'm quite interested in this guitar (that I'll never play, too luxurious for me poor guitar lover). I'd love to see a baritone version one day, though Gibson seems to have given up any kind of creativity now, and capitalizes endlessly on a glorious past (even Epiphone has more new models!)


Guitarz - The Original Guitar Blog - now in its 9th year!

Monday, February 22, 2010

Hoyer Jazz Guitar

Hoyer

Couldn't find much about this beautiful Hoyer Jazz Guitar... It looks like a later, less luxurious and electrified (might be a modification) version of the famous 50s Herr im Frack (Gentleman in Tuxedo). It's noticeable for the rare mix of two non-F F-holes and a round soundhole - some Hoyer of the time even had 18 soundholes all around the table!


bertram

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Friday, February 12, 2010

70s Hoyer Les Paul close-up

Hoyer

Don't know about you, but I love guitar gear close-up such as this roller bridge from a vintage Hoyer LP (yes it seems that I started a LP series lately). And when it's a little bit worn and rusted, it's so sexy!



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Monday, October 26, 2009

Hoyer Fantastik

hoyer fantastik


A last stunning German guitar from the Schlaggitarren website - then I let you explore this site by yourself. But you probably never saw such an incredible guitar, one that is not just meant to look bizarre, but obviously an experimentation on sound.

So this is the Hoyer Fantastik, a guitar that really owns its name and appears in Hoyer's early 60s catalogue (picture above) though only six of them were ever built. Its body is made of six wooden tubes with their own sound holes - hence its nickname the 'organ guitar'. Due to its rarity and originality, it's considered the ultimate collector vintage German guitar.

If you click on the link up there you will find also an article in English about the brit guitarist Carl Goldie (right picture) who has been playing a Hoyer Fantastik his whole career (with an anecdote with Goldie refusing to sell the guitar to George Harrison in 1962 when sharing the stage with the Beatles). You will also find something about this guitar on Jazzgitarren (in English).


bertram



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