Was the 4080 the first?
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- bassduke49
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Was the 4080 the first?
Was it the first double neck to combine bass and guitar in a PRODUCTION instrument? 4080 started in 1975. Anybody else try this before? Or is it the ONLY bass/guitar double neck?
Author: "The Rickenbacker Electric Bass - 50 Years As Rock's Bottom"
Re: Was the 4080 the first?
IIRC, Gibson had one first.
Re: Was the 4080 the first?
Yeah, the Gibson EBS-1250 started production in 1962.
Re: Was the 4080 the first?
And a year before that, in 1961, Hofner had the Model 191.


"A Noble Instrument Must Be Nobly Regarded"
Re: Was the 4080 the first?
Macca should have played one of those! 
Re: Was the 4080 the first?
I'm sure there was some prototypes in the 1800's that have been destroyed in a pirate ship wreck.

Re: Was the 4080 the first?
I have read that Ric was the first to prototype an 8 string bass at NAMM, but Hagstom was the first manufacturer to make an 8 string electric bass a production model.bassduke49 wrote:Was it the first double neck to combine bass and guitar in a PRODUCTION instrument? 4080 started in 1975. Anybody else try this before? Or is it the ONLY bass/guitar double neck?
"Practice does not make perfect. Only perfect practice makes perfect." Vince Lombardi
- antipodean
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Re: Was the 4080 the first?
I think Danelectro did a double-neck bass/guitar in the '60s - not sure of the year though... 
"I don't want to sound incredulous but I can't believe it" Rex Mossop
Re: Was the 4080 the first?
Evan is correct, Dano had a 6/4 double neck (Model 3923) in 1959, so I guess that makes them first.




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- gellkeller
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Re: Was the 4080 the first?
Semie Moseley (Mosrite) was producing double-necks in the mid '50s but I believe most of them would have been custom builds, like the one he produced for Joe Maphis.
- antipodean
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Re: Was the 4080 the first?
I think I may have seen a Mosrite bass/6 string double neck - but it would have been post '65. The early ones were 12/6 or mando/6.gellkeller wrote:Semie Moseley (Mosrite) was producing double-necks in the mid '50s but I believe most of them would have been custom builds, like the one he produced for Joe Maphis.
I think Semie may even have done a triple-neck or two....
"I don't want to sound incredulous but I can't believe it" Rex Mossop
- gellkeller
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Re: Was the 4080 the first?
I think the term "PRODUCTION" probably dismisses Mosrite's claim, hence the "custom" reference
Re: Was the 4080 the first?
To my knowledge the double neck is an old principle, already from the 19th century (at least).
Here is a pic from an instrument 20th century:
and here is one from 19th century:
Usually the upper neck was a kind of bass with strings in a certain tune, so the player did not have to pick it in certaun frets, just the open string.
Here is a pic from an instrument 20th century:

and here is one from 19th century:

Usually the upper neck was a kind of bass with strings in a certain tune, so the player did not have to pick it in certaun frets, just the open string.
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guitfiddle
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Re: Was the 4080 the first?
How about one with an EB-6?


Re: Was the 4080 the first?
As much as harp guitars were around since the 1800s, at least, I don't think they fall in to the current discussion of double neck instruments as HG are played in a different manner than "modern "DN instruments.
Of course, if I had thought of it first, I'd insist they be included.

Of course, if I had thought of it first, I'd insist they be included.
