Re: Korean Epiphone Thunderbird IV
Posted: Wed Jul 09, 2008 9:14 pm
You old 60's guy!johnallg wrote:I remember when Epiphone and MIK meant Made in Kalamazoo.
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You old 60's guy!johnallg wrote:I remember when Epiphone and MIK meant Made in Kalamazoo.
Easy, Mike, I know your birth date, and it is only 6 months after mine! We're showing our ages!mgauction wrote:You old 60's guy!johnallg wrote:I remember when Epiphone and MIK meant Made in Kalamazoo.
And I'm a grandpa!!johnallg wrote:Easy, Mike, I know your birth date, and it is only 6 months after mine! We're showing our ages!mgauction wrote:You old 60's guy!johnallg wrote:I remember when Epiphone and MIK meant Made in Kalamazoo.![]()
I realize I'm responding to this a month later (!), but what Epiphone models did you like from the 90s? I can only really remember the Sorrento - Es-135 style. Of course, I was too young to know what Epiphone was!lennon211 wrote:I'd agree. The fit and finish of instruments that have come out of Epiphone lately have been a better quality than they were in the past. Now if they would just couple the selection of instruments that they had in the mid and late '90's with the quality that they have going for them these days. If they did, I'd probably be buying at least two more instruments.antipodean wrote:MIK instruments seem to be getting better and better. Not quite to MIJ standards yet, but the gap has closed significantly. I'm keeping an eye out for a T-bird to add to the burgeoning herd (or should that be flock?).
They(Gibson) do - they're the Studio series. Set neck vs neck thru and they're about $700 less.I have been tempted to buy a TBird after playing one. They're surprisingly good to play and feel, sound, rock solid. If they make a set-neck model I'd have to surrender.
Sorry it took so long to respond here. I was talking about the time around '97 and '98 when they were doing the Rivoli, EB-1, Riviera 6 and 12 in their vintage style (not the newer Valensi version), Sorrento, etc. It seemed like they had a much better selection of vintage-era models.dpowell wrote:I realize I'm responding to this a month later (!), but what Epiphone models did you like from the 90s? I can only really remember the Sorrento - Es-135 style. Of course, I was too young to know what Epiphone was!lennon211 wrote:I'd agree. The fit and finish of instruments that have come out of Epiphone lately have been a better quality than they were in the past. Now if they would just couple the selection of instruments that they had in the mid and late '90's with the quality that they have going for them these days. If they did, I'd probably be buying at least two more instruments.antipodean wrote:MIK instruments seem to be getting better and better. Not quite to MIJ standards yet, but the gap has closed significantly. I'm keeping an eye out for a T-bird to add to the burgeoning herd (or should that be flock?).