Ibanez Acoustic Guitar

ibanez acoustic guitar


ibanez acoustic guitar

Price: $100.00 (1 Bids)
Time Left: 2h 26m
Rare! Ibanez York model 627L Left Handed


Rare! Ibanez York model 627L Left Handed

Price: $190.00
Buy It Now: $239.95
Time Left: 4h 57m
Ibanez Acustic Guitar Near New Condition PF104 SJP-NT


Ibanez Acustic Guitar Near New Condition PF104 SJP-NT

Price: $61.00 (4 Bids)
Time Left: 5h 58m
IBANEZ ACUSTIC GUITAR MODEL EW20ASNT1201


IBANEZ ACUSTIC GUITAR MODEL EW20ASNT1201

Price: $127.12 (7 Bids)
Time Left: 10h 46m
Ibanez acoustic electric guitar


Ibanez acoustic electric guitar

Price: $150.00
Buy It Now: $200.00
Time Left: 1d 50m
Ibanez JTK4RD Electric Guitar with Vintage Vibrato JTK4


Ibanez JTK4RD Electric Guitar with Vintage Vibrato JTK4

Price: $278.00
Buy It Now: $288.00
Time Left: 1d 1h 25m
Ibanez AW800R with hard case aw 800 acoustic guitar


Ibanez AW800R with hard case aw 800 acoustic guitar

Price: $1.00
Buy It Now: $499.00
Time Left: 1d 2h 52m
Ibanez G480 Classical Nylon Acoustic Guitar + FREE CASE


Ibanez G480 Classical Nylon Acoustic Guitar + FREE CASE

Price: $199.99 (0 Bids)
Time Left: 1d 6h 54m
Ibanez AEL10LE Black LEFTY Acoustic Electric Guitar


Ibanez AEL10LE Black LEFTY Acoustic Electric Guitar

Price: $229.00 (1 Bids)
Time Left: 1d 7h 12m
Ibanez PF acoustic guitar with Gator hard case


Ibanez PF acoustic guitar with Gator hard case

Buy It Now: $235.00
Time Left: 1d 7h 39m
Ibanez GA3 Classical Nylon Acoustic Guitar + FREE CASE


Ibanez GA3 Classical Nylon Acoustic Guitar + FREE CASE

Price: $89.99 (0 Bids)
Time Left: 1d 8h 51m
NEW Ibanez AW800RNT Artwood Acoustic Guitar Natural


NEW Ibanez AW800RNT Artwood Acoustic Guitar Natural

Buy It Now: $599.99
Time Left: 1d 11h
NEW Ibanez AW30NT Artwood Acoustic Guitar Natural


NEW Ibanez AW30NT Artwood Acoustic Guitar Natural

Buy It Now: $239.99
Time Left: 1d 11h
NEW Ibanez SGT110VS Sage Acoustic Guitar Sunburst


NEW Ibanez SGT110VS Sage Acoustic Guitar Sunburst

Buy It Now: $159.99
Time Left: 1d 11h
NEW Ibanez SGT120LNT Lefty Sage Acoustic Guitar Natural


NEW Ibanez SGT120LNT Lefty Sage Acoustic Guitar Natural

Buy It Now: $169.99
Time Left: 1d 11h
IBANEZ PF3-NT ACOUSTIC GUITAR pf 3


IBANEZ PF3-NT ACOUSTIC GUITAR pf 3

Buy It Now: $89.95
Time Left: 1d 13h 50m
TUSQ ACOUSTIC GUITAR SADDLE FOR IBANEZ


TUSQ ACOUSTIC GUITAR SADDLE FOR IBANEZ

Price: $11.95 (1 Bids)
Time Left: 1d 23h 33m
Ibanez SGT120 Blue Acoustic Guitar with FREE CASE!!!


Ibanez SGT120 Blue Acoustic Guitar with FREE CASE!!!

Price: $109.99 (0 Bids)
Time Left: 2d 7h 1m
Ibanez Acoustic Guitar(good condition)


Ibanez Acoustic Guitar(good condition)

Price: $50.00 (0 Bids)
Time Left: 2d 10h 40m
Ibanez Lonestar Series Acoustic Guitar - NO RESERVE


Ibanez Lonestar Series Acoustic Guitar - NO RESERVE

Price: $46.05 (8 Bids)
Time Left: 2d 12h 22m
Vintage Ibanez V-300 w Martin Strings No Reserve!!!!!!!


Vintage Ibanez V-300 w Martin Strings No Reserve!!!!!!!

Price: $88.50 (4 Bids)
Time Left: 2d 12h 37m

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Vintage by Saiichi Sugiyama
Updated :

The Vintage Pignose Amp
I have recently been collecting vintage Pignose amps. They are pretty much the only vintage amps that are actually affordable to the extent that I can have a half dozen of them in a row, compare the sound and choose the best one or two to record with. I probably should not be writing this piece just in case some collectors are reading this and decide to to stock pile on them and push the market price up. The thing is, either not many people latched on to the fact that the ‘70s made-in-USA Pignose is a wonderful amplifier that was used on many classic recordings (the modern made-in-Hong Kong reissue versions don’t record like the old ones at all or I have no ear), or the sound of the vintage Pignose (which is a transistor amp after all) is rubbish and does not deserve to be revered. It's a matter of opinion, of course, but I certainly have recorded with them through a vintage AKG tube C12 microphone and surprised the engineer and others with the sound I got out of this little amp...

Tap Tone - from a Baby's Mouth
I was messing around with my newly acquired 2003 Brazilian fingerboard Historic 1958 Reissue (R8) Les Paul – my friend Koji Mori at Ishibashi Guitars in Tokyo had set this one aside for me when it came in, but, me being in the UK, it took us literally years to hook up and for me to pick it up from his shop in Tokyo. I hadn’t bought a brand new guitar for some ten years previous and it was a treat. I love the playability of this new guitar as the fingerboard is dead straight and it has the right sort of tonal colour. I personally think, although it is a matter of personal opinion, that the fingerboard wood has something to do with the acoustic tone of a Gibson solidbody electric guitar. My hunch is that that is the reason why (a) a ‘68 Les Paul Custom with its maple top acoustically sounds very different from a Goldtop from the same year; and (b) ‘50s Les Paul Customs with their mahogany body still have those tight treble harmonics. Sound is something totally subjective and it may be my ears are deceiving me – but that is my humble opinion on which I base my personal purchase decisions...

Made-in-Japan Replicas
In the last posting, I talked about the awe that I was struck with when I walked into a Tokyo shop with rows of Les Paul sunbursts and two-tone Strats. I had thought more about this and just realised how all of this might have started. I was first introduced to vintage guitars in 1973 by columns written by Tomiaki “Tommy” Hidaka (1950-1986), the singer-songwriter-guitarist of a Japanese band, Garo. They were heavily influenced by the British and American rock of the late '60s and were a well-respected young band in the budding Tokyo rock scene of the time, until they had a major chart success with a pop song written by a M.O.R writer. They then became a nationwide celebrity for a little while before breaking up...

Vintage Tokyo - 1974 and Now
The summer of '08 is basically over. I was in a number of very nice vintage guitar shops in Tokyo on my trip earlier this summer. I always seem to find some guitars that I have a holiday romance with in Tokyo nowadays and some of them I brought home. Until recently, it was always the case that you had to pay a lot more for a vintage piece in Japan. Like it has been here in the UK, the shop prices there consisted of the US price plus a substantial dealer’s margin. The situation changed for some reason and now, you can find a real bargain in Tokyo. I suppose as more and more vintage guitars were imported to Japan, there was a build up of a substantial local stock in Japan and given the stagnating Japanese economy since the '90s and the general practice of lower trade-in prices there, if the dealer does not charge a big margin, you can find some guitars below the US market price let alone the UK prices.

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