Alembic Guitars Club

Connecting => Introductions => Topic started by: dougv on July 15, 2012, 04:18:18 PM

Title: Visited the workshop in 1972, bought #72-05
Post by: dougv on July 15, 2012, 04:18:18 PM
Greetings from Chicago.
This board is really nostalgic for me.  I was in a college band and we modeled ourselves on the Dead, including their singing, unfortunately.  They played at our college strike in NYC in 68 and we all fell hard.
Then we all moved to Seattle in 1972 and when we heard about Alembic, we drove down.  Our Seattle friend went to college with Steven Smith, who was working there.
I bought a sort of breadboard six-string that they said they used to try out things.  It had beautiful wood but it was an unplayable shape, a tiny violin body and a monstrously long neck.  No fancy electronics and so hard to hold I doubt I played it more than a couple hours.  I didn't even put an upper strap peg on it.
Here's a picture on my facebook page:
http://tinyurl.com/6n6n2v6 (http://tinyurl.com/6n6n2v6)
It's in storage in NYC but I'll see if I can dig up some photos of it.  After surfing this board, I miss it!
Cordially,
Doug
Title: Visited the workshop in 1972, bought #72-05
Post by: sonicus on July 15, 2012, 04:30:32 PM
Welcome and thanks for posting.
 
Very cool , An Alembic Peanut Guitar!
Title: Visited the workshop in 1972, bought #72-05
Post by: dougv on July 15, 2012, 06:45:06 PM
Oops, I thought I replied but I came back and it wasn't there.
Aha, is that the official name for the shape?
I googled peanut alembic and there were some pix with a bigger lower bout.  Are they all peanuts?
 
Thanks for the reply in any case.  See you around the club.
Cordially,
Doug
Title: Visited the workshop in 1972, bought #72-05
Post by: rustyg61 on July 15, 2012, 09:16:17 PM
Doug, really cool picture! Thanks for sharing!Here's the picture for those who can't get to Facebook at work, like me!
 
(http://club.alembic.com/Images/397/135941.jpg)
Title: Visited the workshop in 1972, bought #72-05
Post by: tncaveman on July 16, 2012, 04:29:17 AM
Sweet looking guitar.  Museum piece or wall art?   Really cool picture.
 
Stephen
 
(Message edited by TNcaveman on July 16, 2012)
Title: Visited the workshop in 1972, bought #72-05
Post by: dougv on July 16, 2012, 07:35:50 AM
The picture is by a wonderful guy, Jerry Davis, photographer and friend in Seattle at the time, now living on Bainbridge Island.
Title: Visited the workshop in 1972, bought #72-05
Post by: dougv on July 16, 2012, 02:03:57 PM
A couple pix:
|
Title: Visited the workshop in 1972, bought #72-05
Post by: dougv on July 16, 2012, 02:09:14 PM
Oh well, I guess I can't post pix from my browser.  Sorry.
Here are some on Tumblr:
http://www.tumblr.com/blog/dougvanderhoof (http://www.tumblr.com/blog/dougvanderhoof)
Title: Visited the workshop in 1972, bought #72-05
Post by: rustyg61 on July 16, 2012, 09:37:28 PM
Your Tumbler page asks for login info...
Title: Visited the workshop in 1972, bought #72-05
Post by: dougv on July 17, 2012, 03:09:28 AM
Wha...?  I...that is.
Oh wait...
Sorry, Rusty.
http://dougvanderhoof.tumblr.com/ (http://dougvanderhoof.tumblr.com/)
Hulk not like think.  Hurt Hulk head.
Title: Visited the workshop in 1972, bought #72-05
Post by: elwoodblue on July 18, 2012, 02:40:00 AM
OOooooOOOhh...love the back marquetry and hammered brass.  
 Braindamage..I mean Bainbridge is a good place to be. (except for all the lightning recently..wow )
 
Thanks for the extra pics...can't wait to see a new one with You, and number Five, with six strings again.  
 Do you still have the red Guild acoustic?
 
cheers
Title: Visited the workshop in 1972, bought #72-05
Post by: rustyg61 on July 18, 2012, 03:25:42 AM
Thanks Doug! You have an amazing piece of history!
Title: Visited the workshop in 1972, bought #72-05
Post by: room037 on July 18, 2012, 07:40:51 AM
Hi Doug,  Nice old piece ! I found the Factory picture from "Rolling Stone" Sep. 27 73'.
(http://club.alembic.com/Images/397/136128.jpg)
 Please look right side !
(http://club.alembic.com/Images/397/136129.jpg)
  It looks like your # 5 !  Eiji
Title: Visited the workshop in 1972, bought #72-05
Post by: dougv on July 18, 2012, 05:01:25 PM
Wow, good eye, Elji!
You know, since I wrote that first post, I've been thinking that we didn't go down there so soon after we got to Seattle on July 4, 1972.  It may have been a year later.  I do remember the weather was nice.  I can't think why my memories of that whole era aren't clearer.  Must have been something in the air.
That does really look like mine. I didn't have the faintest memory of Steve (Steven?) Smith, except his name.  He was the friend of my friend Dennis Harrington, who went to Evergreen with him.
Maybe a decade ago I got in touch with a nice woman at Alembic whose name I've forgotten, and she recognized Steve Smith's name.
Has anyone ever seen another peanut with that small lower bout?  I haven't but I'm not immersed in Alembic lore like y'all.
And Elwood, yes I still have the Guild Acoustic D-25 Cherry, but it's been put out to pasture.  Warm thanks for the bit of shared nostalgia.  Ahhh.
Title: Visited the workshop in 1972, bought #72-05
Post by: dougv on July 18, 2012, 05:06:01 PM
One more impression of the workshop:  It didn't seem drenched in psychedelia.  I don't know what we expected but I remember being impressed about how it looked like a serious enterprise, not a hobby farm for people who were constantly seeing sounds and hearing colors.
Did anyone else see Tarot, the entertainment in NYC?  I think we were expecting something more like that.
Title: Visited the workshop in 1972, bought #72-05
Post by: edwin on July 18, 2012, 07:41:01 PM
Now wait a minute. My wife sees sounds and hears colors (and smells them both) and has made a career out of it and has a very serious enterprise. Please don't give synesthesia a bad name! :-)
 
Hippies have gotten a bad rap. Most of the people I know who I would consider hippies work a heck of a lot harder than the straight people I know. I don't know who all the great unwashed are who get called hippies, but they give the rest of us a bad name.
Title: Visited the workshop in 1972, bought #72-05
Post by: mica on July 18, 2012, 08:30:48 PM
I have this picture, but I don't know the source:
(http://club.alembic.com/Images/397/136171.jpg)
Where are those two strings?!
Title: Visited the workshop in 1972, bought #72-05
Post by: terryc on July 19, 2012, 06:37:33 AM
Nice TEAC 4 track in the pic too
Title: Visited the workshop in 1972, bought #72-05
Post by: dougv on July 20, 2012, 09:05:08 AM
Mica, sorry about that.  I was trying to post pictures and my first tries went into some parallel dimension.  I guess you have contacts there.
Title: Visited the workshop in 1972, bought #72-05
Post by: tbrannon on July 20, 2012, 09:29:04 AM
Doug,  
 
Mica is Mica Wickersham. Daughter of Ron and Susan Wickersham.  
 
She as a few connections at Alembic
Title: Visited the workshop in 1972, bought #72-05
Post by: jzstephan on July 20, 2012, 09:40:41 AM
He meant connections in a parallel dimension. Its true. Part of the Wickersham DNA.
Title: Visited the workshop in 1972, bought #72-05
Post by: mica on July 20, 2012, 06:30:32 PM
I just had that picture on my hard disk for several years. I didn't keep track of where I got it. These aren't quite the same as on your link. Did you ever email me about this guitar?
 
These peanut guitars as we call them were an idea of Bear's to have a completely minimalist guitar. The experiment as you know, wasn't successful as something that is fun to play. I really love the Bird's-eye Maple top on your guitar. Looks just great!
Title: Visited the workshop in 1972, bought #72-05
Post by: mica on July 20, 2012, 06:31:29 PM
Oh, and I can neither confirm nor deny the parallel dimension connections.
Title: Visited the workshop in 1972, bought #72-05
Post by: dougv on July 22, 2012, 01:38:47 PM
Mica,
That's the same blue bedsheet from the same shoot!  Yes, I think I got ahold of (I guess the woman was you) you some years ago and you remembered Steve Smith from the workshop at the time.  I think I had called Alembic and was on the phone with you briefly and then I guess I sent you the picture.  
Thanks for the bit of history.  I didn't know it was a Bear idea.  I guess that giant brain always a lot going on, huh?
Cordially,
Dv