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Longhorn

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   Forums Archive -> The Vault: 2004-2005Message format
 
schroeder
Posted 2004-12-07 8:04 AM (#170613)
Subject: Longhorn


Joined:
November 2004
Posts: 4413

How come nobody seems to own one of these? Is there a reason noone writes about them?
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Beal
Posted 2004-12-07 8:06 AM (#170614 - in reply to #170613)
Subject: Re: Longhorn



Joined:
January 2002
Posts: 14127

Location: 6 String Ranch
Longhorn? As in Danelectro longhorn?
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alpep
Posted 2004-12-07 8:12 AM (#170615 - in reply to #170613)
Subject: Re: Longhorn


Joined:
December 2001
Posts: 10583

Location: NJ
u mean long neck?

I had several dano longhorns in the day. kinda cool guitars.
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schroeder
Posted 2004-12-07 8:15 AM (#170616 - in reply to #170613)
Subject: Re: Longhorn


Joined:
November 2004
Posts: 4413

Yeah.....LONGNECK.
Can we start again?
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Wuzhizzoner
Posted 2004-12-07 11:17 AM (#170617 - in reply to #170613)
Subject: Re: Longhorn


Joined:
June 2002
Posts: 1614

Location: Converse, Texas
Longhorns... I've heard of them.
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MWoody
Posted 2004-12-07 11:19 AM (#170618 - in reply to #170613)
Subject: Re: Longhorn



Joined:
December 2003
Posts: 13996

Location: Upper Left USA
They are out there. One on eBay right now.

They are a specialized flavor of Ovation. They still outnumber the Mandocellos 4/1.

It's an odd part of the brain that gets excited about baritones!
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Tim in Yucaipa
Posted 2004-12-07 11:24 AM (#170619 - in reply to #170613)
Subject: Re: Longhorn


Joined:
August 2003
Posts: 2246

Location: Yucaipa, California
Hizz...

Longhorns... I've heard of them


...shouldn't that be "I've herd of them" :rolleyes:
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Wuzhizzoner
Posted 2004-12-07 11:42 AM (#170620 - in reply to #170613)
Subject: Re: Longhorn


Joined:
June 2002
Posts: 1614

Location: Converse, Texas
Yeah... the "herd" is in the Rose Bowl.
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Stevechapman
Posted 2004-12-07 1:19 PM (#170621 - in reply to #170613)
Subject: Re: Longhorn


Joined:
April 2003
Posts: 2503

Location: Fayetteville, NC
What A great Christmas Gift!! Go Longhorns!!!
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Beal
Posted 2004-12-07 4:15 PM (#170622 - in reply to #170613)
Subject: Re: Longhorn



Joined:
January 2002
Posts: 14127

Location: 6 String Ranch
OK, back to the question. Longnecks are great. I wanted to call the the D guitar so they wouldn't be confused with a Budweiser but I guess that doesn't happen in Texas anyway.
Picture a regular guitar with a neck that joins the body at the 12th fret so the bridge is further back in the top=better sound. Now add two frets below the nut and you get like a 28"+ scale and to keep the string tension the same tune down 2 steps to D. Want a regular guitar? capo at the second fret.
They weren't overly popular. Maybe it's too advanced a concept for the public, maybe it's designed because it could be but nobody asked for it, maybe it's because the order taker(sales) force didn't get asked for one so they never sold any, maybe the world thinks they suck eggs, who knows.
I think it's a great concept (then again I would). It is a specialty guitar, no question.
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cliff
Posted 2004-12-07 5:06 PM (#170623 - in reply to #170613)
Subject: Re: Longhorn


Joined:
March 2002
Posts: 14842

Location: NJ
It's ANOTHER one on my "List". . . .

". . . WUNNA . . . these DAYS . . . . ."
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Tommy M.
Posted 2004-12-07 5:15 PM (#170624 - in reply to #170613)
Subject: Re: Longhorn


Joined:
January 2004
Posts: 627

Location: Cherry Hill, NJ
Where on e-bay, I can't find it.
Tommy
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MWoody
Posted 2004-12-07 5:56 PM (#170625 - in reply to #170613)
Subject: Re: Longhorn



Joined:
December 2003
Posts: 13996

Location: Upper Left USA
Right Here Y'all:

Longneck

Seller is an OFCer - bid high and often!
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Bailey
Posted 2004-12-08 2:22 AM (#170626 - in reply to #170613)
Subject: Re: Longhorn


Joined:
May 2002
Posts: 3005

Location: Las Cruces, NM
MWoody

That is nice!! Now I have another form of GAS adding to my 12 string therapy failures. It's a 14 fret 28 inch therapy that is doomed from the start. I want it!! I want it!! I am going to hold my breath until my mommy buys me one.
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schroeder
Posted 2004-12-08 5:39 PM (#170627 - in reply to #170613)
Subject: Re: Longhorn


Joined:
November 2004
Posts: 4413

Thanks for the replies. I've never actually seen a LongNECK (will I ever live that down?), but I played a custom built baritone by an English luthier 3 or 4 years ago and it was an absolutely fabulous sound. It was too expensive, but the LongNECK lists a lot cheaper, hence the question.
The Metheny baritone album shows what can be done with one - though I think that the Nashville tuning could have been used more sparingly.
Compared to a regular guitar it was like playing a grand piano - the sheer power, not to mention the vibrations through the back (you could get your rocks off in all sorts of ways with an all wood baritone), is quite amazing.
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cms-man
Posted 2004-12-08 6:39 PM (#170628 - in reply to #170613)
Subject: Re: Longhorn


Joined:
October 2002
Posts: 170

Location: The Shop
I dont know who came up with the name Longneck, but Bill we still call them D scale in the shop.Hence the model # DS768.
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stonebobbo
Posted 2004-12-08 6:57 PM (#170629 - in reply to #170613)
Subject: Re: Longhorn



Joined:
August 2002
Posts: 8307

Location: Tennessee
If I could venture a guess, I'd think the name was born in a Texas bar where they serve the beer in funny bottles. Hmmmm ... where did that former president get all his cowboy boots?
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Beal
Posted 2004-12-08 7:51 PM (#170630 - in reply to #170613)
Subject: Re: Longhorn



Joined:
January 2002
Posts: 14127

Location: 6 String Ranch
Actually the first pair of boots were Dan Posts and came from Boston. The name longneck came from Dave Bergstrom, the ovation product mgr at the time. I don't really recall what gave him the idea, could have been a long neck bud. I had stopped lifting those by then so I wouldn't have thought of it.
The idea for the guitar came from watching Gordon Giltrap play at a Frankfort music fair booth and taking a small bodied guitar and tune it way down for an open tuning in C with a low B. The strings just flapped all over the place, sounded terrible. As always happens, the light bulb came on and I thought, there has to be a better way and one discussion with DJ lead to another and before you know it there was an Adamas proto. We made maybe a dozen grafite ones and used wood for production(read lower retail price). I'm not sure how many would up getting made, I'd guess maybe 100. There's a Ko-reehan version too I'm told.
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BruDeV
Posted 2004-12-09 1:50 AM (#170631 - in reply to #170613)
Subject: Re: Longhorn


Joined:
January 2003
Posts: 1498

Location: San Bernardino, California
Ko-reehan version?

http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&category=2385&item=3768395192&rd=1
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