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Gibson ES-175D
Electric acoustic guitar


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Gibson ES-175D description | ES-175 Catalogue appearances

1954 ES-175 | 1966 ES-175D | 1967 ES-175D | 1970 ES-175D | 1974 ES-175D

Gibson ES-175D
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Gibson ES175
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last message by bilbo230763
28/02/2008 08:29


Steve Howe plays Gibson - 1971. UK Selmer advertisement for Gibson guitars
Steve Howe plays Gibson - 1971. UK Selmer advertisement for Gibson guitars. Steve Howe bought his first Gibson, An ES-175D from the Selmer shop in Charing Cross Road, London, in 1964.

Jazz strings suitable for this guitar

D'Addario EJ22 (D'Addario Electric Guitar Strings Jazz Medium)

Thomastik-Infeld JS111 (light flatwound jazz swing electric guitar strings)

Thomastik-Infeld JS110 (flatwound extra light jazz swing electric guitar strings)

Dean Markley 2506B (Dean Markley Nickelsteel Electric - Jazz)

D'Addario EHR350 (D'Addario S/Steel Half Round Electric Guitar Strings Jazz Light)

D'Addario XLS600 (D'Addario Stainless Steel Electric Guitar Strings Jazz Medium)

D'Addario XLS590 (D'Addario Stainless Steel Electric Guitar Strings Jazz Light)

D'Addario EJ21 (D'Addario Electric Jazz Light)

D'Addario EXL115 (D'Addario Electric Blues/Jazz Rock)

D'Addario EHR360 (D'Addario S/Steel Half Round Electric Guitar Strings Jazz Medium)

Gibson cello-bodied guitars were very well regarded in the 1930s and 1940s. Models such as the ES-350, launched in 1935 showed what was possible, and immediately earned Gibson respect from jazz guitarists of the time. Gibson archtops set the standard, both in terms of quality and design that other manufacturers would emulate, and still do to this day.

The story of the ES-175 starts in 1949 with the launch of the one-pickup model, to be joined in 1953, by a two pickup version, ES-175D. This was a smaller bodied instrument than other archtops, measuring just 16 1/4" wide, (compared to 18" for the Super 400 CES, and 17" for the L-5CES, ES-5 and ES-350) and with a shorter scale (24 3/4"), to faciltate tricky jazz chordings.

The Florentine cutaway was also seen as an advantage over the more usual Gibson Venetian cut, and this again proved popular. Body material was maple throughout, with a set mahogany neck.

There was no completely analogous Epiphone model to the ES-175, the closest being the Epiphone Windsor which shard the same construction, materials, scale length and body dimensions as the ES-175, but as a thinline, with an Epiphone mini humbucker.

The single pickup model was last listed in price lists in 1970, although seems to have been shipped way beyond that date. The two pickup version, is by far the most familiar ES-175, and is still available today, largely unchanged in six decades. There was one significant change though; the pickups in use originally were single-coil P90s, however the ES-175 was the first of all Gibson guitars to be shipped with a humbucker. Original Gibson legers mark this event clearly; it was February 18, 1957, on an ES-175N with serial number A25000.

1970 Gibson electric acoustics catalogueThe following description is taken from the 1970 Gibson electric acoustics catalogue

ES-175 D - Cutaway Easy to hold and comfortable to hold, the ES-175 D produces a brilliant distortion-free tone. The modern cutaway design provides easy access to the entire register.

FEATURES: Arched top and back of select maple with matching rims. Slim, fast low-action neck joins the body at the 14th fret. Laminated mahogany neck adjustable truss rod. Rosewood fingerboard, pearl inlays. Adjustable rosewood bridge. Powerful twin Humbucking pickups. Separate tone and volume control for each pickups. Separate tone and volume control for each pickup. Toggle switch. Individual machine heads. 16 ½ " wide, 20 ¼ " long, 3 3/8 " deep; 24 ¾ " scale, 20 frets.

ES-175D - Double pickups - Sunburst finish
ES-175DN - Double pickups - Natural finish
ES-175 - Single pickup - Sunburst finish
515 - Faultless plush-lined case
303 - Archcraft plush-lined case
103 - Durabilt case
ZC-5 - Zipper cover for 515 case


Summary

ModelGibson ES-175Gibson ES-175D
Available1949-1972, The last price list entry was Sept 1970, although shipping figures suggest they were shipped in very small numbers as late as 1972 (and possibly later)1953-date
PickupsTwo single coils (1953-57), or two humbuckers (1957 onwards)One single coil (1953-57), later one humbucker (1957 onwards)
Scale24 3/4 "
BodyArched maple top, maple back and sides. Some 80s instruments had mahogany back and sides. 16 1/2 " wide, 20 1/4 " long, 3 3/8 " deep
NeckMahogany (1949-1976), Maple (1976-83). Rosewood fingerboard with double parallelogram pearl inlays.
Frets20
HardwareNickel plated (1949-1965), chrome plated (1965-onwards).
FinishesSumburst, Natural, Wine Red, Sparkling Burgundy, Ebony

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Gibson Steve Howe Signature ES-175 Guitar
Gibson Steve Howe Signature ES-175 Guitar Vintage Sunburst

Based on the '64 ES-175 that was Steve's first good guitar and the one to which he has returned throughout his long career, this stunning signature model features everything he loves best: maple top, back, and sides, split-parallelogram mother-of-pearl inlays on a rosewood fretboard, full body and neck binding, inlaid ebony bridge base, unique nickel T-trapeze, and 2 '57 Classic humbuckers. Independent volume and tone controls with a 3-way toggle. Deep, rich tone rings out from a full hollowbody with a deep cutaway for easy high-fret access.