Jump to content
Heritage Owners Club

Leaderboard

Popular Content

Showing content with the highest reputation on 06/17/24 in all areas

  1. Here's an American Eagle newly for sale. Mike Hale (BigMike from the forum) sold his entire guitar and amp collection due to health issues. This American Eagle once was mine. https://reverb.com/item/82963327-heritage-american-eagle-19-1994-natural Many years ago someone who made his first post on HOC was selling this. It seemed like the listing was written by someone who didn't understand electric guitars. I contacted him, and he told me the guitar belonged to his recently deceased father. The seller plays flattops and was in his early 20s. He didn't know much about the AE. He lived in NYC. Patrick was a HOC member who had strong opinions about a lot of things and was the Heritage sales rep for part of NY and NJ. He hated the design of the AE. However he was willing to check the guitar out for me. He met the kid in a restaurant and shared a meal. He then thoroughly check out the guitar, including testing the truss rod function and examining the bracing. He called me from the restuarant to tell me the guitar desperately needs cleaning but is otherwise like new. I told him to pay the guy the money I sent Patrick. It was a deal. Patrick delivered it to me a couple weeks later in one of his routine trips to the Heritage factory. But in the meantime we talked on the phone. The wood easily cleaned up and the setup was perfect. But the gold needed more work. After about a week that was done. By the next week he told me he had the guitar out on a stand in his office all this time and now he gets why the Heritage boys made this design. He actually liked it. He loved the quilted maple. I had it for about five years or so and traded it to RhoadsScholar. Eventually it got to BigMike. Now Patrick is dead (sudden death in his sleep) and Rhoads likewise is (COVID). BigMike loved the AE and encourage me to get one that was listed on eBay, which I did. Benedetto wrote a book on the archtop years ago. It is a masterwork. In it he described the AE as a truly great archtop and described it. This was the only Heritage to make his book. I had occasion to talk with Marv Lamb, Aaron Cowles, Maudie Moore and JP Moats about the model. There are two things that stood out. First, it took more time to build one of these to make a decent wage off of. And I'm talking about hours spent, not just materials. The bracing and the plate tuning was the best they could do. They used the best wood they could find and would save it for the next build. The second thing was that the Heritage team was serious about the model. They decided to make it when the shuttle exploded and America was demoralized. Earlier we had the Iranian hostage crisis then we had the huge recession. Yes, it is kitschy to most. Maudy told me that the guitar needed something on the pickguard. Marv wanted the Challenger shuttle, and Maudie made it happen. The Liberty Bell was made in Germany and cost Heritage $500 each. The case is a vault, is heavy, and is red, white and blue. I had the AE that is now listed hanging on my wall in front of my desk for a few years. Soon I was brainwashed and appreciated the style. It is 100% old school Gibson/Heritage. It was certainly not a great marketing idea, but at the beginning they planned on only 25 guitars anyway. This is Heritage's Citation. The only one I've seen that had this much work put into it is the Centurian. The one for sale is 19. Mine is 15. Check out the listing. Below is my guitar.
    1 point
×
×
  • Create New...