มีใครใช้กีต้าร์ Fender Relic by vince cunetto - Printable Version +- NimitGuitar webboard (http://www.NimitGuitar.com/mybb) +-- Forum: All solid webboard (http://www.NimitGuitar.com/mybb/forumdisplay.php?fid=1) +--- Forum: Electric music (http://www.NimitGuitar.com/mybb/forumdisplay.php?fid=17) +--- Thread: มีใครใช้กีต้าร์ Fender Relic by vince cunetto (/showthread.php?tid=12109) |
มีใครใช้กีต้าร์ Fender Relic by vince cunetto - Guidejung - 21-12-2011 มีใครใช้กีต้าร์ Fender Relic โดย vince cunetto บ้างไหมครับอยากรู้ว่าจะเจ๋งเหมือน Tom Murphy ที่ทำให้ Gibson หรือเปล่า RE: มีใครใช้กีต้าร์ Fender Relic by vince cunetto - pood - 21-12-2011 อาจมีหลายคนที่ใช้อยู่แต่ไม่รู้ว่าเป็น Cunetto relic ครับ ลองอ่านเรื่องราวดู The Real Relic Story and Rumor Clarified... LONG Posted by Vince Cunetto on November 05, 1999 at 15:40:39: Since there seem to be questions out there regarding the who, what when and were of the Relics, I thought I'd do my best to try to set the story straight in a nutshell. I'd be happy to respond to any posts that come up regarding anything in here! The concept of the Relics came out of conversations between my good friend Jay Black (Custom Shop Master Builder at the time) and myself in late 1994 after I'd sent him a couple of "aged" blackguards for a friend's old Tele. Jay and I had known each other for years, so he was familiar with my work making repro Tele bodies and pickguards, as well as the "aged" Fender replicas I'd built for myself. Jay and I reasoned that if people bought distressed leather jacket, jeans and reproduction antiques, why not guitars? I sent one of my personal "relics" to Jay, who showed it to John Page. Being the bright guy he is, John saw the potential of the project and gave us permission to go ahead with building some samples to see what we'd get. I started receiving parts and painting the prototypes in my garage! By the end of December 1994 or early January '95, I'd finished a couple of prototypes that Page liked. He took a risk on this "wacky" idea and, without telling anyone, gave Jay and I approval to show them at '95 NAMM. We finished the final show prototypes in January '95 in just in time for NAMM. With a great deal of surprise to many Fender folks, The two Relic prototypes were specially presented "center stage" under custom-made glass displays. It was a blast for John, Jay and myself. We smiled more than several times when we'd hear dealers comment on "how cool it was that we included real old Fender's as a tribute" as their reps toured displays with them and wrote orders. It was even more fun when we'd see the dealer's jaws drop as the rep would reply "Cool old guitars, huh? How many would you like?" Now we had to figure out how to make them, and keep them "real" on a production basis. After a few failed attempts at Custom Shop and a serious business proposal, I convinced John that the best thing for the project would be for me to set up a company as an outside vendor to specialize in doing nothing but the Relics. This wasn't such a stretch for Custom Shop, as they were used to using vendors for special engraving, aluminum bodies, carvings and a lot of the intricate "artwork" that went into many of the Custom Shop pieces. We saw the artwork required for the Relics as being no different' On a handshake with John Page, in April of '95, I moved my family to my wife's hometown of Bolivar, Missouri, near Springfield, to set up shop under the banner of Cunetto Creative Resources, Inc., the consulting company I operated in Colorado. I found a building, set up booths and equipment and hired and trained employees. We began to receive raw bodies, necks and parts at the end of May 1995. The first shipment from the new facility, 20 Relic Nocasters, went on the truck on June 27, 1995. As a matter of course, we'd receive raw necks and bodies and all parts from Custom Shop. Our work involved complete prep, finishing and cosmetic distressing of necks and bodies. We also aged and distressed all hardware, pickguards and metal parts. We got it down to a 20 piece per week schedule, and every Friday we'd lay out the week's guitars on a large, 24-foot padded table. Every single part on the guitar was then matched for visual consistency and appearance. We'd match necks to bodies, wear on guards to wear patterns on necks, hardware to body wear and on and on. Each part of each guitar was then labeled so that they'd be sure to be assembled as a unit after being packed and sent to Corona for final assembly. Relic order numbers continued to grow, as did the number of custom and one-off orders. In May of '96, we moved the company to a larger, better-equipped facility and continued production. As efficiency and employee training improved, so did our shipping numbers. We also upped the number of customs and one-offs produced. Production continued in the new facility. Over the course of '97, as orders for the regular Relics began to stabilize and taper, we began work on a new idea for the Relics, which we dubbed "The Relic Classic". The concept was simple: a nicely "aged" guitar in good shape. We'd had requests for pieces like this in custom orders and had done a few prototypes for Custom Shop, which were well received. In late '97, the "Relic Classic" became the "Closet Classic", but Fender decided that it was a little late to get it ready for January '98 NAMM. Plans had already been made to re-tool and change the specs of the "Time Machine" Custom Shop guitars over the course of '98, and the new Relic model would be put off until later. By the latter part of '98, Custom Shop had seen a lot of changes. John Page had left to run the Fender Museum. Because of new Custom Shop management and corporate policies, it was decided that the Closet Classics would be done in-house at Custom Shop. We continued to do the majority of the "standard" Relics during '98, although there were a few done "in-house" as Custom Shop honed their "relicing" chops. By early '99, things at Custom Shop had changed quite a bit, and I had a pretty strong feeling that they'd changed enough that using an outside vendor didn't make sense for Custom Shop. In March of this year, I got a call from Mike Eldred, the new Custom Shop manager, informing me that they intended to do all Relics in-house after we finished the then-current back order. That was it, and we shipped the last "Cunetto Relics" in May of 1999. สวน Tom Murphy ผมไม่เคยเห็นฝีมือเขาครับ |