The Gibson Les Paul Junior is a solid-body electric guitar introduced in 1954 as an affordable, entry-level Les Paul. It was first released with a single-cutaway body style; models with a double-cutaway body style were introduced in 1958.[3] The Junior continued through the first three years of the Les Paul/SG body redesign. The initial run was discontinued in 1963.
Gibson Les Paul Junior | |
---|---|
Manufacturer | Gibson |
Period | |
Construction | |
Body type | Solid |
Neck joint | Set |
Scale | 24.75" |
Woods | |
Body | Mahogany |
Neck | Mahogany |
Fretboard | Rosewood, Ebony |
Hardware | |
Bridge | Wraparound |
Pickup(s) | 1 P-90, 2 P-90s, 1 humbucker, 1 H-90 (Billie Joe Armstrong signature model only) |
Colors available | |
Sunburst, Ebony, TV Yellow, White, Red |
History
editThe Les Paul Junior was designed as a high-quality, affordable guitar. Gibson stripped the standard Les Paul down to the basics: no binding, no carved top, one pickup, and just one volume and tone knob.[4] The Junior was equipped with one P-90 "dog-ear" pickup at the bridge, which was actually a stop tailpiece from the standard Les Paul. It was originally released in sunburst in mid-1954.[5][3]
In 1955 Gibson launched the Les Paul TV model, which was identical to the Junior except for the name and a fashionable contemporary "limed oak" style finish, later more accurately named "limed mahogany".[4] This natural wood finish with white grain filler often aged into a natural wood or dull yellow appearance, and eventually evolved into the opaque mustard yellow, popularly called "TV yellow". The intention was not to avoid glare from old TV cameras, but to offer a modern look and a name to promote The Les Paul & Mary Ford Show then on television.[citation needed] The double-cutaway model was introduced in 1958, nearly doubling Junior sales.[3]
In the 1960s and 1970s the Les Paul Junior became very popular because of its simplicity and unique tone when played through an overdriven amplifier. The P-90 pickup and simple bridge give the guitar a distinct sound that was desired by rock and blues players of the time, including Leslie West of Mountain, Luther Grosvenor (a.k.a. Ariel Bender) of Spooky Tooth and Mott the Hoople, Johnny Thunders of The New York Dolls and The Heartbreakers, and Glenn Frey of The Eagles. A Les Paul Junior (with a Charlie Christian pickup added in the neck position) also became John Lennon's main guitar during his post-Beatles years. Martin Barre of Jethro Tull recorded the entire Aqualung album with a 1957 Les Paul Junior, including the extended guitar solo of the title track. Steve Howe used one with a different bridge on Tales from Topographic Oceans to overcome tuning problems he had with the guitar, where it was his key instrument on sides two, three, and four.[6]
It is also used by Billie Joe Armstrong from the band Green Day.
Variations
editThe Les Paul Junior was originally introduced in 1954 as a single-cutaway model, with its double-cutaway debuting in early 1958.[7] The most common color schemes were vintage sunburst, cherry red, and TV yellow. In 2012, two rare black models with tortoiseshell pickguard, from 1959 and 1960, were described in Vintage Guitar; the possibility was offered that black models were special-ordered for a specific store, or that the black finish was used to cover up blemishes in the wood.[8] In 1961, the body style of the Junior was shifted, and after conflict between Gibson and Les Paul, these models were renamed the "SG Junior".[9]
The Les Paul Junior is still offered today[as of?] in several U.S.-made versions that have been given modern touches, including a slimmer tapered neck. These have been seen in several different incarnations since the mid-1980s in both single- and double-cutaway. (see #Timeline) The Gibson Custom shop has also offered a period-correct Junior over the years through both its Historic and VOS branches. These models feature the more notorious large (or "baseball bat") neck.
Several artists have had Juniors produced in the Gibson product line, including John Lennon, Mick Jones, Peter Frampton, and the Bob Marley Les Paul Special. The Lennon model is unique for the single-coil, hexagon-shaped "Charlie Christian" pickup at the neck (which derived its name from the type installed on Christian's Gibson ES-150), a modification Lennon accepted when he had the guitar serviced upon acquiring it in the 1970s. Green Day's Billie Joe Armstrong and Gibson have released four signature Les Paul Juniors, the first is in three custom colors including Vintage Sunburst, Classic White, and Ebony, and is based on the actual '54-'57 Juniors. It also has some modern features requested by Armstrong, which include a slim tapered neck, as well as a specially designed "H-90" pickup which is said to be hum-canceling and it is overwound to handle more distortion. Armstrong's second signature model is a double-cutaway in TV Yellow which also includes an "H-90" pickup. However, according to Armstrong's guitar tech, he does not use the H-90 in his guitars. He uses a Seymour Duncan Antiquity P-90 pickup.[10] The third signature is a single-cutaway released in 2018 in cherry, ebony, and sonic blue.[11] The fourth, and as of 2023, most recent signature model is two structurally identical single-cutaway guitars; one in a "vintage ebony gloss" finish[12] and the other in a "silver mist" finish,[13] the second of which appearing in multiple music videos such as Oh Love and Stay the Night and being used in live performances throughout the 2010s and early 2020s.
The Les Paul Special has a generally similar body shape, but has a contoured top, , two P-90 pickups, and Gibson's standard four-knob, three-way switch electronics.
Ace Frehley and Gibson created a unique model of this guitar, The Gibson Les Paul Junior Lighter. It has a DiMarzio Superdistortion pickup as added by Frehley. It contained light bulbs incorporated into sequences that turned on as a marquee, but the lamps gave off too much heat and were reduced. They installed 20 cells for rechargeable ""C" batteries", new circuits, and new lamps.
Leslie West declined an offer to have a signature model of the instrument produced because he did not want a signature guitar based on an already-existing instrument, even though the Les Paul Junior was his main instrument during his heyday in Mountain.
In 2015, Gibson announced the re-release of the Gibson Les Paul Junior into their 2015 USA range.[14] They decided to release a newer version of the Gibson Les Paul Junior in 2018 with vintage specifications including a '50 neck profile.[15]
Epiphone Les Paul Junior
editEpiphone, a major guitar company purchased by Gibson in 1957, sells lower-cost Juniors which feature a bolt-on neck configuration as well as being outfitted with a single humbucking pickup rather than the traditional P-90. Epiphone has released limited edition models including the Collegiate Edition and the Epiphone Limited Edition '57 Les Paul Junior Reissue with P-100, which features a set neck, all-solid mahogany construction, and a P-100 humbucker. Epiphone Japan has also released Juniors (with the Gibson headstock) including the LPJ-70 and the Ltd edition Lacquer Series Jr (both in vintage sunburst and cherry). These Juniors were pretty much dead-on regarding the original 1954 Gibson specifications but they were manufactured for the Japanese market only and not for export.
Epiphone Invader
editEpiphone manufactured the Invader as part of a starter pack which was marketed mostly in mainland Europe. In essence, the Invader is an identical guitar to the Epiphone Junior, with a single generic humbucker and single volume and tone pots. Invaders were manufactured by the Samick organisation in Indonesia but have now been discontinued in light of the success and production of the Junior.
Invaders are strictly budget-end instruments and do tend to suffer from the not-unusual weakness of occasionally having poor tuning stability, but these instruments can still be regarded as very useful and playable instruments. They are light, versatile, and comfortable.
As with the Junior, the Invader is the Epiphone version of the Gibson Junior and can also be seen as having links with the Gibson Melody Maker.
Models
editList of "Junior" models (original and reissue).[2] For "Junior Special" models, Epiphone models, and Robot Guitar models, see Gibson Les Paul Special and #Variations, respectively.
Single cutaway
edit- 1954–1958: Les Paul Junior (Single Cutaway)
- 1956–1958: Les Paul Junior 3/4 (Single Cutaway)
- 1954–1958: Les Paul TV (Single Cutaway)
- reissues
- 1986–1992: Les Paul Junior (Single Cutaway Reissue)
- 2001–2002: Les Paul Junior (LPJ-)
- 2019–Pres: Les Paul Junior (Original Collection)
- variations
- 2008–2012: Les Paul Junior Faded (LPJ)
- 2011–2012: Les Paul Junior 2011 (Model LPJ)
- 2015: Les Paul Junior 2015 (LPJR15)
- 2018: Les Paul Junior 2018
- 2018: Les Paul Junior 2018 Billie Joe Armstrong Signature (Humbucker loaded)
- 2020: Les Paul Junior 2020 Lukas Nelson '56 Limited Edition
- 2024: Les Paul Junior 2024 Charlie Starr Limited Edition
Double cutaway
edit- 1958–1961: Les Paul Junior (Double Cutaway)
- 1958–1959: Les Paul TV (Double Cutaway)
- (1961–1963: Les Paul Junior (SG-style))
- reissues
- 1987–1989, 1995–1996:
Les Paul Junior (Double Cutaway Reissue)
- variations
- 1990–1992: Les Paul Junior Hall of Fame Series (Double Cutaway Reissue, with P-100 humbuckers)
Timeline
editSee also
edit- List of Gibson players
- Gibson Melody Maker (1959–1971) – an entry-level guitar model similar to Les Paul Junior but with thinner body
- Gibson SG Junior (1961–1971, 2011–present) – successor of Les Paul Junior with SG shape
- Gibson Spirit (1982–1986) – a guitar model similar to Les Paul Junior DC but with cutaway at 20th fret
References
edit- ^ a b c d Carter 2007, p. 139
- ^ a b "GIBSON Les Paul: Junior/TV Series", Blue Book of Electric Guitar Values, Blue Book Publications, Inc, archived from the original on April 11, 2016, retrieved March 30, 2016
- ^ a b c Carter 1994, p. 196
- ^ a b Duchossoir 1998[page needed]
- ^ Batey 2003, p. 114
- ^ Steve Howe, with Tony Bacon, photography by Miki Slingsby (1993), The Steve Howe Guitar Collection, GPI Books, p. 37, ISBN 0-87930-290-9
{{citation}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link). - ^ "Les Paul Junior Single Cutaway". Zuitar.com. Retrieved August 16, 2008.[permanent dead link ]
- ^ Meeker, Ward (February 2012). "Beauties in Black: The Emergence of Two Rare Gibson Les Paul Juniors". Vintage Guitar.
- ^ Batey 2003, p. 115
- ^ "Interview with Billie Joe Armstrong; re Signature Les Paul Junior", Gibson USA & Green Day present, Gibson Guitar Corporation, 2006, archived from the original on July 21, 2008
- ^ "Gibson Unveils New Billie Joe Armstrong Signature Les Paul Jr". reverb.com. July 23, 2018. Retrieved April 22, 2023.
- ^ "Gibson | Billie Joe Armstrong Les Paul Junior". www.gibson.com. Retrieved April 22, 2023.
- ^ "Gibson | Billie Joe Armstrong Les Paul Junior". www.gibson.com. Retrieved April 22, 2023.
- ^ Les Paul Junior 2015, Gibson Guitar Corporation, 2015[non-primary source needed]
- ^ Les Paul Junior 2018, Gibson Guitar Corporation, 2018[non-primary source needed]
Bibliography
edit- Batey, Rick (2003). The American Blues Guitar. Hal Leonard. ISBN 9780634027598.
- Carter, Walter (1994). Gibson guitars: 100 years of an American icon (1st ed.). General Pub. Group. ISBN 1881649393.
- Carter, Walter (2007). The Gibson Electric Guitar Book Seventy Years of Classic Guitars. Backbeat Books. ISBN 9780879308957.
- Duchossoir, A.R. (1998). Gibson Electrics - The Classic Years. Hal Leonard. ISBN 9781476851266.
Further reading
edit- "GIBSON Les Paul: SG Series", Blue Book of Electric Guitar Value, Blue Book Publications, Inc, retrieved April 12, 2016
— search the text "SG Les Paul" to find the SG-shaped Les Pauls.