Armistice
Son of Yoda
I was just reading through the Burns vs. Mexi Strat thread and I realised that I wasn't the only Burns owner here..
If you have also one, make yourself known... tell me your story.
I bought mine in 1983 when an intrepid music shop imported just two into the country (Australia), mine and a black Marvin - they were the same price as a Strat (US - not sure they were making them anywhere else at that stage). I really wanted a strat but this guitar was far heavier and so I took it on as a personal weightlifting challenge.... I had absolutely no idea of what I was doing, but I've always been glad I bought something that no-one else has. Still haul it out every now and then to restring it - the brass nut to brass saddle string length gives it this truly amazing sustain - not great on distorted sound, but really nice clean.
Tried to sell it a couple of years ago, and cleaned it all up and replaced the rusty screws and then decided I just couldn't do it.
To this day it's the heaviest guitar I've ever lifted.
People have since told me it's not a "real" Burns but I never really figured out why - it's got Burns written all over it... I always just thought it was the coolest guitar ever, and the only one to have a pair of horns carved in the headstock.. doesn't really look like the Bisons of today and vintage times though.
I love that guitar, it's such a part of me.
Here's it and me about 20 years ago. Neither of us has aged much since....
My Burns Bison '83
If you have also one, make yourself known... tell me your story.
I bought mine in 1983 when an intrepid music shop imported just two into the country (Australia), mine and a black Marvin - they were the same price as a Strat (US - not sure they were making them anywhere else at that stage). I really wanted a strat but this guitar was far heavier and so I took it on as a personal weightlifting challenge.... I had absolutely no idea of what I was doing, but I've always been glad I bought something that no-one else has. Still haul it out every now and then to restring it - the brass nut to brass saddle string length gives it this truly amazing sustain - not great on distorted sound, but really nice clean.
Tried to sell it a couple of years ago, and cleaned it all up and replaced the rusty screws and then decided I just couldn't do it.
To this day it's the heaviest guitar I've ever lifted.
People have since told me it's not a "real" Burns but I never really figured out why - it's got Burns written all over it... I always just thought it was the coolest guitar ever, and the only one to have a pair of horns carved in the headstock.. doesn't really look like the Bisons of today and vintage times though.
I love that guitar, it's such a part of me.
Here's it and me about 20 years ago. Neither of us has aged much since....
My Burns Bison '83
but I do love ugly guitars.

