Dani Pace said:
Is it just me or has the quality of import guitars suddenly improved? I grew up in an era when if a guitar didn't have Gibson or Fender on the headstock then it probably wasn't worth buying.
That was because of two reasons....
1: Anti-Japan (and foreign-made) bias from guitar players and the music stores who sold them. Music stores made bigger profits on American made guitars from the 60's thru the 90's, so it's obvious they would push for sales of American made guitars.
2: Most players were introduced to Japanese guitars from the cheap crap they got for Christmas from mom and dad. Teisco, Kingston, Silvertone, Kay, etc, were all cheap guitars that lacked solid wood construction, had cheapo pickups (and hardware), and had no neck or bridge adjustments.
But there were some GREAT guitars coming out of Japan in the 70's if you knew what to buy. Two Japanese factories (Matsumoku and Hoshino) put out some KILLER guitars that were awesome in build quality, playability, and were better all-around guitars than the guitars being built by Norlin-Gibson and post-CBS Fender.
Yes, that's correct... the Japs made a better guitar from the mid 70's to early 80's. Many guitars from the Matsumoku factory (under the names Aria, Westbury, Electra, Daion, Skylark, and Westone, to name few) had better build quality than the crap that Norlin-Gibson was making at that time. Hoshino also made killer guitars. Remember those old Ibanez Les Pauls from the mid to late 70's? They were absolutely phenomenal!! Same goes for the "house brands" made by Hoshino, like Penco guitars and Greco. These were the infamous "Lawsuit Guitars" that people talk about. Guitars that were so good, it forced the American companies to re-group, re-tool and make a better product. That's why these old Jap-made guitars are now becoming collectable and are steadily increasing in value.
I have a '73 Aria SG copy that simply blows away any Gibson SG I've ever played, and I've played a lot of them in my 30 years of guitar playing. I also have a '79 Westbury Standard that nails the tone and playability of a vintage Les Paul. I bought both of these guitars in near-mint condition (with hard case) for $250 each within the past 18 months. I could EASILY get about $600 for each one if I decided to sell them, but they're such great players that I'll probably hold on to them and pass them on to my kids. Seriously... they're THAT GOOD!!!
So, let's not generalize and cast off the old Jap-made guitars as "junk." They made some great guitars back in the day... IF you know what to look for.
