Gibson ES-125

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Gibson ES-125
Manufacturer Gibson
Construction
Body type archtop electric
Woods
Fretboard rosewood
Hardware
Bridge rosewood
Pickup(s) one
Colors available
sunburst

The Gibson ES-125 is an archtop, hollow body electric guitar model that was produced by the Gibson Guitar Corporation.

Contents

[edit] Model history

Introduced in the 1941 as the successor to the ES-100, the ES-125 was an entry-level archtop electric guitar. It had with one P-90 single-coil pickup in the neck position, and a volume control and tone control. The pre-war model, discontinued in 1942, had a smaller 14.5" body. When reintroduced in 1946 it had the larger 16.25" wide body that the ES-150 had. The unbound rosewood fingerboard initially sported pearl trapezoid inlays; later, it would have dot inlays.

In the mid-1950's, the ES-125T was introduced, which was an entry-level thinline archtop electric guitar based on the original ES-125. It would later feature optional two P-90 pickups and a sharp cutaway similar to the ES-175. Both the thinline and the regular models would be discontinued by the 1970s.

[edit] Notable ES-125 players

[edit] Specifications

Gibson ES-125 P-90 1955
Gibson ES-125 P-90 1955

[edit] 1946

  • 16 1/4" wide
  • approximately 3.5" thick body
  • one non-adjustable P-90 pickup with "dog ears"
  • pickup in neck position
  • tortoise grain pickguard
  • trapeze tailpiece with raised diamonds
  • single bound top and back
  • pearloid trapezoid fingerboard inlays
  • silkscreen logo
  • sunburst finish

[edit] 1950

  • dot fingerboard inlays
  • plain tailpiece
  • P-90 pickup with adjustable poles

[edit] Models

  • ES-125T (T = Thinline)
  • ES-125TC (C = Cutaway)
  • ES-125TCD (D = Double p90 pickups) versions available starting in 1956 and 1960, respectively.

[edit] External links