1 |
Louis Allen
– Kay.
|
2 |
Elester Anderson
– Gibson Southern Jumbo (Kip Lornell’s?). |
3 |
Pink
Anderson
(p) – Harmony, Gibson B-25, J-50, Martin 0-18. |
|
4 |
Kokomo Arnold
– a National Model O strung for left-handed playing (glass
bottleneck on the pinkie). Also an unidentified standard
guitar and, reportedly, a Martin.
|
5 |
Howard “Louie Bluie” Armstrong
– Weyman banjo-mandolin, “Keystone” flat-back mandolin.
|
6 |
DeFord Bailey
– Yes, I know, a Hohner Marine Band (pref. an A or a G), but
he also played guitar (a Gibson Dove) and banjo (NorMa(?)
and Maybelle 5-strings).
|
7 |
Ballard Chefs
–
Curtis Hayes National Triolian and Carroll Smith a National
pear-shaped Polychrome tenor.
|
8 |
“Memphis Willie B.” Boerum
– Epiphone Triumph.
|
9 |
Barbecue Bob
– Stella 12-string.
|
10 |
John
Henry Barbee
– Gibson L-1, Harmony 165 flattop.
|
11 |
Jim
Baxter
(of Jim & Andrew Baxter) – Stella.
|
12 |
Ed
Bell (Barefoot Bill)
– Stella.
|
13 |
Blind Blake
– Harmony(?) concert, prob. a (wood-bodied?) resonator
guitar on 1929 sessions onward.
|
14 |
Black Ace (Babe Turner)
– National Style 2 Hawaiian, Kalamazoo KG-11.
|
15 |
Scrapper Blackwell
– National Triolian (c.1931), 1926 Gibson L-0 (thanks to
Paul Fox) and Stellas. A Kay Solo Special in the 1960s.
|
16 |
Ted
Bogan
– Martin D-35.
|
17 |
Pillie Bolling
– “A mail-order red Stella”.
|
18 |
Son
Bonds
–
Regal Concert.
|
19 |
Wee
Bea Booze (Muriel Nicholls)
– Regal Model 27½ resonator tenor guitar.
|
20 |
Ishmon Bracey
– Regal.
|
21 |
Dink
Brister
– Gibson A-1 mandolin.
|
22 |
Big
Bill (Broonzy)
(p) – c.1920 Gibson Model O, Bacon & Day Senorita, Epiphone
DeLuxe, Gibson L7. Bill played a Martin 000-28 during his
late 40s/early 50s acoustic period.
|
|
23 |
Buster Brown
– Dobro (Regal) Model 27.
|
24 |
Gabriel Brown
– Harmony, Dobro Model 45, Gibson J-35.
|
25 |
Pearly Brown
– Guild F-212 12-string.
|
26 |
Willie Brown
– Stella for the May 1930 recordings; apparently this was
the make he preferred.
|
27 |
Bumble Bee Slim
– National Model O.
|
28 |
R.L.
Burnside
– Martin D-28, Gibson LG-2, Japanese Epiphone dreadnought.
|
29 |
Charlie Burse
– National Silver Tenor Style 1, Triolian, Harmony ukulele.
|
30 |
Joe
Callicott
– Stella, Harmony Archtop and H1203 flat-top.
|
31 |
Blind James Campbell
– Kay K-24 flattop. Also the guitarist in his Nashville
Street Band played a Kay archtop with all the electrics
stripped out.
|
32 |
Gus
Cannon
– 1920s Gretsch Broadkaster and Van Eps Recording banjos.
Ashley Thompson from his Jug-Stompers played a Stella and a
1961 Gibson LG-2 in a later reunion photo.
|
33 |
Bo
Carter (p)
– National Style N (Gary Atkinson of the wonderful Document
Records has a 1930 Style N which he considers to be a
possibly Bo Carter’s guitar as shown in the earlier
(mid-30s) of the two photos that we know of. The guitar has
longer head slots than usual, no neck binding and has a
nickel-silver back with a copper front to the body, giving
it a unique tonal quality very similar to that on Bo’s
recordings of the time).
|
|
34 |
Goree Carter
– Stella (Harmony).
|
35 |
Catiron (William Carradine)
– Harmony concert size.
|
36 |
Sam
Chatmon
– Gibson L-4, Harmony Sovereign H1203.
|
37 |
Rev.
E.W.
Clayborn – Grand Concert Stella.
|
38 |
Sam
Collins
– Stella.
|
39 |
Johnny Copeland
– Ovation “Glen Campbell”.
|
40 |
Elizabeth Cotten
– Mike Seeger says “Ms. Cotton played a Stella when she was
young; then, about 1960, a mid-century Martin D-18; and
eventually, from the late 1960s onward, her favourite 00-18
Martin”. She was also pictured with 000-18, D-28 and a
Gibson J-45.
|
41 |
Ollie Crenshaw
– Stella.
|
42 |
Arthur Crudup
– Silvertone (Kay), Kay Upbeat and Gibson archtops.
|
43 |
Emma
Daniels (of “Two Gospel Keys”)
– Stella.
|
44 |
Jed
Davenport
– Stella concert 12-string, Joe McCoy’s Washburn(?), Regal
mandolin.
|
45 |
Blind Gary Davis
(p) – National Duolian then a Washburn, a Kay K-26 jumbo
(1950) and various Gibsons including J200s, B45-12s,
Hummingbirds, a Southern Jumbo, a J-50, also Bozo and Martin
12-strings and briefly, a Bozo 6-string and a huge Zemaitis.
There are photos of him with a Yamaha
dreadnaught
dreadnought
and a Martin D-28. His
first guitar was “an $18 Washburn for his 8th
birthday”. He also played the banjo, a 5-string that he was
lent and that I can’t identify, a 1930s Gibson GB-1 (c.1962)
and a 12-string Framus which was strung as a 6-string. There
is a long-necked Vega-ish instrument pictured on the “Guitar
& Banjo” CD, but I can’t tell how many strings it has
(plectrum?) The banjo featured on that record was a
6-string.
|
|
46 |
Dan
Dixon
– Martin D-28 (The Lonnie Johnson Trio).
|
47 |
K.C.
Douglas
– Harmony Sovereign H1203. |
48 |
Scott Dunbar
(p) – Kay Grand Auditorium, Gibson J45. |
|
49 |
Ford
“Snooks” Eaglin
– Harmony Archtop. |
50 |
Dave
“Honeyboy” Edwards
– Stella, Martin 00-17 (1930s), Kay Monarch (1942), Martin
D-41. |
51 |
Sleepy John Estes
– Stellas, Silvertones, Gibson LG-1 (“mid-50s”, customised),
a Lark Junior archtop in 1962, Harmonys Stella, Models 162
and Sovereign 1260, also a Yamaha dreadnought later. |
52 |
Bud
Ezell
– Bacon & Day (Regal made?). |
53 |
Blind Boy Fuller
– National Duolians (1 from 1933, 1 1938). |
54 |
Jesse Fuller
– A really huge12-string based on a Prairie State (Larson
Bros.) (from the late John Joyce, via Paul Brett), also
various Harmony 12-strings. |
55 |
Clifford Gibson
– Looks like a Regal-made grand concert with odd string
anchoring (repair?). |
56 |
James Gooch
– (of The Gospel Stars) Dobro Model 65. |
57 |
Blind Roosevelt Graves
– Large Kay archtop. |
58 |
Arvella Gray
– various National Duolians, a Model O, a Gibson J200 and a
Les Paul (yeah, really). |
59 |
Guitar Shorty (John Henry Fortascue)
– Kay K-22 flat top with custom floral decoration, Kay
archtop, “steel” National (from Danny McLean).
|
60 |
Clarence Green
– “My first guitar cost $12. It was a Stella”. |
61 |
Buddy Guy
– Kay Archtop for “Muddy Waters – Folk Singer” session, also
a Kay Jumbo, possibly a Solo Special.
|
62 |
“Hacksaw” Harney
– Gibson J-200.
|
63 |
Buddy Boy Hawkins
– Washburn grand concert.
|
64 |
John
Lee Hooker
– Kay Jumbo.
|
65 |
Sam
“Lightnin’” Hopkins
– Kay K-24 Jumbo, Harmony 165 Grand Concert, Gibson J-45s,
J-50 and J-160E, also a Washburn and a Framus.
|
66 |
Son
House
– National Duolian, Triolian or Model O. He favoured Stellas
early on and said that he used one for the 1930 recording
session; there is a 1960s photo of him holding one, but it
was on loan; there is also a late picture of him holding an
early 20s Gibson L-1.
|
67 |
Peg
Leg Howell
– Stellas (there is a 1963 picture of him with a nylon
strung guitar). Henry Williams, a member of his “Gang” also
played a Stella.
|
68 |
Howling Wolf
– Kay Archtop, Guild G-212 12-string, Harmony Sovereign
H1203.
|
69 |
Mississippi John Hurt
(p) – The guitar he used on the 1928 sessions was provided
by the studio, his personal guitar (“Black Annie”, of
unknown provenance) was not considered good enough quality.
A Stella (Harmony era) in the 1950s, a Gibson J-45
(customised & refinished) and an Emory belonging to Tom
Hoskins, Gibson/Harmony/homemade 12-string belonging to
Peter Silitch, Guild F-30 NT, a Gretsch resophonic (pic.),
Harmony Sovereign H1260, 1930 Martin OM-45 (from Stefan
Grossman), a custom guitar by Jim Snow and another
auditorium-sized by Jack Alderson. This list was culled, in
the main, from Philip R. Ratcliffe’s excellent book on Hurt,
with input from Stella expert Neil Harpe.
|
|
70 |
James “Bo Weavil” Jackson
– Gibson L-1.
|
71 |
Papa
Charlie Jackson
– Possibly a Euphonon guitar banjo in 1925/6 pic. (I once
played one dating from 1914ish that had the same type of
tailpiece), a Gibson GB Banjo in the 1927 photo &,
reportedly, a Gibson guitar, possibly an early L-4.
|
72 |
Jim
Jackson
– Stella 12-string and Concert.
|
73 |
John
Jackson
– Early 1950s Gibson J-50, 90s L-00 reissue.
|
74 |
Lulu
Jackson
– Stella.
|
75 |
Melvin “Lil’ Son” Jackson
– Harmony Sovereign H1260.
|
76 |
Elmore James
– Kay Western Rhythm dreadnought with added electrics
(specifically DeArmond Rhythm Chief Model 1000, the actual
pickup he uses on most/all of his recordings, mounted on the
guitar top between bridge and soundhole, with the DeArmond
vol./tone control box hanging down from the bridge. He also
experimented with pickups attached over the soundhole. a
DeArmond soundhole pickup is present on the November 1959
pictures, not there in 1957 pictures and gone by December
1959 pictures. The Rhythm Chief pickup is present in ALL
photos !!). He apparently also used a National Princess.
Thanks to the Elmore Oracle “Snakehips” O’Donnell for all
that; you can see photos of Richie’s amazing Elmore
collection on
http://s51.photobucket.com/user/snakehips82/library/My%20Elmore%20Kay.
|
77 |
Homesick James
– Stella.
|
78 |
Skip
James
– Gibson J-185, J-45, Martin D-18, D-28 in the sixties. The
guitar used in the 1931 session is now generally accepted to
have been a Stella 12-string strung as a six-string.
|
79 |
Blind Lemon Jefferson
(p?) – Stella (and reportedly an Oahu – see pic.).
|
|
80 |
Alfred “Snuff” Johnson
– Martin D-28, Gibson LG-0, Gurian (prob. borrowed).
|
81 |
Henry Johnson
– National Model O 14 fret “chicken-feet”, Gibson J-45.
|
82 |
Herman E. Johnson
– Stella 928.
|
83 |
Lonnie Johnson
– Martin 00-21, 1942 Gibson J-100, An Epiphone archtop with
a DeArmond clip-on pickup, a custom-made Mexican 12-string
which he occasionally played with single strings in the two
high string positions rather than doubles.
|
84 |
Mager Johnson
– Guild F-30 (poss. borrowed).
|
85 |
Robert Johnson
– 1928 Gibson L-1, Kalamazoo KG-14 (Johnny Shines referred
to Johnson’s last guitar as a “big old Kalamazoo”, but he
also said that R.J. had a Kalamazoo archtop that he
favoured). He was also reputed to have played Stellas and a
brass National with the high E string doubled for extra
volume.
|
86 |
Tommy Johnson
– a Stella, a Washburn, a Martin and a Gibson; also “many
cheap guitars” (c.f. the excellent “Tommy Johnson” – David
Evans 1971).
|
87 |
Blind Willie Johnson
– a concert-sized Stella in the photo (poss. taken 1927),
but Pillie Bolling borrowed his Washburn in Atlanta 1930.
|
88 |
Dennis “Little Hat” Jones
– Harmony Archtop (from c.1950).
|
89 |
McKinney Jones
– Harmony Sonata Superior archtop with added pickup.
|
90 |
Moody Jones
– Martin 00-28. |
91 |
Charlie Jordan
(p) – I don’t know what this guitar is (the one with all the
pearl dots) so we’ll call it a “Stella”. |
|
92 |
Luke
Jordan
– a Gibson.
|
93 |
Junior Kimbrough
– Yamaha dreadnought.
|
94 |
B.B.
King
– there is a very early photo of him with a well-worn
acoustic guitar of strange appearance, possibly with a
resonator. Does anybody know what this machine was? Also “a
red Stella”, a Gibson L-30 with added electrics (The
Original “Lucille” was one of these) and a J-45.
|
95 |
Freddie King
– Silvertone “Roy Rogers” acoustic (first guitar).
|
96 |
Eddie Kirkland
– National (Pete Lowry).
|
97 |
Charlie Kyle
– Stella Grand Concert 12-string.
|
98 |
Clyde Langford
– Gurian Auditorium, “Honda 500”.
|
99 |
Leadbelly
– Stella 12-strings, one Grand Auditorium (an emergency buy
for him by John Lomax in 1935 - the one on the films and
most of the photos), also a Martin 000-18 in 1949.
|
100 |
J.B.
Lenoir
– Michigan archtop (Hoyer-made?), Gibson LG-0.
|
101 |
Furry Lewis
– Stella concert, Martin 0-18 in the early ‘60s, an Epiphone
Texan and a Gibson B-25N in the late 1960s.
|
102 |
Charlie Lincoln
– Stella concert-size 12-string.
|
103 |
Mance Lipscombe
– Harmony Sovereign H1203, Gibson J-200 and J50 (prob.
borrowed).
|
104 |
Robert Jr. Lockwood
– “$3.98 Gene Autry model from Montgomery Ward”, Gibson L-0,
Dobro “Hula Blues”, Guild 12-string.
|
105 |
Willie “Poor Boy” Lofton
–
National Model O.
|
106 |
Joe
Hill Louis
– Kay archtop.
|
107 |
Barbara Lynn
– “My first guitar was an Arthur Murray ukulele”.
|
108 |
Carl
Martin
– Stella.
|
109 |
Maxwell Street Jimmie
– Harmony archtop, Martin 00-28, Gibson L50, Silvertone Kay
archtop, Martin-copy dreadnought.
|
110 |
Lil
McClintock
(p) – Stella concert in the photo, but I think that he plays
a 12-string on the recordings.
|
|
111 |
Charlie McCoy
– Washburn (Regal) mandolin (model 5281?).
|
112 |
Ethel McCoy
– National Duolian 1933/34 12-fret.
|
113 |
George McCoy
– Gibson J200.
|
114 |
Kansas Joe McCoy
(p) – Washburn, Harmony, National Style 3 Tricone, National
Electric Spanish.
|
|
115 |
Mississippi Fred McDowell
– Washburn DeLuxe, Martin D28, Harmony Cremona, Hofner
Congress, Guild F-30 (prob. borrowed from John Hurt).
|
116 |
Brownie McGhee
– The Martin D-18 is what he’s famous for, but, before that,
he played “an f-hole S.S. Stewart” (possibly made by
Gibson), a 14-fret National Duolian, 1938 Gibson J35 (later
customised with, to the eye, extended f/board & modified
bridge), a Martin D-28, a Harmony archtop and a Gibson
J-200. He preferred Black Diamond strings with an unwound 3rd
and used steel National fingerpicks (2) and a plastic
thumbpick.
|
117 |
“Stick” McGhee
– National Trojan (1935?), Kalamazoo KG-31(?), Epiphone
Spartan with added DeArmond.
|
118 |
Fred
McMullen
– Stella Auditorium, Martin OM-28 c.1930.
|
119 |
Blind Willie McTell
– various huge Stella, Regal & Harmony 12-strings.
|
120 |
Memphis Jug Band
–– Robert Carter – Gibson L30; “Unidentified Member”
(Charlie Burse?) – National Triolian; Will Shade – Stella,
Gibson SJN, 1933 National Duolian.
|
121 |
Memphis Minnie
– Stella, Harmony, National Tricone (Joe McCoy kitted them
both out with identical Nationals in c.1929), 1938 National
New Yorker Electric Spanish (1940 pics.), early 1950s
National Aristocrat with non-standard quadrant fret markers
(c. 1953 – thanks to Mark Makins), Harmony.
|
122 |
Memphis Slim
– National Electric Spanish archtop (perhaps just minding it
for a friend?).
|
123 |
Lottie Merle
– “An old Stella”.
|
124 |
Flora Molton
– Stella, Del Vecchio, “some was Gibson …… some was named
Stellas”.
|
125 |
George “Daddy Hot Cakes” Montgomery
– Kay archtop.
|
126 |
Willie Moore
(Kinston N.C., not the barber) – Kay archtop.
|
127 |
Buddy Moss
– pre-1933 National Duolian, Gibson L-00, Kay Kraft Style C
(poss. Curley Weaver’s).
|
128 |
Charlie “Dad” Nelson
– Stella 12-string.
|
129 |
Robert Nighthawk
(p) – Stellas.
|
|
130 |
Hammie Nixon
– 1933 National Triolian.
|
131 |
Jack
Owens
– Silvertone (Harmony) 12 string strung as a 6, Martin
000-18, Guild F-30 (poss. not his own).
|
132 |
Charlie Patton
– Stromberg-Voisinet Concert in the photo; he reportedly
used a “brown Stella with lots of fancy pearl and stuff” for
some time. Patton was also said to have used “a Gibson with
a Black Top” around the time of his last session; the guitar
lasted well because of its robust construction, although he
apparently preferred Stellas for bass and volume. It is also
said that he played and destroyed the odd Washburn.
|
133 |
Ike
Perkins
(Albert Ammons Rhythm Kings) – Gibson L-5; in 1936 he was
photographed holding an early Rickenbacker Frying Pan (prob.
A-25), complete with correct amplifier (these guitars had a
round neck, so could be played either as Hawaiian or
Spanish). The way he held the guitar suggests that he played
it in conventional “Spanish” mode, possibly even while
standing.
|
134 |
Robert Petway
– c.1931 Sears (National) Duolian.
|
135 |
Washington Phillips
– a complex double zither of his own devising.
|
136 |
Eugene Powell
– Silvertone (Harmony) auditorium-sized flat-top.
|
137 |
Doug
Quattlebaum
– National Duolian (mid-30s).
|
138 |
Herb
Quinn
– Martin A style mandolin with optional shaded top.
|
139 |
Yank Rachell (p) –
Gibson A-1, F-5s, Flatiron F-5, Harmony mandolins with the
bottom strings octave tuned; he also tended to tune the
whole instrument down about 1½ tones. Gibson J-200 guitar.
|
|
140 |
Charlie Rambo
(Star Band 1933) – Dobro Mod 66B with custom decoration on
top.
|
141 |
Moochie Reeves
– Kay-Kraft.
|
142 |
Leslie Riddle
– Stromberg-Voisinet mandolin.
|
143 |
Frank Robinson
– Gibson B-25, Stella.
|
144 |
Jimmy Rogers
– Silvertone (Kay) acoustic archtop
|
145 |
Dr.
Isiah Ross
– 1960 Gibson SJN, Harmony Cremona.
|
146 |
Bobbie Rush
– Gibson Hummingbird.
|
147 |
John
T. Samples Sr.
– Fender dreadnought (1993).
|
148 |
Dan
Sane
– Harmony concert (Beale Street Sheiks).
|
149 |
Tom
Shaw
– “$8 Stella”, Gibson J45.
|
150 |
Bud
Scott
– Martin 0-21 with Papa Mutt Carey.
|
151 |
Johnny Shines
– Stella, “a little black Regal”, Kalamazoo archtop (at
least two of these, one with a Dearmond pickup c1942),
Gibson B-25 (his favourite), J-45, J200, National Duolian
(c.1932) and an Alvarez dreadnought.
|
152 |
J.D.
“Jelly-Jaw” Short
(p) – Stella, Regal (Dobro) Model 37 spanish with the
resonator cover removed and the hole filled in with wood
(also with a wonderful custom harp-rack clamped to the top
bout). The photo showing this guitar was taken in 1962 when
he was recorded by Sam Charters and the guitar he used
sounds like a Dobro with its resonator intact.
|
|
153 |
Frankie Lee Sims
– Gibson J-50.
|
154 |
Robert Curtis Smith
– Harmony Sovereign H1203.
|
155 |
Smoky Babe (Robert Brown)
– Stella 922 12-string customised as a 6-string with the
tailpiece removed and the floating bridge replaced with a
fixed, string-retainer type.
|
156 |
Spark Plug Smith
– Martin 2-17.
|
157 |
Joseph Spence
– a large Kay archtop in 1958, a 1949 Martin 00-18 by 1977,
also a Dobro (Regal made) No.35.
|
158 |
Roebuck “Pop” Staples
– Kay K-44 Archtop.
|
159 |
Frank Stokes
– Harmony concert, Martin 00-28.
|
160 |
Jewell “Babe” Stovall
– National Model O and Triolian (Silvertone badged says
Chester P.) both c.1932, Stella, Kalamazoo Oriole mandolin.
|
161 |
Daddy Stovepipe (Johnny Watson)
(p)
– In 1924, a 9-string guitar with doubled-up treble strings
and single basses. Neil Harpe identifies this as a
Grunewald, c.1905, made in New Orleans, Harmony archtop (Conondo?).
|
|
162 |
Stovepipe No. 1
– Stella (I’ve no idea what make the stovepipe was).
|
163 |
Roosevelt Sykes
– Gibson J-50 (you’d better believe it!).
|
164 |
Tampa Red
(p) – 1928 National Style 4 with custom engraving (sadly
nickel plated, not gold), now on its third neck at least.
Custom National Electric Archtop c.1938.
|
|
165 |
Steve Tarter
– Stromberg Voisinet mandolin. Harry Gay played a Washburn
concert.
|
166 |
Baby
Tate
– Gibson Southern Jumbo, Leader jumbo.
|
167 |
Sister O.M. Terrell
– National Triolian flat f-hole model with a plated
cover-plate.
|
168 |
Sister Rosetta Tharpe
(p) – National Triolian, Gibson L-5.
|
|
169 |
Henry “Ragtime Texas” Thomas
– Lyon & Healey concert.
|
170 |
Rambling Thomas
– Washburn, his first guitar was from Sears.
|
171 |
James “Son” Thomas
– Wolfram Triumph with an aluminium clad fretboard, Martin
D-28.
|
172 |
Willie Thomas
(w. Butch Cage) - Harmony Sovereign 1203, Gibson J-50 (prob.
borrowed from Chris Strachwitz).
|
173 |
Buford Threlkeld
(Whistler’s Jug Band) – Stella.
|
174 |
James Tisdom
– Grand concert sized Kay.
|
175 |
Henry Townsend
– Stella, also a Thorn or Thornton which he says was the
best ever (prob. a Thornward by Lyon & Healy – thanks Todd).
Later, Henry was filmed using a c.1937 National Model O.
|
176 |
Willie Trice
– a “fine steel National” and a Regal (Recording King?)
concert.
|
177 |
Walter Vinson
(aka Vincson, Vincent, Jacobs) – National Style 1 Tricone.
|
178 |
Aaron Washington
– Harmony Archtop.
|
179 |
Muddy Waters
(p) – Stella, followed by “a beautiful Sears-Roebuck box”, a
borrowed Martin for the L. C. session, a National Trojan
(maybe a Sears model?) in 1943 John Work photo, Harmony
Archtop, Gibson Southern Jumbo and the “dunno” in the
picture (for “Folk Singer”).
|
|
180 |
Curley Weaver
– Kay Kraft style C.
|
181 |
Sylvester Weaver
– Stella, Washburn Auditorium-size.
|
182 |
Peetie Wheatstraw
– National Style 3 Tricone (possibly belonging to Joe
McCoy).
|
183 |
Bill
Weldon
– Stella (1927). If you believe that the early picture is of
Casey Bill Weldon, then you should know that the
guitar that he favoured on the 1935 onward recordings
was, almost certainly, a National Tricone squareneck. There
is a poor quality photograph of him with an electric lap
steel which I can’t identify; the photo is dated 1941, but
he “went electric” before Dec. 1938 – his last recording
session.
|
184 |
Booker T “Bukka” White
(p) – National Duolians & Triolians after his first Stella;
he swapped a Gibson “in bad shape” for his first National.
He also used a very rare 1938 National “Exploding Palmtree”
squareneck Tricone, with the nut cut down for use with
fingers, on the Takoma Sessions and was filmed playing a
Gibson J45 and Furry Lewis’s B25N.
|
|
185 |
Josh
White
– Kay Kraft (as Curley Weaver & Buddy Moss), Martin 00-21,
00-42, with custom scratch-plates applied when he wore the
tops. Custom Guild (1965) and Ovation (1967) “Josh White”
models.
|
186 |
Mott
Willis
– Guild F-30 (prob. on loan).
|
187 |
Rev.
Robert Wilkins
– Gibson J-45, Martin D-28, Stefan Grossman’s OM-45.
|
188 |
Bill
Williams
– Gibson L-1 c.1931.
|
189 |
Blind Connie Williams
– National Duolians, both 12 and 14-fret.
|
190 |
Poor
(Big) Joe Williams
(p) – Gibson L-1, Stella 12-string, then all sorts of
Harmonys, Gibsons, Kays, Silvertones, etc. butchered in an
infinite variety of fascinating fashions.
|
|
191 |
K.M.
Williams
– Dobro copy.
|
192 |
Robert Pete Williams
– Harmony Stella Grand Auditorium 12-string sometimes strung
as 6-string, a Regal, Harmony archtops, Harmony Sovereign
H1260 & H1203, Martin 000-45.
|
193 |
Hosea Woods
– Stella.
|
194 |
Johnny Young
– Martin 00-21; Gibson A-40 (with added pickup) and Wilson
flat-top electric mandolins.
|