Gibson Teams Up with Lzzy Hale for New Signature Explorerbird Guitar

Lzzy Hale

Gibson has partnered with Halestorm singer, songwriter, and electric guitar player Lzzy Hale to create a unique new signature model, the Explorerbird.

The premise of the model is fairly simple, but a first for Gibson nonetheless: a mahogany Explorer body and mahogany Explorer neck, fitted with the headstock of a Firebird. That mahogany neck sports a 12″ radius, 24.75″ Indian rosewood fretboard with 22 gold medium jumbo frets, accompanied – in a swanky touch – by gold acrylic dot inlays.

Sounds come by way of a pair of 70s Tribute humbuckers with gold screws and rods, at the mercy of the standard Explorer control layout of two volume knobs, a master tone knob, and a three-way pickup switch.

Aside from the inlays, frets, and pickup screws and rods, there’s plenty of gold to go around elsewhere on the Explorerbird. The Tune-O-Matic bridge with Stop Bar tailpiece, Grover Mini Rotomatic tuners, and even strap buttons are all also given a nice gold finish. 

Aside from the inlays, frets, and pickup screws and rods, there’s plenty of gold to go around elsewhere on the Explorerbird. The Tune-O-Matic bridge with Stop Bar tailpiece, Grover Mini Rotomatic tuners, and even strap buttons are all also given a nice gold finish. 

In another signature touch, the guitar’s non-reverse Firebird truss rod cover also sports Hale’s signature.

“As synonymous as lipstick and leather, the Explorerbird brings two iconic worlds together,” Hale said of her new signature model in a statement. “This guitar is a statement and celebration of owning what makes you stand out. Because no one has ever made history by playing it safe.”

The new Lzzy Hale Explorerbid is the result of two years of testing with Lzzy at the Gibson Lab, and on stage with Halestorm,” added Gibson Brand President Cesar Gueikian. “We started with the idea of merging her favorite shape, the Explorer, with the iconic Gibson Firebird, and the result is this new guitar, in Cardinal Red. It sounds as epic as it looks!

The Gibson Lzzy Hale Signature Explorerbird guitar is available now – in a Cardinal Red finish and with a Modern Series hardshell case included – for $2,799.

The 1963 Gibson Explorer from the ’50s

Beginning life in ’58, this ultra-rare solidbody finally left the factory some five years later

This is a 1958/1963 Gibson Explorer. I’ve just come on the heels of delivering Big Ed [a 1958 Gibson Explorer] to Gibson. I delivered it by hand. [Edison] ‘Big Ed’ Thompson was a well-known blues guitarist. In 1958, he and his brother acquired matching guitars – Ed got an Explorer and his brother got a left-handed Flying V, which is one of a kind

I have it here at Well Strung Guitars. When Big Ed died [in 1993], Rick Vito from Fleetwood Mac bought both guitars and kept them together. They went from Rick Vito to a guy I know, and I bought them as a pair about four and a half years ago. They’ve always stayed together, and I had a deal in place to sell them to a client who wound up only being able to take the V.

Meanwhile, Gibson was waiting in the wings, and they bought the Big Ed Explorer. They flew me out last week to deliver the guitar by hand. It was next to me in a seat all the way there.

Gibson’s late-50s ‘modernistic’ electric guitars comprised the Futura, the Flying V and the Moderne. But the Moderne never made its way out to the public; at least I have no reason to believe one exists. 

Gibson released the Explorer and Flying V models in ’58, but they had trouble selling them and so they were abandoned by the following year. Later on, they started assembling what they had left just to get rid of them.

They made 19 Explorers in ’58 and a few in ’59. Then in ’63 there were less than a couple dozen more put together, mostly with ’58 serial numbers. Gibson don’t have concrete records of these early ’60s Explorers, but it appears they made 22.

 Flying V was formally reintroduced in the late ’60s, but the Explorer didn’t reappear until the mid-’70s.

The biggest differences between the original run of late ’50s and these early ’60s Explorers are that most of the later guitars no longer have gold-plated hardware. And they did away with the six separate tuners in place of specially made six-on-a-strip tuners that don’t fit any other guitar.

This guitar sounds absolutely amazing when it’s plugged in. To me, an Explorer doesn’t sound like any other guitar. They don’t sound like Les Pauls. It’s somewhat like a Flying V, but it has more bottom-end. They’re thick- and chunky-sounding. I think that’s why a lot of metal players love them. Sure, they look funky, but they also sound deep and rich.

The History of Gibson’s Iconic Flying V Guitar

Fender didn’t design the innovative-looking Gibson Flying V solidbody electric guitar, but the company deserves credit for inspiring its creation. In the mid Fifties, Fender introduced the Stratocaster, whose then-futuristic design made Gibson’s guitars look rather staid.

Consequently, Gibson’s sales began to suffer.

In 1957, Gibson president Ted McCarty decided that Gibson needed to restore its image as an innovator and industry leader. 

In typical McCarty “take no prisoners” fashion, he made a series of bold moves that resulted in the development of several of the most desirable and valuable electric guitar models of all time, including the sunburst Les Paul Standard, ES-335, Explorer and Flying V, all of which made their debut in 1958.

The Flying V was one of several “modernistic” models that Gibson developed during that period. Sometime in 1956, McCarty hired artists outside of the company to come up with guitar designs with futuristic appeal. 

“I told them what I wanted and asked them to make me some sketches,” McCarty told Andre Duchossoir. “We chose the ones we liked, and then we called in [guitar foreman] Larry Allers and John Huis and asked if they could make them. You can design anything on paper, but building and producing it is a different matter.”

Only a handful of the submitted designs made it to the prototype stage. Allegedly, mockups were built and three final models were chosen from those contenders.

Gibson filed patent applications for those three guitar body designs in June 1957, with the patents eventually being granted in January 1958. This was an unusual strategy, as previously Gibson had filed patents only for engineering inventions and not cosmetic designs.

Although model names were not submitted with the patent applications, the guitars became unofficially known as the Futura, Moderne and Flying V. 

Of these three submitted designs, only the Flying V’s shape remained unaltered through the production stage. The Futura’s body and headstock were modified to that of the Explorer, and the Moderne never went into production.

Early prototypes of the Flying V and Futura/Explorer that were built for trade shows had mahogany bodies, but before the models went into production Gibson switched to African limba wood, better known as korina.

In addition to being lighter than mahogany, korina’s pale-blond color was more in step with the prevalent aesthetic of the late Fifties.

“No one else had a korina guitar,” Gibson wood expert Wilbur Marker told Duchossoir. “That was the novelty of the thing. It was very pretty. In essence, that is the reason why we went with korina.”

When Gibson displayed the Flying V and Explorer prototypes at trade shows in 1957, they certainly generated the desired reaction from dealers. But while Gibson re-established its reputation for innovation with the guitars, that did not translate into sales. 

Most dealers thought that the models were a little too far out and space age, and those that did order them purchased only one instrument, which was generally used as a window display to attract attention. 

Orders for the Flying V far outnumbered those for the Explorer, and Gibson decided to manufacture three batches (with each batch numbering 40 guitars) of Flying Vs and one batch of Explorers.

Gibson shipping records show that only 81 Flying V guitars shipped in 1958 and 17 shipped in 1959. In early 1959, the Flying V was phased out of production. Leftover parts for unfinished guitars from the initial batch order sat dormant in the Gibson factory until the early Sixties, when about 20 more Flying V guitars were completed.

The hardware on these early Sixties models differs from the 1958–’59 models in several ways. They have hardware plated with nickel rather than gold, metal cap knobs instead of bonnet knobs, patent-number humbuckers rather than PAFs and a Tune-o-matic bridge with an early Sixties-style retaining wire.

Although very few Flying Vs were in circulation during the late Fifties, a few did manage to catch the eyes of performers like Lonnie Mack and Albert King, who immediately adopted the Flying V as their signature guitars. Mack added a Bigsby vibrato to his V, which he used to record “Wham.” 

As a left-handed guitarist, King was attracted to the V’s symmetrical shape, which accommodated his unorthodox style of keeping the guitar strung for a right-handed player and flipping the instrument over.

The Kinks’ Dave Davies was another early adopter, although his use of the Flying V started much later, in 1965. According to Davies, the airlines lost his only guitar when he came to America on tour that year, so he stopped into a shop to get a replacement. 

When he failed to find a guitar that he liked on the racks, the owner pulled from storage a dusty case that contained an original Fifties V. He sold Davies the V for only $60. 

Davies’ Flying V became an iconic image of the British Invasion after he made several television appearances with it and was shown with the guitar on the cover of The Kinks’ Greatest Hits! in 1966.

Demand for the rare and elusive Flying V suddenly increased due to its new exposure, which motivated Gibson to issue a new Flying V model in 1966.

This second version of the V had a mahogany body and neck, a larger pickguard, a modified headstock shape, a triangular control knob configuration and a traditional stop tailpiece or Gibson Vibrola instead of the V-shaped string-through-body tailpiece. 

However, the new version was only marginally more successful than its predecessor. Just 111 of the guitars shipped in 1966, and the shipments decreased each year afterward, until the guitar was discontinued in 1970.

Jimi Hendrix was the most notable guitarist to adopt this second version of the V. In 1969, Gibson built a one-of-a-kind custom left-handed Flying V for him, featuring gold-plated hardware, a pearl Gibson logo headstock inlay and Trini Lopez–style split-diamond fretboard inlays. 

Hendrix famously used his custom V to perform several songs at the 1970 Isle of Wight Festival. Keith Richards also caught many guitarists’ attention when he played a late-Fifties V at the Rolling Stones’ Hyde Park concert on July 5, 1969

In 1971, Gibson produced the limited-edition Flying V Medallion model, which was essentially identical to the 1966 version, with the exception of its shorter peg head. The company produced only 350 Medallion Vs. 

The Flying V returned to regular production for a third time in 1975 with a version similar to the 1966 V, and since then some variation of the Flying V has remained a regular production model of the Gibson electric solidbody guitar line.

Demand for the Flying V reached critical mass in the Seventies as hard-rock and metal guitarists fell for its aggressive styling. Performing with UFO, Michael Schenker played a white 1975 Gibson Flying V, which he later decorated with a distinctive black-and-white “negative” mirror-image motif. 

He got the guitar from his brother Rudolf of the Scorpions, who started collecting Flying Vs during the Seventies and today owns more than 100. Flying V players from the U.K. during this period included Mark Bolan of T. Rex, Uriah Heep’s Mick Box, Wishbone Ash’s Andy Powell, Bad Company’s Mick Ralphs and Chris Spedding.

In the United States, the V found its way into the hands of guitarists like Billy Gibbons, Rick Nielsen, Joe Perry and Paul Stanley.

Metallica’s Kirk Hammett and James Hetfield helped further the Flying Vs reputation as an iconic metal guitar during the Eighties, but the V has also remained a favorite of rockers like Lenny Kravitz, Grace Potter and Eddie Van Halen, who used his Fifties V to record several songs on 1984, including “Hot for Teacher.” 

Today, the Flying V can be seen in the hands of players representing almost every genre of popular music, from country to punk and Detroit blues to death metal. 

The guitar’s modernistic design was truly ahead of its time, but now that guitarists’ tastes have caught up to it, the V has become a timeless classic that, today, is considered one of the most successful and desirable guitar designs of all time.

Gibson reveils new Tony Iommi SG

Gibson has teamed up with legendary Black Sabbath guitarist Tony Iommi to create theTony Iommi “Monkey” SG. The guitar’s handmade pickups were wound by an apprentice of late pickup master John Birch. The Iommi “Monkey” SG features an exclusive replica of the Sabbath guitarist’s silver cross necklace with a coffin case, a replica of Iommi’s leather touring guitar strap and a ’60s replica case. The price of the Gibson Tony Iommi “Monkey” SG – which will be produced in a run of 50 instruments, 25 left-handed and 25 right-handed – has not yet been revealed. 

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