Epiphone Casino

Epiphone Casino
Manufacturer Epiphone
Period 1961–present
Construction
Body type hollow
Neck joint Set
Scale 24.75" with 14" fretboard radius
Woods
Body maple (laminated)
Neck mahogany on most models in most periods; sometimes maple
Fretboard rosewood on most models, ebony on some
Hardware
Bridge Fixed or Bigsby
Pickup(s) 2 P-90s
Colors available
Vintage Sunburst, Cherry, Natural[1]

The Epiphone Casino is a thinline hollow body electric guitar manufactured by Epiphone, a branch of Gibson. The guitar debuted in 1961 and has been associated with such guitarists as Howlin' Wolf, George Harrison, John Lennon, Paul McCartney, Keith Richards, Dave Davies, The Edge, Dave Grohl, Joshua Homme, Daniel Kessler, and Gary Clark, Jr.[1][2]

Casinos have been manufactured in USA, Japan, Korea and China.

Construction

The Casino, also designated by Epiphone as model E230TD, is a thinline hollow-bodied guitar with two Gibson P-90 pick-ups. Although generally fitted with a trapeze-type tailpiece, often a Bigsby vibrato tailpiece is used in its place (either as a factory direct feature or as an aftermarket upgrade). Unlike semi-hollow body guitars such as the Gibson ES-335, which have a center block to promote sustain and reduce feedback, the Casino and its cousin, the Gibson ES-330 are true hollow-bodied guitars. This makes it lighter, and louder when played without an amplifier, but much more prone to feedback than semi-hollow or solid-body electrics.

Early versions of the Casino had a spruce top. Through 1970, the Casino headstock was set at a 17-degree angle and the top was made of five laminated layers of maple, birch, maple, birch, and maple.[1][3] With the exception of the John Lennon models, subsequent Casinos have been made with 14-degree headstock angle with five layer all maple laminated tops. Current versions have a laminated maple top, sides, and back, and a mahogany neck.[1]

Factory string gauge guide for casino

Per the Epiphone String Gauge Guide, the Casino comes with string gauges (from high to low): 0.010" 0.013" 0.017" 0.026" 0.036" 0.046".[4]

Use by the Beatles

Paul McCartney with an Epiphone Casino at Live8

In 1965, Paul McCartney, The Beatles' bass player, was the first Beatle to acquire a Casino[5] (a 1962 model), using it for his studio forays into guitar work, including his guitar solos on "Ticket to Ride" (1965), "Drive My Car" (1965) and "Taxman" (1966). In 1966 John Lennon and George Harrison bought 1965 Casinos,[5] which are clearly seen in photos of Japan concerts (last World Tour, 1966). John Lennon used the Epiphone Casino as his main instrument during the remainder of his time with the Beatles.[5] In 1968 when the Beatles were making the White Album, Lennon had the pick guard removed from his Casino and professionally sanded to bare wood and lightly lacquered with two thin coats of nitro-cellulose. In the early seventies, the original tuners were replaced with a set of gold Grover tuners or machine heads. His stripped guitar, (but still with the original nickel tuners), is first seen in the "Revolution" promo film. The guitar was used at The Rolling Stones Rock and Roll Circus in December 1968, the Apple rooftop concert on January 30, 1969, and the concert of Live Peace in Toronto 1969 with the Plastic Ono Band on September 13, 1969. It can also be seen in the Let It Be film, and most other pictures of Lennon playing guitar after that time. Harrison had his fitted with a Bigsby trem, removed the pickguard (it can be seen in this state in the "Hello Goodbye" and "Penny Lane" videos, and in pictures of the final Beatles show in San Francisco, 1966). He also had it sanded down in 1968.

Current Casinos

Paul Weller with an Epiphone Casino
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Epiphone Casino.

Epiphone currently builds several versions of the Casino. These include:

Notable users

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 "Epiphone Casino". Epiphone.com.
  2. "Gary Clark Jr.". GaryClarkJr.com. Retrieved 23 February 2012.
  3. Vintage Guitars Info – Epiphone model history collecting vintage guitars
  4. "Epiphone String Gauges" (PDF). Web.archive.org. Archived from the original (PDF) on September 23, 2010. Retrieved 2014-06-13.
  5. 1 2 3 "Epiphone: A History". Epiphone.com.
  6. "Epiphone Elitist Casino". Epiphone.com. Retrieved 23 February 2012.
  7. "Epiphone 1961 50th Anniversary Casino". Epiphone.com.

External links

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