0:39

well hello friends and welcome to ask Zack today we're going to talk about how I ended up with uh really a total dream


0:48

guitar for me this is a 8s Glazer Bender


0:53

guitar that was taken from parts that were up in Joe Glazer's shop attic and


1:01

then my buddy Brad Paisley uh finished them out uh and then


1:07

the guys at the shop uh put you know Frets on it and stuff and and a bender and got some Seymour Duncan pickups and


1:16

Music City Bridge on here and it turned into just an amazing guitar and again A


1:21

A Dream guitar for me cuz I uh you know of course grew up in the 19 you know started playing guitar in the 1980s and


1:28

got into country music and of course loved Ricky skags and Steve Warner and


1:34

you know Jeff King and Jimmy olander and all those cats that were playing Glazer Bender guitars and I thought they were


1:40

the coolest thing ever so today just going to tell the story of uh of you


1:46

know how I got obsessed with these things and then how I ended up with the guitar going to you know go through the


1:52

all the sounds it has you know all the sounds it can make cuz it's got you know it's got like a five-way switch a a


1:58

tapped pickup up it's got a push pull to get the outside you know it's got all sorts of stuff it's got a blend control


2:04

for the middle so I'm going to show how all that works it's got a bender uh yeah so I'm going to tell all


2:11

about this guitar and uh we'll just have some fun before we before we begin begin I


2:18

should just say uh thank you to all my patreon members and everyone that has supported the Channel Through The Years


2:24

thank you so much there's uh tip jar information there's merch you know t-shirts uh coffee mugs also uh yeah and


2:33

I just appreciate it so thank you all right let's dive in so I really got into country music


2:41

through Albert Lee and through his playing on an Eric Clapton record called just one night and through the miracle


2:49

of the great Guitar Player magazine uh I would buy them buy the the huge I'd buy


2:55

them by by the stack loads I would uh I would get them there was a half price books U you know kind of book and record


3:03

shop in Corpus Christie Texas and I would go there and they had used guitar


3:08

player magazines and I would buy them they were 25 cents each and however much money I had I would buy as many as


3:15

possible and maybe buy a record or two also and uh found out that Albert Lee


3:23

had played with AMU Harris and then Ricky Skaggs and all these and it was kind of like one thing led to another


3:28

you know all of a sudden I get into James Burton and that gets me into Merl Haggard which gets me into Buck Owens


3:35

and you know Ricky Skaggs and get into Steve Warner and all this so one of my


3:40

favorite albums was Ricky Skaggs live from London and it was a great record


3:46

had a lot of really good energy a lot of good playing and on the cover it showed skags holding a purple Glazer telly now


3:55

I didn't know what it was at the time I just saw that it was a purple Telly and it was single bound had a flame Maple


4:02

neck and had a it had a middle pickup and and it just looked i' had never seen


4:07

a Telecaster that looked like that ever before and I couldn't really figure out what it was and you could kind of make


4:12

out the headstock in on the album cover and I was like I couldn't tell if it


4:18

said Fender or something else cuz it was a spaghetti logo so in this one of my stacks of


4:26

guitar player magazines there was a um this January 1987 issue of Guitar Player


4:34

magazine which was their 20th anniversary issue and they had this questions column and it was written by


4:41

John severt and someone asked about Ricky Skaggs guitars specifically his


4:48

Violet telecaster and a Telly style electric mandolin that had a fantastic sound and so in here um you know John


4:57

sver you know he must have contacted Joe Glazer or you know Ricky's Tech and uh


5:02

so they they indicate in there that you know Joe had made those instruments that they have a string bender and also that


5:09

he was using old uh Martin guitars in fact it's a uh let's see what year was


5:14

it of 1949 and a 1961 Martin D28 with takini pickups that's a whole another


5:21

Rabbit Trail we could go down and talking about you know the the thing where Ricky would take uh takini pickups


5:28

he'd rip him out of those takini guitars and uh he'd put them in Martin's I thought that was hilarious anyway so


5:35

then I had a name and uh and I knew who was making those guitars and then I also


5:42

saw Steve Warner playing a uh he had a red Strat that had a matching headstock


5:48

that he was using and also he had a Telly that looked just like Ricky except it was red and so I knew that I wanted a


5:58

Glazer Bender guitar so I started playing gigs and by


6:04

about 1992 I was 19 years old and I was gigging


6:09

regularly and I had saved up about $1,500 and back in 1992 $1500 was quite


6:16

a bit of money and I didn't know if it was enough to get a Glazer guitar or not


6:21

but I knew it was enough like you know it was likely enough to to be at least a deposit or something on on one and so I


6:29

got Joe Glazer's phone number and I called him up and you know someone else answered the phone and they brought Joe


6:36

on the line and Joe was very nice about it but he said I'm not building guitars


6:41

anymore and I was you know I was pretty disappointed but uh you know getting to


6:47

know Joe over the last you know 20 plus years you know I know that he really


6:52

didn't like manufacturing guitars he liked building these custom things for his friends like building that purple


7:00

you know Telly for Ricky or you know or Steve Warner those were friends of his and people that he liked their music and


7:06

liked what they were doing and like the the Mando cter with the Bender that he


7:11

built for Ricky or like the lap steel that he built for uh for Jerry Douglas


7:17

that looked like a little Strat but with just two pickups and yeah he built all these custom things or the the double


7:23

Bender guitars he built for Jimmy olander they were for artists that were making music and so here's this kid from


7:29

from Texas you know saying he wants something like he's already made before so I was disappointed but uh he


7:38

said just buy a good telecaster and uh and send it to me and I'll you know I'll put a vendor in it so I said okay so I


7:46

bought a James Burton Telecaster from Fender they had just started making it it was three pickups you with the lace


7:51

sensors and the black and gold Paisley finish and I sent it to to Joe and a


7:57

couple months later you know I got the guitar back had a b bender on it and I had I was Off to the Races and shortly


8:04

after that I moved to Nashville and I started going to Joe's shop uh actually


8:09

he was working out of Corner Music um you know like two days a week and then he you know otherwise you'd have to go


8:15

down to leaper Fork where his shop was and I kept looking for a Glazer guitar I


8:20

kept thinking one was going to come up used but one never did I think the the only Glazer guitar that that I've ever seen


8:28

for sale was there was a black Glazer Strat with a bender on it that came up for sale you know probably 5 to 10 years


8:36

ago and I got to play it and it just you know that was not what I wanted you know I wanted the three pickup Telly thing


8:43

with the binding and the whole nine yards so you know fast forward to


8:49

earlier this year was still looking but I just had kind of pretty much given up


8:55

because it's like I have all these killer telecasters and uh it's like you know I need another Telecaster like a


9:01

hole in the head and uh and then there was this fateful episode of Tom bac's


9:09

you know homeschooling show where he went up into Joe Glazer's


9:14

attic and there were like bodies and necks and wood and stuff up there and


9:20

that kind of started started me thinking then I would go by Glazer's


9:28

shop and also some of my friends like JD Simo all of a sudden these different


9:33

Glazer you know guitars started showing up so there was a uh there was a flame


9:39

Maple neck Strat that was Fiesta red that JD Simo had you know was playing


9:44

for a little while it wasn't his he was borrowing it from one of the guys at Glazer's shop and I found out that there had been


9:52

some finished Parts up in the attic that they had all been turned into guitars and they were kind of like owned by the


10:00

guys at the shop or by Joe or whoever but they weren't up for trade or


10:05

purchase or anything like that well I happened to go down to the shop with Brad Paisley We were working


10:13

on a project and and Brad needed to do a little bit of finish work and he was wanting Joe to show him how to do


10:19

something because Brad does a lot of finish work if you I mean he did all this um so while we were


10:27

there uh we saw this little stack of bodies and necks and we looked at


10:35

them and we said could this be and so there was an alder


10:41

body that was single bound and uh this half of The Binding was on it but the


10:47

binding starting from here up to here had was like in pieces and some of the


10:53

pieces were missing and it was already drilled out or routed out for three pickups


11:00

uh and but it wasn't drilled for a bridge or any of the hardware or anything like that and then there was


11:07

this bird's eye Maple neck that was huge it was it had you know roughed in a


11:12

Telly headstock No Frets no dots no side dots uh no nut no no nothing on it and


11:20

it was just huge uh kind of shaped on the back a little bit um but it was just


11:25

gigantic it was like a baseball bat so so oh and we also found a pit guard


11:31

there was this this pit guard was there and it was really cool looking cuz you could tell it was like old Celluloid and


11:37

has you know was kind of a little bit wavy and grainy looking and uh and sure enough found out from Joe that this was


11:43

a really old Celluloid that he got and that he had he had cut himself


11:49

so Brad goes to Joe Glazer and he he has the body the neck and the pit guard and


11:57

he very audacious ly says to Joe Glazer you need to give Zach


12:04

this and Joe's response was I'm not building a guitar which is you know what


12:11

he told me you know 30 plus years ago he said y'all can put it together y'all can


12:18

finish it out I'm not having anything to do with it he said if it's a great guitar you can put the Glazer logo on it


12:26

said but if it's not we're going to put it in the wood shipper so I walked out of Glazer's shop with


12:33

Brad Paisley with a body and a neck and


12:38

uh you know of course the body was missing you know half of its binding we had a couple pieces and we found some


12:43

binding that matched up but it was too tall and uh so we you took it back to


12:49

Brad's shop and we started working on it so we got the


12:55

body and we started gluing this other binding on there and uh it was mainly


13:02

Brad I was you know kind of holding some things and we'd put some little glue and kept you know gluing little bits at a


13:09

time as we went all the way around and then later on he sanded The


13:14

Binding down because it was too tall and so he just sanded down the top made it you know flush with the top of the


13:20

guitar uh then Brad shaped the neck he shaped the


13:25

headstock uh he even did kind of the the the too kind of uh you know shaping on


13:32

the on the you know where the you know kind of neck goes into the headstock um did it in a soft v which is


13:39

kind of my favorite shape uh he uh let's


13:44

[Music] see and uh then the the neck I'm trying


13:50

to remember the right order on this I think he did some level of ricking on


13:55

the neck then the neck went back to Glazer's shop so that they could put


14:01

dots in it and side dots then he did some finish work then


14:06

they put finish on it and then they put the Frets in I


14:11

believe and then uh then of course it was drilled out for machine heads and we


14:17

put you know they put clusin on there at Glazer shop put a string Tree on there and then um the neck was pretty


14:25

much done got a nut then on the B body


14:31

um once The Binding was on there we started experimenting with colors and so


14:36

Joe Glazer was over at Brad's shop and the three of us were there and Brad


14:43

started mixing up colors and he started I kind of wanted kind of a greenish blue color and kind


14:52

of to turquoise um but you know Brad was kind of mixing


14:57

up a number of colors together and he was he had a little bit of tal turquoise he had some Sonic blue had some other


15:04

things in there and he sprayed a bit on this body and he showed it to Joe and I and


15:11

Joe said no which was funny because he have to remember Joe had said he wasn't going to


15:17

have anything to do with it but uh he he ended up being very opinionated about the color uh and I think it was because


15:25

he wanted this guitar to not look like any of the other guitars that he had done he wanted to be a different color


15:31

he wanted to be an individual you know guitar not a copy guitar and uh he also wanted to look


15:38

like a color that he would have done so Brad kept kind of mixing up the colors


15:43

and he kept spraying until he came up with this color and you know Brad was


15:48

happy with it I was happy with it Joe was happy with it so Brad finished it


15:53

out and uh you know scraped the The Binding and then uh he did some ricking


16:00

on it which you can see back here which I thought was fun you know gave it some of that good belt buckle wear and uh you


16:08

got some other little dings and such and he really didn't do any


16:13

cracking of the Finish but yet the Finish started cracking when Glazer shop


16:19

got the guitar back and they were drilling it out for the bridge so when


16:25

they drilled the holes for the bridge all this cracking started that uh and


16:31

also Brad had done some of this you know kind of brown stuff that's kind of come


16:38

through the Finish or I don't know how he did this but more of it started coming through and so I don't know if


16:43

that's coming from the wood or what but I love it so so we had pain on the body so I


16:49

take it down to you know again it's it's down at Joe's shop and Aaron Parker is


16:55

doing the Lion Share the work on this and so he uh he puts the bridge on he


17:00

installs the pickups he puts the bender on there he he wires it up uh he he uh


17:09

you know get lines up the pit guard and everything gets the neck on there um another another chap at the


17:16

shop uh named Max put the Frets in and then Clayton pleck it and I think Nick


17:25

did a little Nick drushel did a little bit of uh of work on on it and of course uh you know Joe kind of oversaw some of


17:33

it but uh you know he uh he he kept his distance so because he was a little


17:39

concerned that the guitar wasn't going to turn out great but it really really


17:44

did so again this was a a dream guitar for me something I always wanted to have


17:50

you know as a as a teenager and well even up till today I I I love these


17:56

guitars and to finally be able to have a a real Glazer Bender guitar is a big


18:02

deal uh I got to talk about the logo so I'd seen these guitars you know


18:08

through the years and I thought this was going to be a water slide decal and it


18:13

is but only the Glazer part the you know spaghetti Glazer is a water slide but


18:19

then the part that says Bender is actually these transfer letters that where you put it up against the


18:25

headstock and you rub a pencil on this sheet and then it trans on there and so


18:30

Joe still had a sheet of that and so it was really funny I took the tuners off


18:36

and the string tree off and it was funny watching Brad uh use you know a pencil


18:42

and holding this sheet up against the headstock and you know rubbing against it and actually ended up having trouble


18:48

with there was only one B left and we've got to do bender and the B ended up coming apart so he ended up using a p


18:56

and an eight on there to to make the uh the Bender part of the uh of the logo


19:03

but yeah and you know once it all came together it was just it was just like wow I have a a real Glazer Bender guitar


19:12

from the 1980s cuz that's when you know this body and neck was it was made in the 80s and then it was it was abandoned


19:19

for some reason and uh you I think just Joe was kind of moving away from manufacturing already from you know


19:26

actually building guitars and uh so I was fortunate and glad to be able


19:33

to to get it and so of course glad that uh you know glad that Joe was willing to


19:39

you know give the you know the the body and neck up and then grateful for Brad


19:46

Paisley for you know twisting Joe's arm and for doing all his finish work then of course again to Aaron Parker for


19:52

doing so much work on this guitar for Max and I've got some videos of these guys um I got Max to talk a little bit


20:00

so you'll get to meet him I got Aaron to talk a little bit about the guitar and then I was uh Joe Glazer was kind enough


20:08

to talk a bit and you need to understand that he there are no more of these parts


20:14

lying around this is it this was the last of it and uh so do do not call Joe


20:20

Glazer or his shop and say Hey I want you to build me a guitar or are there any more parts left there is nothing


20:26

left it is the bottom has been dread Ed so no that's all gone so I'm going to


20:33

have a little clip of of me showing you all the sounds that this can make and uh again I need


20:40

to thank um Seymour Duncan pickups for giving me the pickups in here they are


20:46

fantastic um so you'll hear all all that the pickups do and the the Music City Bridge wiring harness does and uh yeah


20:55

and then you'll have uh you know Max talking a little bit about Fring it up and uh Aaron and then Joe and uh yeah I


21:04

just really appreciate it here we are guys just finished up one


21:11

of the last Glazer Benders beautiful teal color this nice quilted curly neck and


21:21

me this thing had been seasoning about 35 almost 40 years back just air drying


21:27

in the back there and uh we recarved the neck got the body up and running put a


21:34

bender in it some new Frets new nut in there and you could feel you know how


21:41

stiff that neck was when you're hammering in those Frets uh I me it's stiffer than most Tellies out there most


21:49

Maple necks it's a it's a real treat and uh excited for you guys to


21:55

hear it got a great little Bender mechanism in there you can see the little finger


22:01

moving when you when you pull the lever and


22:07

uh all right guys so I wanted to talk about the electronics on this so um you


22:14

know these guitars normally had three pickups and they had this hot Strat stack Duncan pickup in the middle wired


22:21

top coil only and uh I was trying to decide what pickups I wanted to use I knew I was


22:27

going to use a Duncan in the middle and then earlier this year I ended up going to Santa Barbara and getting to


22:35

tour the Seymour Duncan Factory and getting to meet I think I'd met Seymour Duncan in the past at probably at Nam or


22:41

something like that but I got to see Seymour and Mark Delorenzo who is the uh the CEO of Seymour Duncan and MJ maracel


22:50

wz that is the kind of master builder Master Winder there and it was a ton of


22:57

fun to get to uh to tour the place and then also as a parting gift they gave me


23:03

some pickups and uh and it was a set that they call the 53 tapped pickup and


23:10

it's from the custom shop and it was a neck and Bridge and the neck pickup is kind of a


23:16

normal vintage style neck pickup early 50 Style with that has a brass cover but


23:21

then of course Chrome plated which creates kind of a a darker uh neck


23:27

pickup sound the bridge was tapped and so the tapped output was like six and a


23:34

half K which is you know pretty normal for certain black guards I mean there's


23:40

a lot of black guards that were made in 53 that have you know the mid mid 6K you know output and then uh when you get all


23:49

the the rest of the windings going it's about 9 and a2k and it's uh I was really concerned


23:58

when they gave me the pickup you know whether I would you know whether I'd even use it or not or whether I'd like it because normally you know what I


24:05

think of with ta pickups is you know one sound that's that's weak and anemic and another one that's overblown and Bloated


24:12

sounding and uh I I found that uh this one really sounded great the 6K which is


24:18

in the up position on my switch here it's just a really great Telecaster


24:25

sound um [Music]


24:46

then you can hit the 9k


24:53

[Music]


25:09

and you can hear it has more a little more output uh and has a lot more mid-range so it works great as a as a


25:16

boost as a solo boost especially if you're playing you know maybe something with some gain or if you just want a


25:22

fatter sound it's really nice because you know you could you could just stay on the back pickup and let's say even if


25:28

you were playing something on a ballot it just makes where the high strings sound like you know you went from 10 to


25:34

11s you know helps if you turn it


25:39

up 6K


25:48

9k so just very very usable very very much a fan of uh of this pickup the


25:56

other thing um so then of of course you have this hop Strat stack that's wired


26:01

top coil only and it's wired to this music City Bridge wiring harness and


26:08

this is not a tone control this is a blend control for this pickup but it only works in this position so only when


26:15

you're in this number five position Bridge pickup only does this come into play and turn all the way down it does


26:21

nothing and as you turn it up it brings in this pickup so here all


26:29

you know kind of hold a cord and hopefully you can kind of hear it as the as the bridge pickup comes in as the


26:35

middle pickup comes in I should [Music]


26:45

say and the magic of it is to just use some of it you know because if you want it full up on both you might as well go


26:52

to this position you know which defeats this control uh and the whole point of


26:57

that is to be be able to have this as a preset so what you do is you play [Applause]


27:03

something and you bring in just enough to kind of soften the high end because it kind of acts as kind of a an


27:09

interesting EQ and uh you know then it makes you play all those great Brent Mason legs


27:18

[Music]


27:32

then uh of course let's turn the blend off so it's back to just being this


27:37

pickup now I can pull this up and now I have the outside two pickups which


27:43

normally wouldn't be available when you're using a regular 5way switch unless you have a one of those super switches or something so uh again Bridge


27:52

pickup here's both pickups which you know to me always when


27:57

you do both pickups either makes me want to play shatkins or R&B you know so you can


28:03

[Music]


28:11

go or you can [Music]


28:26

go yeah you can put it in this number four position and now and with this


28:31

pulled out you've actually got all three pickups which to me is even more chit sounding then you can


28:38

[Music]


28:56

do all right and uh let's just hear this regular number four position which is just of


29:03

course this at 6K and this top coil only uh you know you kind of have the


29:10

[Music]


29:25

uh you know kind of your uh know pretty stratty sounding and then if you want to


29:30

take it to like a fat stratty kind of snarly tone you hit hit this to the 9k


29:37

and then you


29:43

[Music]


29:49

[Music] get which is kind of fun to do get that


29:56

uh fat slightly quacky you lose a little quack you know when you have a higher


30:02

output pickup uh this is the middle pickup by itself


30:07

[Music]


30:34

then of course you have the front two pickups uh you know for you know


30:41

[Music]


30:59

then we can go all the way to the neck by itself and uh you get


31:04

[Music]


31:26

uh and in this position you can still do the pull on the uh on that blend control


31:32

to get both [Music]


31:40

pickups again I was just I landed on the just doing the uh you know the the neck


31:46

by itself but yeah very very versatile uh wiring and uh and I kind of I usually


31:54

kind of shy away from anything you know I usually do kind of the two pickup traditional Telecaster thing the most I


32:01

do is you know have it where the tone control only works on the bridge and uh so this is a much more complex than I


32:08

would normally use however every sound on it is super useful and just to have


32:14

really good Strat sounds right there and have this kind of boosted you know Bridge pickup sound available you know


32:21

whenever I need it is a a really really nice and great thing it kind of makes for a a Do-it all all super Telly as it


32:29

were so yeah of course then you have the uh the Bender this is Joe's latest


32:37

iteration which has been out for I guess the last 5 to 10 years which is convertible it can be moved from uh from


32:44

the B string to the G string and of course I've got it set on the B and I've got you know brass Saddles uh these are


32:52

compensated looks like they're bent uh I don't know what manufacturer they are but they're nice and and this is a


32:58

Glendale bridge I really was kind of uh


33:04

trying to figure out what kind of bridge I wanted to use because normally I would have used a Fender bridge but being that this is a Glazer guitar I didn't want to


33:11

have a a Fender bridge on it and so um


33:16

uh friend of mine had this Glendale Bridge lying around and uh I saw it and


33:21

I remember remembered having a Glendale Bridge back you know 15 20 years ago and it was great and so I thought well you


33:27

know it starts with the G and it's it's good quality and we'll use that so yeah I really like this this bridge it's very


33:34

nice so yeah uh let's see anything else about the electronics and such you know


33:40

of course yeah I just love the Bender I've got it set to a short throw I'm not really into uh long throw or even medium


33:48

throw I I like it to be you know pretty you know quick


33:53

[Music]


34:11

yeah it just works and does what it's supposed to do it was cool to see these things come


34:18

from you know just sitting around up in the attic for 30 years or whatever it


34:24

was and getting to see gags and Steve Warner and Jimmy o Landers and everybody's that come through and you


34:33

can see how cool they are and how cool they were and uh we just got to thinking it's


34:39

like man there's still some up there they're still living and uh just getting


34:44

to bolt them together and hear them ring and they're lightweight you know they're


34:50

kind of kind of everything you want to tell him so so I didn't build this guitar


34:59

my guys went up into the attic and picked


35:05

through some of the bodies that were some of them were painted and leftover


35:10

bodies and necks some of them weren't painted they were like they put one or two of them


35:16

together I guess they just have around the shop


35:21

and somehow I think Jeff King is largely to blame he came in and saw one of did you do this first sack I go was Jeff one


35:29

of you guys came in and said I want that guitar and so number of bodies and necks were


35:36

pulled down from the attic finished up and turned into guitars this being one of them the Zach


35:41

child model already beaten up like God it's


35:46

unbelievable how rough you are on this stuff but here's the thing the things that


35:53

were in the Attic were either something that had a defect or something that were so good that I was holding on to them at


35:59

the end so I'm not sure which one whether this is a good body or a bad body but when it was finished and you


36:05

went and played it on the award show I was talking to you and Brad I was like is it any good tell me tell me the truth


36:10

is it any good because it's either it was either up there because it's particularly good body and I was you


36:16

know I was checking resonance and all that kind of stuff at the time or because it was not a good body so


36:23

apparently it all worked out um I play


36:28

steel and I like music I like country music and in the midst of


36:35

everything I sort of didn't get to listen to some of the old music I really love the old Buck Owens and Merl Haggard


36:43

and Mel Street and all these things all these years particularly things involving steel and


36:51

recently somewhat because of the cocaine in rhinestones uh


36:59

podcast and a couple other things I've gone back and listen to a lot of the old music I realize I really fundamentally


37:04

love it that the love is exactly the same even if I've been put off by some of the stuff that came out in the 90s


37:10

and the 80s and the T and the 20s and you know it's like I don't want to hear any more of that


37:16

stuff and looking at this bird's eye Maple neck I have the same feeling it's like


37:23

it feels exactly like looking it like listening to the steel that got me playing steel I remember looking at this why I


37:31

got absolutely Spellbound by Bird's ey Maple


37:37

and curly Maple and started using it at a point where almost nobody was Phil kii


37:42

was Paul Reed Smith was I was I don't know if anybody else was and I know Paul


37:47

probably got his fixation from Les Paul's I don't know where Phil kabiki


37:53

got his mine came from my show but steel which one of the two showd Ste I had had


37:58

a bird's eye had bird's eye necks and I just loved it and also growing up the


38:03

bed that I I slept my first 15 years in had a curly one of the posts one of the


38:09

N posts or whatever there was Curly Maple and it just mesmerized me so looking at


38:15

this after all these years having not made one of these in 30


38:20

years it just has an overwhelming power the neck is I guess you guys


38:26

finish shaping this NE NE but it's very it's it's very was this Square when you got it or was it pre-shaped a little bit


38:32

it was pre-shaped a bit so CU it's got a little bit of that too Gomez shape which


38:38

I was um I was really caught up in the too Gomez thing because of Billy holl


38:44

and who introduced me to tell anyway that that's it um you asked meach I'm I


38:51

know where the three pickup thing came in I've talked about that a lot about why I started building


38:58

where this idea of even putting a middle pickup came in into a Telly and blah blah blah but you asked about where the


39:05

single binding came from because I did Steve Warner and did a bunch of them like that and I


39:12

think it was just an aesthetic I liked I thought to binding on the front and the back was too busy I like to have I liked


39:19

having one curve and um I think that the white makes it stand


39:25

out in some in some beautiful just iconic Telly look I


39:31

didn't invent the The Binding but I certainly appreciated it and just doing one


39:36

side I did a really early on I did a a guitar for a guy in Germany Manfred


39:42

Peter and it was I believe front and back bound and I remember thinking that if I did another bound guitar I would


39:49

just do the front because it was too busy with front and back and not a lot of people I think Fender did some front


39:56

only ones but not a lot of people had done front only ones that I was exposed to I I just think it's for my own


40:04

taste it's much more elegant than no no binding and much more elegant than two


40:11

than being B front and back and then the rest of it is all just very copied very carefully from


40:19

Fender fake decal my decal Glazer Glazer whatever it says Glazer Bender done to


40:25

look exactly like Fender because the the point that point they weren't they weren't bothering they didn't people


40:32

like me weren't on the uh the list to be sued which I would be today if I made this headstock I think when people went


40:38

out and played these with Steve Warner and Skaggs and stuff played these these Tellies Ricky is was purple single bound


40:45

people in the audience thought that they were Fender and so it really I really sold Fender guitars so Fender had no


40:50

reason to be mad at me but the the details of how all this was shaped exactly how round that ought to be and


40:57

how how scooped this ought to be that all came from from closely studying the


41:02

early the Early Tellies and and having the influence of Bill holled who


41:08

explained to me why they were perfect why every little curve every little


41:14

curve that Fender did was perfect and you shouldn't mess with it and I didn't anyway that's my impression of


41:21

this guitar I'm glad you have it I'm glad it sounds good and uh you know it's the so this the Music City Bridge three


41:29

pickup blend yep and just the Classic middle pickup and then our


41:37

Bender I'm glad you have it if it didn't sound good by the way I would I would have taken it away and um put it through


41:44

the chipper so I'm going I'm kind of glad that this nice piece of some birds I didn't have to go


41:51

into the trash Aaron Aaron here Aaron Parker is one of the guys that put this together


41:57

again against my will because I stopped building sometime in the late '90s and


42:02

I'd had enough sawdust and lacker thinner and just didn't want to build anymore and um I'm glad they put these


42:09

together but there there aren't any more parts upstairs there's no more necks that that will become guitars no more


42:15

bodies to become guitars so don't call and ask if there's one more up there because they went through there and they


42:21

really thoroughly depleted the the final stash there was like six or seven of them and they're they're on but uh I'm


42:28

glad it happened but it did happen against my will and they're


42:35

gone all right guys well I hope you've enjoyed today's episode and of course that at the intro of the show was me


42:41

playing uh the uh wonderful Steve Warner part to uh some fools never learn a


42:49

great tune and a really great guitar part it's very steel guitar is with the


42:54

uh the second half where you you kind of start off with the the low string


43:00

stuff but then when you get to


43:06

[Music] the it's just a really great part and


43:12

you ought to you got to check that out I've made a uh a kind of Bender Glazer


43:17

Bender guitar playlist that's there's a link in the description so if you want to go down the rabbit hole of hearing


43:24

some Glazer Bender guitars some of the examples are like that one Steve's still


43:29

using a Glazer Strat with a with a bender but uh some of the other ones like uh baby yor uh and of course all


43:36

the skagg stuff is all the Glazer single bound Tellies so all right guys we'll


43:44

see you next time bye-bye [Music] [Applause]