This a Charvel Custom Shop San Dimas Guitar w/Ash Top. This was part of a limited run of guitars built with exotic woods and natural oil finishes. Get your Charvel today!
The Charvel Story
In November 1978, Wayne Charvel sold the small
Azusa, California, company he founded earlier that decade, Charvel's
Guitar Repair, to one of his employees, Grover Jackson. Charvel left the
company soon afterward and ceased having any real association with the
company's name from that point on.
Jackson promptly began
building highly regarded electric guitars bearing the Charvel name. In
1980, he was introduced to Ozzy Osbourne's new young guitarist, Randy
Rhoads; the two began to develop an angular, neck-through-body guitar
designed by Rhoads himself that quickly evolved into a model dubbed the
"Concorde." Wary of putting the Charvel name on this radical new
instrument lest it not prove a smashing success, Jackson instead put his
own surname on the headstock in a move that prompted the creation of
the Jackson guitar brand (the guitar was eventually re-christened the
"Rhoads" model and remains a top Jackson seller today).
In the
meantime, Grover Jackson had moved production to neighboring Glendora,
California, where both brands were manufactured until moving to Ontario,
California, in 1986.
Grover Jackson sold Jackson/Charvel to
Japanese manufacturer AMIC in 1989. Thenceforth, Charvel guitars were
produced to very high standards in Japan until 1991. Interestingly, the
neck plates on these bolt-on neck Charvel models bear AMIC's Fort Worth,
Texas, address despite the fact that they were built in Japan.
Charvel's
active-electronics Model 4 and Model 6 guitars became popular in the
latter part of the '80s before the line was revamped in 1989 into
several different series, including the Classic, Fusion and Contemporary
instruments. Guitars in the Classic series included the 275, 375, 375
Deluxe, 475 and 750xl models. Fusion series deluxe and custom guitars
had shorter scales than the others; the Contemporary line included the
Predator and Spectrum models. Most of these guitars featured
Schaller®-made hardware, including licensed Floyd Rose® locking tremolo
units. The Korean-made Charvette brand was also introduced during these
years to cover the lower end of the market.
Unfortunately at the
time, the grunge rock boom of the early 1990s spelled trouble for
Charvel; the brand fell from favor and suffered a drop in quality as the
name was used on lower-quality budget instruments. Nonetheless, the
'90s and early 2000s did see several attempts to restore Jackson/Charvel
to its '80s-era glory, with high-quality Japanese and U.S.-made guitars
such as the Journeyman. And, of course, original U.S.-made Charvel
guitars (referred to as San Dimas® models after the San Dimas,
California P.O. box listed on their neck plates) remain some of the most
highly sought-after guitars in the world today.
Charvel and
Jackson were bought by Fender Musical Instruments Corporation in fall
2002, and the Charvel name saw a rebirth with several U.S.-made San
Dimas® models, so named in order to recapture the spirit of the original
high-quality U.S.-made guitars.
Today, Charvel offers several
U.S. made Custom-Built guitars, a set of Warren DeMartini signature
models, and the all new U.S.A. Production Model Series.
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