UNPLANNED DOWNTIME: 12th Oct 23:45
Finding an old guitar friend!
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This is my first day on this forum and also the day I got a guitar back from an old friend who I loaned it too about 40 years ago. Until then I had a crappy electric job from Woolworths, then I decided it was worth me getting something that sounded nicer. I had a trip to the 2nd hand shops, in Newcastle in 1979 and fell in love with a well used but comparatively sweet sounding Eko 12 stringer, just because it sounded nice. I subsequently I lugged around parties and informal jams for the next couple of years. This was an important instrument for me because it steered me away from lead guitar into exploring chords and into song writing.
I then stopped playing, moved away and lost touch with my buddy. This year I eventually recorded my first solo acoustic album, and one of the songs (flowers) was written on on the Eko. I remember distinctly sitting cross legged in the garden on a sunny day writing it
By a strange twist of fate my friend heard of the album release and Facebooked me on Friday and said, "we should meet up and anyway I need to give you your guitar back". We met today and I have it. It is in the same battle scared condition I left it and still has the same strings on (well 10 of them). Despite the age of the strings it still has a bit of 12 string jangle and reckon it is going to play fine.
Amazing! I am so pleased to have it back.
Here is the song that I wrote by the way, which summed up how I felt at the time:
https://eddiemole.bandcamp.com/track/flowers
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The singer I work with has the 6-string version and it sounds great - it's also inspired more songs than all the other guitars we've used put together. I like the song . (You need to edit off the bit after 'flowers' in the link or it doesn't work.)
"Take these three items, some WD-40, a vise grip, and a roll of duct tape. Any man worth his salt can fix almost any problem with this stuff alone." - Walt Kowalski
"Just because I don't care, doesn't mean I don't understand." - Homer Simpson
I have (almost) the exact same story! Re-united with an old Eko Ranger 6 that I'd "left" with an old friend and lost touch with.
Not a great instrument by todays standards but, as a youngster, it was a leap forward for me as I'd just started gigging regularly and needed a "proper" guitar. (£35 in the early 70's was a lot of money!)
40-odd years later I ran into the old friend who was keen to re-unite me with the Eko, exactly as I'd left it!
I think the similarities of this story (I'm in the North East too) are mostly possible because of the build quality of those old Ekos. Pretty much indestructible! All that internal bracing may have compromised the sound but we never had to be gentle with them!
Well I have put new strings on it and it still has its old character and jangley sound. I will keep it by my side from now on.
Wouldn’t have done anything different tho mate - always worth the look on someone’s face when you reunite them with their fave guitar
Seriously: If you value it, take/fetch it yourself
A year or so later I found it, remembered whose it was but not what had been wrong with it, so I phoned him and asked - he said I’d told him that the neck was knackered. I said it wasn’t now! There was nothing wrong with it at all -just leaving it alone to dry out had been all it needed. Easiest repair ever .
"Take these three items, some WD-40, a vise grip, and a roll of duct tape. Any man worth his salt can fix almost any problem with this stuff alone." - Walt Kowalski
"Just because I don't care, doesn't mean I don't understand." - Homer Simpson