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Bridge state/height
posted in forum Gear by thomasfloss on 30. January 2012 at 20:00
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Recommended gear for the MK style
posted in forum Gear by Ingo on 29. January 2012 at 16:41
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Welche Gitarre und Amp fuer Anfaenger und Knopfler-Sound?
posted in forum Deutsches Forum - German forum by markus on 26. December 2011 at 18:38
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Gitarre & Amp mit Knopfler-Sound für Anfänger
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St. Mark's DSP Effects Pickups Debuted At The Musikmesse Frankfurt Show
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Sunburst and unburst Les Pauls from the late 50ies
Posted in: Guitars,Mark Knopfler gear,Vintage guitars by Ingo on November 27, 2008
Have you ever wondered why Mark Knopfler’s Gibson Les Pauls (he has a ’58, a ’59, and some replicas of late 50ies models) differ so much in their colour? And what is the colour called, simply sunburst, or is it cherry sunburst, or tobacco sunburst? Have you ever heard the term ‘unburst’?

from left to right: Knopfler's '59 Les Paul Standard, a reissue, the '58
The answer is simple: all those Les Paul Standards from that era (they were only built in this version from ’58 to ’60) were cherry sunburst, a sunburst which goes from red on the outer area to yellow in the center. However, the red paint Gibson used in those days was very sensitive to light exposure (especially UV radiation) and easily faded. This is a general problem of red, but it depends of the kind of laquer to which extend this might happen. Modern laquer is almost stable in this respect, but the laquer on the early Les Pauls has proven to be extremely sensitive, much more than the one of Fenders from that time.
While there are old Les Pauls Standards that look like new – which means a bright red -, there are others which have lost all the red and seem to be completely yellow. These got the nickname ‘unburst’ – Peter Green’s Les Paul from the Fleetwood Mac days (later this guitar belong to Gary Moore who meanwhile sold it) is maybe the most famous example of these.

Peter Green's Les Paul - all red totally faded, an 'unburst'


I first thought Knopfler’s reissue (center on picture) was the 1984 he played in the BIQ era, but it isn’t (I compared the flame grain). Does anyone know what year it is? I think I read something but cannote remember.
Comment by Ingo — 27. November 2008 @ 15:14
[...] Sunburst and unburst Les Pauls from the late 50ies | Mark Knopfler … – Peter Green’s Les Paul – all red totally faded, an ‘unburst’. If you like this article or my blog and want to say thank you, you can click here to buy me a beer via Paypal. Post tags: Gibson, Les Paul, sunburst, unburst, Vintage guitar … [...]
Pingback by Les Paul Sunburst News | The Gibson Les Paul Electric Guitar Blog — 27. November 2008 @ 17:22
[...] Read the original: Sunburst and unburst Les Pauls from the late 50ies | Mark Knopfler … [...]
Pingback by Common Sense USA » Blog Archive » Sunburst and unburst Les Pauls from the late 50ies | Mark Knopfler … — 27. November 2008 @ 20:12
Ingo .. I think that one appeared around 2005 – it’s very close to one that appeared on a stand with other guitars before the show. It’s certainly not the one that appeared during the 1985-6 tour with his birth date as serial number or as you say the first 84 one. Just to add Neil dorfsman mentioned Money For Nothing been played on a Les Paul Junior when we all thought it was the 1984 LP .. he proberly meant the Les Paul Special as that always seemed to be a favourite studio guitar.
Comment by Dermot O'Reilly — 6. February 2009 @ 17:58
Hello Ingo. Thanks for your blog and old website. But now I’m trying to make a update of our guitars section at our website and I had my “private investigation” about Mark’s Les Paul. There are a lot wrong information. A lot of it cames from Guitar & Styles book. Actually Mark has 4 Gibson LP guitars: 2 original guitars ’58 & ’59 and 2 re-ussues: first has s/n 90006. The wrong info that this guitar produced in 1984. It is mystake. If you are trying to decode the s/n in accordance with Gibson Blue Book, you can find that the first digit “9″ means year of production so 90006 is sitxth guitar was produced in 1979 (not in 1989, Mark got it from Rudy Pensa in 1984) Second re-issue was buil by Gibson Custom Shop with Mark’s birthdate as the serial number – 12849. Mark told about it in his old interview for Vintage guitar mazagine in 2001. But there is not any info – when and where Mark can use this guitar.
Comment by Stanislav Petrov — 11. October 2009 @ 08:34
OK – let me correct the date for #9 0006. I’ve also emailed to Stanislav’s website. It’s not an ’84 or a ’79 – it’s an ’83. Gibson first “officially” started making LP reissues in 1983 (before this they had made special reissue runs for different music stores – Strings and Things, Leo’s, Guitar Trader). The Gibson reissues were officially named the Flametop ’59 Reissue. The very first run of them had serial numbers coded “9 xxxx” and after that they switched to a “Y xxxx” format, with Y being equal to the last character of the year produced. So, to be an ’84, it would be 4 xxxx. I own #9 0004 and it dates to about the second week of June, 1983, and has been verified by Gibson. I hope this helps correct a common misconception about Mark’s #9 0006.
Comment by JT — 18. September 2011 @ 02:36