U2 Atomic: Edge Gear

Home | About This Site | Articles | Music Rising | U2 News | GEAR OVERVIEW - by era | Dallas Schoo | NEW Gear NEWS | Video links | Atomic Links | Other U2 Links | AMPLIFIERS | CONTROLLERS/SWITCHERS | EFFECTS (rack effects) | EFFECTS (stompboxes) | GUITARS | PICKS/STRINGS & ACCESSORIES | TABLATURE LINKS
1958 Gibson ES 295 // Auction information

192_3.jpg

192_1.jpg

192_0.jpg

Description:
THE EDGE'S GIBSON ES295 ARCHTOP GUITAR:
 
1958 Gold ES295 Gibson electric guitar, serial number A-13384, laminated maple body and top, mahogany neck, 2 Alnico-V P-90 pickups. Accompanied by a brown leather Levy's guitar strap with suede on leather piping. The Edge says: This guitar, a 1958 Gibson ES 295, is the model made famous by Elvis Presley's guitarist Scotty Moore. It's a piece of high 50's Americana. Like a classic Corvette or Cadillac of the period, with all gold finish and fittings. It is a real cult object. I found mine in the USA back in the 80's and it's been a prized possession ever since. It has "P90" pickups, the forerunner of the "Gibson humbucker", so in the studio I always turned to it for that authentic early rock and roll sound. The Edge is known for using 17-19 guitars in a single show, generally a lead guitarist uses 4-5. When touring with U2 he travels with 45 guitars. The ES295 is used on the famed song "Desire" and can be seen in the video for this song. The Edge performed with it on the early U2 Joshua Tree and subsequent U2 tours that followed even up to the last Vertigo tour. He played with this instrument on such live numbers as "The Electrico Co." and "God's Country."
 
A photograph of the Edge playing this guitar can also be found on page 195 of the book "U2 by U2."

U2's The Edge donates guitar to auction

By SANDY COHEN, AP Entertainment Writer2 hours, 53 minutes ago

LOS ANGELES (AP) — The Edge is donating his favorite instrument to an auction benefiting Music Rising, a charity the U2 guitarist co-founded to replace musical equipment lost or destroyed by Hurricane Katrina.

He's logged thousands of hours of stage and studio time on the 1975 Gibson Les Paul. The 45-year-old musician has used the guitar throughout his years with U2.

"I wanted to give something really significant that would really mean a lot for me to give. It deserved something that I would miss," The Edge told The Associated Press by phone from France.

The Icons of Music auction, administered by Julien's Auctions, features 196 rock-related items, including a saxophone signed by former President Clinton, a guitar that belonged to Jimi Hendrix and an original Elvis Presley recording contract.

An exhibit of auction highlights will travel from Los Angeles to Dublin, Ireland, and London before the sale ends April 21 with an event at Manhattan's Hard Rock Cafe. Fans may bid online or in person.

The Edge's guitar was expected to fetch between $60,000 to $80,000, according to the auction Web site.

Bandmates Adam Clayton donated a bass guitar, Larry Mullen gave a pair of tom-tom drums and Bono donated a pair of Emporio Armani sunglasses.

"It's some great poetry to ask the people like myself, who've earned a good living from rock 'n' roll, to donate items to an auction that would help protect and stave off the decline of the music culture in the Gulf Coast," he said.

New Orleans is the soul of American music, so the Irish rocker said he felt compelled to help after hurricanes Katrina and Rita. He created Music Rising in 2005 with record producer Bob Ezrin and Gibson chairman Henry Juszkiewicz.

"One of the good things about globalization is it has created a single international music community, and I feel very much part of it," he said. "So this doesn't seem like it's someone else's problem. It's really our problem, too."

The Edge, whose real name is David Evans, first discovered the area's rich musical culture as a young member of U2. He was intoxicated by the city's jazz funerals, where scores of musicians parade down the street in colorful costumes covered with flowers and feathers.

"Jazz came out of New Orleans, and that was the forerunner of everything," he said. "You mix jazz with European rhythms, and that's rock 'n' roll really. You can make the argument that it all started on the streets of New Orleans with the jazz funerals."

___

On the Net:

Julien's Auctions:

http://juliensauctions.com/

Music Rising:

http://musicrising.org/

U2:

http://www.u2.com/

U2 - Atomic: Then and Now
thenandnow_u2.jpg
* click on photo for main U2 Atomic site *