A SOLID-BODY ELECTRIC GUITAR, CUSTOM SHOP JEFF BECK ESQUIRE RELIC REISSUE
Important information about this lot
Price realised GBP 75,600
Estimate
GBP 6,000 – GBP 9,000
Estimates do not reflect the final hammer price and do not include buyer's premium, and applicable taxes or artist's resale right. Please see Section D of the Conditions of Sale for full details.
This guitar, one of two examples sent by Fender to Jeff Beck, is one of a limited edition of Master-Built replicas of Jeff Beck’s original unique Fender Esquire, which he used for his main body of work with the Yardbirds leading up to their eponymous album (also known as Roger the Engineer) released in 1966, which featured his first ‘59 Les Paul (see lot 3). Soon after joining The Yardbirds, Beck acquired a ‘54 Esquire from John Maus, the guitarist in the American band The Walker Brothers, whom Beck met while playing on a package tour with The Kinks in 1965. Walker had contoured the top and back in the style of a Fender Stratocaster, leaving the bare wood exposed, and Beck removed the original white pickguard, replacing it with the black one from his ’59 Telecaster (later given to Jimmy Page), which apparently created quite a buzz amongst guitarists in London.
In an interview with Fender filmed to coincide with the release of the Reissue Esquire, Beck reflected on the original guitar: ‘At the time we’re talking about it was, I think, the transitory period where Fender started using a rosewood fingerboard and I didn’t want that - I wanted a maple neck and the only one I ever saw or got close to was John Walker’s from the Walker Brothers. And just like as luck would have it we went on tour with them - Yardbirds & Walker Brothers in ’65 and I bought it. And he wanted £75, which is a lot of money - it was only about £10 quid cheaper than the one that was for sale in the shop brand new. But he wouldn’t shift on it so I dug out the 75 quid and gave it to him, so that’s how it started and I’ve never regretted it. ‘Shapes of Things’ it was on, ‘Over Under Sideways Down’ it was on it; ‘I’m the Man’. I didn’t have any other guitar. We’re talking, uh, April, February, March, I joined The Yardbirds and we were just on the road constantly and I didn’t even have my own guitar. I think I used Eric’s red Tele which I think belonged to The Yardbirds. I think they leased it to us, oh they were bastards.’
Following his departure from The Yardbirds, the Esquire was put to one side, and other guitars took the limelight during his time with the first and second line-ups of the Jeff Beck Group and subsequently Beck, Bogert & Appice, including at least three Fender Strats, a second 1959 Sunburst Les Paul, with a ‘zebra’ PAF pickup in the neck, which in July 1969 was stolen following a riotous concert in upstate New York, and his third Les Paul – the Oxblood, which had been purchased in 1972. In around September 1973, the young American guitar restorer and pickup wiz Seymour W. Duncan, who was working for Fender at their repair shop in London, created a guitar for Jeff Beck, whom he had admired since he was a child and for whom he had been devastated following the theft of his ’59 Les Paul. Duncan recounted that ‘As a kid in New Jersey, I grew up a major fan of Jeff's and the Yardbirds. I used to stare at the 'Rave Up' album cover and wonder what it would be like to see Jeff's Esquire or, better yet, to hold it.’ Duncan took his new creation to the nearby studio where Beck, Bogert & Appice were rehearsing, and presented it to Jeff, which he loved for its feel and the punchy Gibson pickups, and was immediately put to use. In exchange for the new guitar – nicknamed ‘The Tele-Gib’ (see lot 8) for its combined features of a Fender Telecaster and a Gibson, Seymour acquired Beck’s old Yardbirds Esquire.
‘The fact that the same guitar [I had admired as a teenager] was given to me by Jeff years later is one of the highlights of my life. I worked with the Fender Custom Shop to spec out all the details of the original. And it's amazing how faithful their replica is.’ Fender released details at the time specifying that the ‘Jeff Beck Esquire guitar features an extremely light two-piece offset ash body with the now-famous body contours. The neck is similar to the 10⁄56 neck shape and has nicely rolled edges, as well as the wear pattern identical to the original. Most of the parts on the Tribute Series Esquire are recreations of the original parts found on the original, including brass saddles, which Jeff replaced the usual steel saddles with. Legendary pickup guru, Abigail Ybarra, carefully recreated Jeff's pickups from the original's specifications. Additionally, the control wiring is authentic for those wishing to achieve the classic wah wah and volume swells that Jeff made so famous. Additional features include a black pickguard (with the same chipped edges), a 1056 serial number, the Master Builder's signature and serial number decal on the back of the headstock, and a vintage style, cosmetically-aged guitar strap.’
When Fender sent him a prototype of the Reissue, Beck was taken aback: ‘I thought you were having a laugh. I thought it was the original one. ... It's spooky. Until I opened the lid, it didn't really hit me. I thought, “Oh, this is my original guitar back!”’ This prototype was sent back to Fender following Beck’s approval, and they sent two of the production models to Beck following its release – one built by John Cruz (subsequently given to Beck’s close friend Johnny Depp) and this one, built by Greg Fessler.