Philosophical Musings on the Emotional-Synaptic Response of the Aging Caucasian Male to Japanese Guitar Design Trends of the 1960's Era.
I was trying to explain to my wife why the old asian guitars have captured my imagination  - particularly the funkiest of the Asian and Italian models (and I tend to analyze myself constantly anyway...) But, why do people love these things?
When I think of the history of fender and gibson, they designed their early electrics to be great, functional guitars. So much of the early shapes that became standards of guitar design - cutaways, body relief, knob placement, etc. - grew from acoustic guitars to fat-bodied "jazz" electrics and then into Strats, LPs, Teles. It seems to me most of the early era of solid body electric guitar design was "form follows function" - the guitars weren't "rock and roll" designs, they became synonymous with rock music because they were well-suited to playing it. There weren't crazy finishes, wild shapes, etc.
And about that time, rock & roll happened, and US (and a few European) guitars were the pro instruments. You could say rock music was a "response" in part to those early US electrics. When Japan came into the design business, it was very clearly as a response to rock & roll (and the market for guitars it created). You could say that the Americans designed guitars, but the Japanese designed "rock and roll guitars" (OK, at least they really tried to).
I think that's where so much of the cool factor comes in - as an example, it's obvious some makers said "more buttons! more knobs!" (Les Paul and Leo Fender never needed FOUR pickups, y'know?) There's a weird cross-cultural mangling of the concept of "a guitar for rock music", mixed with an outsider view of American teen culture. (Thank god the Asians had gotten pretty good at engineering by then or this would be the "cool looking guitars that are utter crap" forum).
It's not, for me, a "replace my first guitar" - my first electric, purchased brand new in 1974, was en entry-level Mosrite, hollow thinline, rosewood bridge (that slid all over the place) and no binding - an American guitar. (Purchased with a Fender Champ - god, what those two would fetch now). (Not to mention my first "real" electric, a 1968 Gibson SG, sold for a few hundred bucks in the 80's). 
I like the crazy-looking models. What I LOVE is getting one and finding out it actually plays OK and sounds killer. What's pricleless is getting all that for 60 bucks. Which means I can swap pickups and bridges all day and not get all tweaked up about "the value". 
I love the fact that some of my guitars have been around - and obviously been played - for four decades. That really, really appeals to me, seeing the age all over the guitar, that it really came from a different time and is still around, like a time capsule. And, I've got a thinline hollow Teisco that is just "magic" - it, and a Gibson Acoustic, are the guitars I own with that magic/mojo/whatever (not even my Strat has it).
Anyone bored? Tell us what & why you dig in this department.
			
		
