The Gibson Firebird was made from 1963-65 in the initial “reverse” body shape, and from 1965-69 in the “non-reverse” shape. The two models were later reissued and are still on sale.
Gibson had been accused of being overly conservative in the 1950s, only marketing the Les Paul solid-body electric guitar and its various semi-acoustic guitars such as the ES series. This meant that, to the younger market Gibson were at a disadvantage to Fender’s more modern designs, the Stratocaster and Telecaster.
As a riposte to all the people who claimed Gibson were being too conservative, the company released the Explorer and Flying V models in 1958 as part of an angular three-guitar “Modernistic series”, along with a third guitar, the Moderne, of which none were ever built until the model was “reissued” in 1982. The three modernistic guitars were very unsuccessful. In the original 1958 series of guitars, no Modernes were built, (although some eager collectors are still waiting for a 1958 Moderne to surface), and less than 150 Flying Vs and Explorers were built in total. The Modernistic series was discontinued in 1959, having been a complete failure.
Gibson decided in 1963 that they needed another foray into more modern styles of guitars, although they were careful to avoid another failure like the Modernistic series had been. They enlisted the help of Ray Dietrich, an American car designer. Dietrich decided to use the Explorer model as a base and came up with what would become the Firebird shape, basically an Explorer with rounder edges and a softer shape overall.
Gibson released the Firebird in “reverse-body” format in mid-1963. It was much more successful than the Modernistic series was, although 1960s guitarists still found the shape too radical for their tastes. It was decided in 1965 that the bold Explorer-esque shape was to blame. Gibson designers put the body on the other way around, and the more conventional “non-reverse” body style was born. This was sold from 1965 to 1969, when the Firebird was discontinued altogether.
In 1972 the “reverse” Firebird was reissued. The “non-reverse” body was not reissued, although it was added as a Gibson Custom Shop guitar in 2002.
In the Firebird’s original range there were four models, all unusually named using Roman numerals. The Firebird I had one humbucker pickup and chrome hardware. The Firebird III had two humbuckers, a Gibson Vibrola tailpiece and chrome hardware. The Firebird V was the same as the III, but with a Tune-O-Matic bridge.
The Firebird VII had three humbuckers, a Vibrola tailpiece, a Tune-O-Matic bridge and gold hardware. Later the Firebird XII was added to the range. It was a “non-reverse” shape with 12 strings and two pickups. The pickup options were Gibson’s old-fashioned P-90 singlecoil, humbuckers, or mini-humbuckers.
The “reverse” Firebird is noted for its’ radical shape and the fact that the tuners are on the back of the headstock, hidden from view. The more conventional “non-reverse” shape eschewed both of these traits.
Famous Firebird players include Eric Clapton, Dave Grohl of the Foo Fighters, Johnny Winter and Brian Jones, original lead guitarist for the Rolling Stones. Allen Collins of Lynyrd Skynyrd also used a 1964 Firebird to record the famous solo in Free Bird.
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