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August 19, 2004

Favorite Things: The Fender Jaguar Electric Guitar

It can shatter windows or render old people completely deaf with one screaming, extended solo in a minor key.  It was Kurt Cobain's prize guitar, the one he carried from concert to concert and never smashed onstage.  His was a 1966 model.   Mine's a 1965 with sunburst coloring, just like the one in the picture. 

I bought my Fender Jaguar when I was a high-school junior, after having played guitar since second grade.   fender20booksmallThat was in 1980.  It was years before the grunge rockers "rediscovered" the Fender Jaguar.  But its unpopularity didn't matter to me.  It didn't matter that my friends gave my guitar funny looks and asked me why I hadn't bought a Les Paul or a Stratocaster.    I liked it and it sounded good, even if I wasn't a virtuoso.

It cost $350, several months of working as a restaurant cook at $3/hour.  It replaced a Gretsch 12-string that was on loan from a friend of my sister who one day, out of the blue, demanded it back.  I didn't want a 12-string electric guitar anyway.

Since 1980, I've lived in a lot of places, but I've always found a place for my Fender Jaguar.  I've changed amps, and I've played with lots of different people, but I've never changed guitars.

During the days when Kurt Cobain and others were repopularizing the Fender Jaguar, I saw the value of mine triple, then quadruple.  It didn't matter, of course, because I wasn't selling.  Too bad those high-school friends of mine had all scattered to the winds--I didn't get a chance to tell them I told you so.

It's also too bad I became a lawyer and not a rock musician.  But sometimes these things don't work out exactly like we want them to.  I can still pretend I'm a rock musician.  I do it sometimes late in the evening when no one's around, and I'm on my third beer, and the amp's turned up as loud as it will go.  Mine goes all the way to 11.

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Comments

That's pretty cool... I have a wonderful Fender P-Bass ('58) myself, been carting it around from home to home since I saved up to buy it in high school. I'll never sell it, rock star or not.

Excellent. I still have an electric guitar that I bought second-hand when I was in college. An Ovation Deacon. I think it was the only solid-body guitar that Ovation made back then. I stopped playing around the time I started law school (night student with day job -- no time for life). Probably just as well, as I have very little musical talent.

Maybe it's not too late to get back into it. I've read that T-Model Ford didn't learn to play guitar until he was 58.

i have a 72 fender telecaster custom. you might remember it from such rock concerts as The Rolling Stones - Still Life (where Keith Richards used it as a weapon to batter a crazed fan) and Rich Robinson off the '95 Horde tour.

i know what you are saying. it's good to rock sometimes.

I'm another lawyer who had rock star fantasies. In '67 I managed to pick up a used Gibson Les Paul junior (later called the SG model - cherry red woodgrain with double cut away) for $35. It got me through several bands in junior high and high school. My son keeps it in his room now, but I still claim it's mine.

Hello,

Starting on Thanksgiving, at 5 PM (E.S.T.) I will be auctioning off my authentic 1956 Gibson Les Paul TV Junior with its original GA-7 Amplifier, Original Alligator Case and Original Sales Receipt. If interested go to:
"http://www.auntieteee.com/Ebay2004/LesPaul/LesPaulMain.htm"
to view the pre-auction description, history of this set and view the photos. On Thankgiving, go to the bottom of that page and click on the "View my other auctions here!" link to find the auction. Any questions please email me at "sgtbobvila@ameritech.net".

Does anyone know how the switches and pots on a Jaguar work?

I bought my Fender Jaguar when I was a high-school junior, after having played guitar since second grade. That was in 1980. It was years before the grunge rockers "rediscovered" the Fender Jaguar. But its unpopularity didn't matter to me. It didn't matter that my friends gave my guitar funny looks and asked me why I hadn't bought a Les Paul or a Stratocaster. I liked it and it sounded good, even if I wasn't a virtuoso.

Evan, your friends weren't looking funny at the guitar. You were quite the 1965 model, yourself, in 1980.

Right on, Ive got a '65 Jaguar myself. I payed a bit more than you did but they go for a lot more though so I dont feel too bad. God I love it, get it going with a little reverb and Im gone. I think Im gonna be buried with it.

I like those guitars. They are pretty.

When you were in high school, wasn't Elvis Costello at the height of his popularity (during which time he was frequently pictured playing a jazzmaster)?

Other notable Jaguar/Jazzmaster players prior to 1980 include Jonathan Richman and Tom Verlaine.

I love the jaguar so much beacause it was kurt cobains guitar and as a kid i looked up to him.

Hi,
is there any chance to get a scan of the "electric guitar course" book for use on my Jag/JM tribute webpage? (see link)
that would be great! :-)
rock on
Tom

aye, and if it's not too much trouble, you could send them to me as well. so that i don't have to steal them off that man there (;

Ya know....I bought a 66 Jag when in highschool. Carried it completely around the world in the navy got good on it and got to play as lead -in with Fats Domino at the Jersey Shore. Got married and (unbelieveably!!!) sold it to pay the rent frinish college and have a child. Went 20 years crying the blues that I sold it.(And I do mean CRYING!)I paid $275 for it at 8th Street Music in South Philadelphia. Now it's 35 years later and I have re-purchased a 66 AMERICAN Made Jag (are there any others???)exactly like the one I lost (I say lost cause I feel like I really was stupid) Paid $1500 for this one and it's worth every damn penny. Now I'm back and playing in an orchestra. It'sot as fun as a club group but still a ball..........Hope everyone that has one doesn't make the stupid mistake I did.....Rock ON!

When I was in Jr. High in Hollywood, in 1966, I couldn't afford the Fender Jaguar, it was Leo's top of the line, most expensive. I did get a nice Mustang, white with red pickguard. Never played professionally, just a hacker. I'm one of those that saw the cover of The Ventures album and decided, "I want one."

10 years ago, at age 47, I found a beautiful '65 Jag. Bought it, still have it, will never let it go. I love it. I don't play like I used to, having had a stroke rendering the left had a little less than normal, but I can still do a kick ass job on Walk, Don't Run and Pipeline. I play it through a vintage '64 Princeton Reverb which I recently acquired from my best friend who bought in new and was anal about the way he cared for it. Not one speck of dust on the amp, completely original, unbelieveable...and he GAVE it to me because he has Bell's Palsy and paralysis in his left hand and can't play. Now, is that a best friend or what? So now I have two Princeton Reverbs, the vintage and a 68 Silverface. Couldn't afford those back in '66 either, got a Deluxe-non reverb.
Leo, I love you, rest in peace my friend.

Steve Berk
Houston, Texas

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