Wow, some of those are really surprising, particularly Tobias basses -- I always assumed they were independent. Interesting.
Did you know that these are all daugther-companies of Gibson? There's definitely more to the company than 335, LP, SG and Robot guitars!
Cakewalk
Cerwin-Vega
Dobro
Epiphone
Esoteric
Integra
Kramer
KRK Systems
Maestro
Onkyo
Stanton
Steinberger
TASCAM
TEAC Corporation
Tobias
The Law of Gravity is nonsense. No such law exists. If I think I float, and you think I float, then it happens.
Master Guitar Academy - I also teach via SKYPE.
Wow, some of those are really surprising, particularly Tobias basses -- I always assumed they were independent. Interesting.
Guitars: Gibson LP Studio, MIA Fender Precision, Carvin C350Originally Posted by Spudman
Amps: Genz Benz Shuttle 6.0 + Avatar B212 / Genzler 12-3, Acoustic B20
Pedals: Pod HD500X, Diamond Compressor, Tech 21 VT Bass, Sonic Research Turbo Tuner
That's interesting and I am surprised about some of the brands being part of Gibson. BUT, I asked myself immediately how many of them are still active/doing prosperous business - Kramer? Tascam? Onkyo? I believe Fender bought more cleverly with Jackson, Charvel and Gretsch....
"A lot of people in the industry want to blame downloading for the state of the business. But I think if most music wasn't shit to begin with people wouldn't be downloading it for free," - Corey Taylor (Slipknot)
The Law of Gravity is nonsense. No such law exists. If I think I float, and you think I float, then it happens.
Master Guitar Academy - I also teach via SKYPE.
Wow. That's quite some turn over I'd say.
"A lot of people in the industry want to blame downloading for the state of the business. But I think if most music wasn't shit to begin with people wouldn't be downloading it for free," - Corey Taylor (Slipknot)
Interesting.
One wonders when and how these were acquired, and with what goals?
Active participation in management?
Product design cross-pollination?
Consolidation in the music business?
Argh... too many questions!
Less golf, more saxophone