Gibson RD

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Gibson RD Artist
played by Niclas Engelin (The Halo Effect (band), ex-In Flames)
Gibson RD Artist Bass
played by Katia Taylor (Lullabye Arkestra)

The Gibson RD series solid body electric guitars were launched in 1977. Distinguished by its active electronics (RD is the abbreviation for "research and development"[1]), they were designed to appeal to those interested in synthesizers as well as guitars. An "unhappy marriage of traditional and modern design", the series was unsuccessful,[2] though the concept of the RD was continued for a while in the Les Paul Artist series.

The RD series (guitar and bass) was the result of Gibson's desire to tap into the developing synthesizer market, which was thought to have taken customers away from guitars.[3] The series had longer scale lengths: The guitars came in 25½", which is more commonly found on most Fender guitars and the many instruments inspired by them, as opposed to 24¾", which is more usual for Gibson guitars. The bass guitar in the series had a 34½" scale, as opposed to the 34" which most bassists are familiar with, or the 30½" of other Gibson models. Its maple body was shaped somewhat like Gibson's Firebird and Explorer.[1] Five models were made: the "Artist", "Custom Artist", and "Artist Bass" sported state-of-the-art pre-amplified (active) electronics. At the time Gibson was owned by Norlin, which also owned Moog Music. The active electronics were designed by Bob Moog, shortly before he left Moog Music, and included a compression and expansion circuit.[1] The "Standard" and "Standard Bass" models did not have the active electronics.[1]

RD models

Model demise

References

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