marque " melody guitare " made in Italy

Modérateurs : Benoit de Bretagne, carlos, chloé

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sam de manche
Messages : 119
Inscription : mer. 21 févr. 2007, 13:31
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marque " melody guitare " made in Italy

Message par sam de manche »

vous connaissez cette marque ?
Des infos , des liens ?

Precisement c'est le model 300



merci
Avatar de l’utilisateur
sam de manche
Messages : 119
Inscription : mer. 21 févr. 2007, 13:31
Localisation : drancy

Message par sam de manche »

bon bah apres 3h de recherche infructueuse , je suis tombé la dessus :

auto-reponse :
The Melody company was set up in 1961 in Potenza Picena, a small town only six miles from Recanati. Founding associates were: Stellio Pescetti, Mr Gerio (ex-accountant of the Marinucci company), Giuliano Gurini (formerly of Marinucci), Fernando Piatti (previously of La Clavietta, a subsidiary of Marinucci), and Mr Branko, a Yugoslav citizen who came from Eko (which reminds us of the relationship Eko's founder Oliviero Pigini had with the Slovenian maker Melodija Mengeš back in the 50's). As a whole, a well experienced team in guitar making.

Melody guitars from the sixties first half shared mostly the same hardware, electronics and general design as the early Crucianelli, Welson and especially Bartolini / Gemelli electrics, except that they never had any zero-fret — which was the right thing to do. There were very skilled people in the company. Melody introduced as soon as 1963 a neck adjustment system which was just like the "Micro Tilt Neck" patented by Fender seven years later!

In 1964-65 a powerful shareholder joined the company, Oliviero Pigini and his Eko group, who were looking for additional production capacities. Mr Branko stepped back. Melody became for all practical purposes an Eko subsidiary. Melody instruments were rebadged with an Eko logo, then the company manufactured virtually only Eko products. From 1969 on the Melody name was sporadically revived as a sub-brand of Eko to liquidate inventories of unsold instruments.

Finally, Eko withdrew in 1972 from the company's capital. Independent again, Melody dedicated itself to developing models of its own, mainly flat top acoustics that show a very strong and very logical influence from Eko. Then the electrics evolved more and more towards perfect copies of Gibson and Fender models, just like Gherson was doing at the same time.

Ironically, Melody managed to survive longer than its ex-parent company Eko. Following Eko's demise in 1983 its production manager Remo Serrangeli joined Melody, which remained in activity until 1988. If it was not for the long gap of 1964 through 1972, one could say that Melody was Italy's longest living guitar making company in modern times.

Ps: vous pouvez effacer ce post si inutil
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