Gold Tone Representative, Marc Horowitz:
"In
1963, I was a junior in high school. I was consumed then (as now) with
all things banjo. I was playing a Seeger-style longneck Bacon banjo, but
I’d recently become aware that what I needed for Bluegrass was a
MASTERTONE. In those days, there was no “vintage” craze; the banjos from
the 1930s (only thirty years before) were just, well… used banjos. Some
players had one, some didn’t. Many of the big Bluegrass names (Scruggs,
Reno, Crowe etc.) had pre-war banjos, but some others (Alan Shelton for
example) played a contemporary bowtie banjo.
I decided that
THAT’S what I would get. My father liberated some of my bar mitzvah
money and off I went to Roger Sprung’s place to buy a bowtie Mastertone.
I was over the moon! I practiced hard and made the rapid progress you
achieve when you acquire a professional-grade instrument. While this was
going on, the mystique of the “pre-war” Mastertones was coming onto
every picker’s radar. Suddenly, EVERYONE wanted a nineteen-thirties
banjo! The race was on, and I fell for the legend. When a friend offered
to sell me his 1926 RB-5, I made it happen; I sold the bowtie.
Fast
forward to around ten years ago. I was musing one day about all of the
banjos that had passed through my hands over the previous four decades. I
fondly remembered that first Mastertone bowtie I had bought new in
1963. I wondered what I would think of one of those now, if I found one.
I’d learned a lot about banjo setup over the past forty years. Maybe I
could get one of these and optimized it for today’s styles of playing.
It's
worth mentioning that while a pre-war banjo was thirty to forty years
old back in the sixties, a bowtie Mastertone from '63 is now SIXTY years
old! I located a mint condition '63 and bought it. After I finished
setting it up it was... WOW. I still have it. I found more examples and
bought, fixed up and resold them to eager buyers. Today, a clean early
sixties bowtie brings five to six thousand dollars, and they sell
quickly. These are great banjos.
Since the success of Gold
Tone’s OB-3 Twanger, we were kicking around ideas for the next tribute
banjo when the bowtie banjos of 1960 to mid-1964 were brought up. This
was when the bowtie was at its peak of quality. A unique nineteen-hole
flathead tone ring (versus the previous twenty-hole version) was used
during this time. The banjos were built in Kalamazoo by some of the same
people that worked there in the thirties, and the tone rings were still
cast by the same foundry that made them back before The War. A full
thickness rim and nickel-plated hardware were still used as well.
With
those specs in mind, we set about creating a worthy modern evocation of
this great old banjo: the Gold Tone OB-2 Bowtie. The feature set
closely adheres to the original banjo: mahogany neck and maple
resonator, a beautiful golden sunburst finish and even a nineteen-hole
flathead tone ring. Updated features include superb quality Gotoh
machine heads, the renowned Snuffy Smith bridge, a Presto-style
tailpiece and dual coordinator rods for precise adjustment.
From our hands to yours, the value is superb and the tone and playability are amazing. Enjoy!"