fbpx
Wikipedia

Burns London

Burns Guitars London is an English manufacturer of electric guitars and bass guitars, founded by Alice Louise Farrell (1908–1993) and James Ormston (Jim) Burns (1925–1998) in 1959. The company was first named "Burns-Weill", then renamed "Ormston Burns Ltd". At its peak, in the 1960s, it was the most successful guitar company in England.[2]

Burns London
Company typePrivate
IndustryMusical instrument
Founded1959; 65 years ago (1959)
FounderJames Ormston Burns and Alice Louise Farrell
Headquarters,
Area served
Worldwide
Key people
Lee Anderton[1]
ProductsElectric guitars
Bass guitars
WebsiteBurnsguitar.com

Ormston Burns Ltd. was bought up by Baldwin Piano Company in 1965, and the company was renamed "Baldwin-Burns".[3] Burns guitars were reintroduced in 1991[2] under the name "Burns London", and the product line now includes a collector's edition of the first model the company produced.

History edit

 
A 1962 Burns Vista Sonic, with the "Wild Dog" tone setting (missing original finish)

Jim Burns set out to make, in his own words, "mass produced one-offs", such as the Marvin, a radical take on the Stratocaster style with many more differences than it is generally credited with The Bison, now considered as a classic, combined fewer Fender influences with a shorter scale length of 25 inches, and the "Wild Dog" electronics, allowing the high-output Tri-Sonic pickups to be selected in many different, and sometimes unusual, combinations. Burns had a proprietary vibrato system, which was used also on Gretsch guitars.[4]

 
Shortscale Jazz Guitar
 
Detail of Shortscale Jazz Guitar

The original guitars made many showbiz friends, and were seen in the hands of some high-profile performers of the time, such as Elvis Presley, Hank Marvin[5] and Jimmy Page,[6] and were quite popular since they were much cheaper than US brands such as Fender and Gibson, helped also by import tariffs that made it expensive to buy US-made guitars in Britain.

Jim Burns' first commercial foray into electric guitar making came in 1958 when he designed and built the "Ike Isaacs Short Scale Model" for the Supersound Company. The timing of the establishment of Burns London was perfect with the British guitar market experiencing a huge boom, in part thanks to the popularity of British pop bands like the Shadows, and again thanks to the high tariffs on US-made goods. The US brand Ampeg imported British-made Burns guitars for a short time prior to the Baldwin takeover. Apart from the pickguard badge ('Ampeg by Burns of London') these were exactly the same as their British counterparts.[7]

Burns manufactured guitar amplifiers as well; the Jimi Hendrix Experience acquired a few small 30-watt amps in 1966, but desired "big clout, you know, big amplifiers", according to Mitch Mitchell.[8]

Despite the good times for guitar sales, Ormston Burns Ltd. was sold in 1965 to the Baldwin Piano and Organ Company of Cincinnati for the price of $380,000, small money in comparison to the $13 million paid at the time for Fender (where Baldwin were outbid by CBS).[9] The company was renamed Baldwin-Burns (latterly Baldwin) and released three amplifiers at the June 1965 NAMM Convention.[3] Collectors insist that the Baldwin-era instruments were somehow inferior to those produced before the takeover, but with the exception of some newly-introduced models, the quality standards on models like the Marvin, Jazz Guitar and Shadows bass remained consistent, with only minor cosmetic differences and the Baldwin badge to distinguish them from the Burns-branded era of production. For a short time, existing stock was rebadged (initially as 'Baldwin-Burns', then simply 'Baldwin') by the simple expedient of inserting a routed nameplate into the pickguard, from which the earlier Burns routing had been excised. This practise did not last long, and original Baldwin pickguards appeared shortly afterwards, identical to the Burns originals save for the Baldwin routing. Other commercially-driven changes included the replacement of the elaborate, carved scroll head (seen on earlier versions of the Marvin, Virginian and others) with a simpler design, and a standardised neck began to appear on most models around 1967, consisting of this 'flat' scroll head and a bound fingerboard. Towards the end of the 1960s, Baldwin took the decision to concentrate on the Gretsch range of guitars and drums which they had acquired in 1967, and the Baldwin guitar brand was wound down, with production coming to an end in 1970.[10]

Burns Guitars from 1970–1983 edit

 
Burns Flyte, a popular glam rock guitar with Mach One Humbuster pickups

While the original Burns guitar line ended in 1970, Jim Burns never quite stopped working on his creations. Several attempts were made to revive the Burns name, in between projects with entirely new companies. In 1966, Jim Burns, unable to use the Burns name, started a new company called Ormston, formed initially to market a range of pedal steel guitars made by Denley. In 1968, just before Ormston shut its doors also, Jim Burns created an original guitar which later became a prototype for the Hayman range, which came about after being hired by the Dallas-Arbiter Organisation to work on a new range of guitars under the name of Hayman. The line lasted from 1969 to 1973, and enjoyed a fair share of popularity.

During the '70s, two more attempts were made at resurrecting the Burns guitar line. Again, due to the agreement with Baldwin, the Burns name could not be used, so the first attempt was named "Burns UK", and the second called "Jim Burns Actualizers Ltd."

Burns UK (1974-77) edit

 
The 1977 release of the simpler LJ24 with new Mach Two pickups came too late to save Burns UK

"Burns UK" appeared in 1974 and lasted until 1977.[9] Burns UK guitars were manufactured close to Newcastle upon Tyne in Jim Burns' native north east. Only one guitar model sold well, The Flyte, which was originally to be named the Conchorde, after the supersonic plane, because of its shape. Its design proved popular among glam rock performers of the time, such as Slade and Marc Bolan.[11] Despite their unconventional design (which often added to the production cost), the guitars had a rather conventional sound, and again Burns ceased to produce guitars—but not before of few examples of the Burns Mirage, the successor to the Flyte, had been produced.

Jim Burns Actualizers Ltd. (1979–1983) edit

Jim Burns Actualizers Ltd. was established in 1979 at Littleport near Ely in Cambridgeshire, and lasted another four years, into 1983, and produced some more recognisably "Burns" guitars. These were the Steer, Scorpion, Magpie and Bandit. There was also the first attempt to recreate the Bison and Marvin in updated form. [12] The Burns Steer, a semi-acoustic altered to reduce feedback, was popularized by singer Billy Bragg. A variant of the Scorpion was produced for Chris Stein of Blondie in very small numbers.

Burns London Ltd. edit

After Jim Burns Ltd, no more Burns guitars appeared on the market until 1992, when the company was restarted by Barry Gibson, who employed Jim Burns as a consultant in the company.[13] The original idea was to manufacture handmade replicas of famous Burns guitars from previous incarnations, such as the Marvin and the Nu-Sonic; Gaz Coombes of Supergrass played a reissue of the Bison.[5] Later on, in 1999, the company began work on a budget line called the Club Series, outsourcing production to Korea. The Club Series became the first Burns guitars ever to be manufactured outside of Britain, but the original Burns design ethics, construction and style didn't suffer as a result, with the range exploding in popularity throughout the following years. The Club Series expanded quickly, many Jim Burns-designed guitars constructed from 1960 to 1983 receiving its own budget model, such as the Marquee which was a budget version of The Marvin, the Steer (most famously played by Billy Bragg, the London Steer being a copy of a Steer guitar built and given to Billy by Jim Burns many years ago), the Bison and even the Barracuda six-string bass/baritone model. Newer designs have begun to emerge in the last few years, usually building upon the designs of the '60s originals, such as the Batwing, a Marquee with a Bison-style headstock. Burns also worked with Queen guitarist Brian May to produce a copy of May's Red Special guitar (which uses Burns Tri-Sonic pickups), and this model was awarded "Best Electric Guitar of the Year 2001" by Guitarist magazine.[14]

An even cheaper range (manufactured in China) has emerged with two new models, the Cobra and the Nu-Sonic. The Cobra is the closest Burns have come to a straight copy in its lifetime. The body is that of a Stratocaster, but the model retains the sectioned pickguard, Tri-Sonic pickups and (shrunken) batwing headstock common to other Burns guitars. Meanwhile, the Nu-Sonic borrows the name of an original Burns guitar, and resembles more the Fender Telecaster, albeit with a distinctly different pickup setup with two Tri-Sonics and a bridge humbucker borrowing directly from the Steer. As well as the pickups, it also retains the shrunken batwing headstock of its cousin, as well as a German carve around the front edge of the guitar.

Notes edit

  1. ^ ""It was never my intention to try and mislead anyone": Lee Anderton responds to Victory Amps ownership questions". Guitar.com. Retrieved 5 November 2023.
  2. ^ a b Bacon, Tony (2012). "British Makers: Jim Burns". The Ultimate Guitar Sourcebook. MBI. pp. 142–43. ISBN 9781610588423.
  3. ^ a b "Baldwin Buys Firm". Billboard. 23 October 1965. p. 6. Retrieved 10 April 2015.
  4. ^ Hunter, Dave (2014). Guitar Amps and Effects For Dummies. Wiley. p. 108. ISBN 9781118900000.
  5. ^ a b Bennett, Joe (2002). Guitar Facts. Hal Leonard. p. 25. ISBN 9780634051920.
  6. ^ Day, pp. 84–87
  7. ^ Day, p. 33
  8. ^ Shapiro, Harry; Glebbeek, Caesar (1995). Jimi Hendrix: Electric Gypsy. St. Martin's Press. p. 683. ISBN 9780312130626.
  9. ^ a b Gjörde, p. 35
  10. ^ Day, p. 36
  11. ^ Gjörde, p. 47
  12. ^ Gjörde, pp. 50–54
  13. ^ Gjörde, p. 55
  14. ^ Gjörde, pp. 62–63

References edit

  • Day, Paul (1979). The Burns Book. pp Publishing.
  • Gjörde, Per (2001). Pearls and Crazy Diamonds. Göteborg, Sweden: Addit Information AB.

External links edit

  • Official website  

burns, london, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, november, 20. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Burns London news newspapers books scholar JSTOR November 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Burns Guitars London is an English manufacturer of electric guitars and bass guitars founded by Alice Louise Farrell 1908 1993 and James Ormston Jim Burns 1925 1998 in 1959 The company was first named Burns Weill then renamed Ormston Burns Ltd At its peak in the 1960s it was the most successful guitar company in England 2 Burns LondonCompany typePrivateIndustryMusical instrumentFounded1959 65 years ago 1959 FounderJames Ormston Burns and Alice Louise FarrellHeadquartersLondon EnglandArea servedWorldwideKey peopleLee Anderton 1 ProductsElectric guitarsBass guitarsWebsiteBurnsguitar comOrmston Burns Ltd was bought up by Baldwin Piano Company in 1965 and the company was renamed Baldwin Burns 3 Burns guitars were reintroduced in 1991 2 under the name Burns London and the product line now includes a collector s edition of the first model the company produced Contents 1 History 2 Burns Guitars from 1970 1983 2 1 Burns UK 1974 77 2 2 Jim Burns Actualizers Ltd 1979 1983 3 Burns London Ltd 4 Notes 5 References 6 External linksHistory edit nbsp A 1962 Burns Vista Sonic with the Wild Dog tone setting missing original finish Jim Burns set out to make in his own words mass produced one offs such as the Marvin a radical take on the Stratocaster style with many more differences than it is generally credited with The Bison now considered as a classic combined fewer Fender influences with a shorter scale length of 25 inches and the Wild Dog electronics allowing the high output Tri Sonic pickups to be selected in many different and sometimes unusual combinations Burns had a proprietary vibrato system which was used also on Gretsch guitars 4 nbsp Shortscale Jazz Guitar nbsp Detail of Shortscale Jazz GuitarThe original guitars made many showbiz friends and were seen in the hands of some high profile performers of the time such as Elvis Presley Hank Marvin 5 and Jimmy Page 6 and were quite popular since they were much cheaper than US brands such as Fender and Gibson helped also by import tariffs that made it expensive to buy US made guitars in Britain Jim Burns first commercial foray into electric guitar making came in 1958 when he designed and built the Ike Isaacs Short Scale Model for the Supersound Company The timing of the establishment of Burns London was perfect with the British guitar market experiencing a huge boom in part thanks to the popularity of British pop bands like the Shadows and again thanks to the high tariffs on US made goods The US brand Ampeg imported British made Burns guitars for a short time prior to the Baldwin takeover Apart from the pickguard badge Ampeg by Burns of London these were exactly the same as their British counterparts 7 Burns manufactured guitar amplifiers as well the Jimi Hendrix Experience acquired a few small 30 watt amps in 1966 but desired big clout you know big amplifiers according to Mitch Mitchell 8 Despite the good times for guitar sales Ormston Burns Ltd was sold in 1965 to the Baldwin Piano and Organ Company of Cincinnati for the price of 380 000 small money in comparison to the 13 million paid at the time for Fender where Baldwin were outbid by CBS 9 The company was renamed Baldwin Burns latterly Baldwin and released three amplifiers at the June 1965 NAMM Convention 3 Collectors insist that the Baldwin era instruments were somehow inferior to those produced before the takeover but with the exception of some newly introduced models the quality standards on models like the Marvin Jazz Guitar and Shadows bass remained consistent with only minor cosmetic differences and the Baldwin badge to distinguish them from the Burns branded era of production For a short time existing stock was rebadged initially as Baldwin Burns then simply Baldwin by the simple expedient of inserting a routed nameplate into the pickguard from which the earlier Burns routing had been excised This practise did not last long and original Baldwin pickguards appeared shortly afterwards identical to the Burns originals save for the Baldwin routing Other commercially driven changes included the replacement of the elaborate carved scroll head seen on earlier versions of the Marvin Virginian and others with a simpler design and a standardised neck began to appear on most models around 1967 consisting of this flat scroll head and a bound fingerboard Towards the end of the 1960s Baldwin took the decision to concentrate on the Gretsch range of guitars and drums which they had acquired in 1967 and the Baldwin guitar brand was wound down with production coming to an end in 1970 10 Burns Guitars from 1970 1983 edit nbsp Burns Flyte a popular glam rock guitar with Mach One Humbuster pickupsWhile the original Burns guitar line ended in 1970 Jim Burns never quite stopped working on his creations Several attempts were made to revive the Burns name in between projects with entirely new companies In 1966 Jim Burns unable to use the Burns name started a new company called Ormston formed initially to market a range of pedal steel guitars made by Denley In 1968 just before Ormston shut its doors also Jim Burns created an original guitar which later became a prototype for the Hayman range which came about after being hired by the Dallas Arbiter Organisation to work on a new range of guitars under the name of Hayman The line lasted from 1969 to 1973 and enjoyed a fair share of popularity During the 70s two more attempts were made at resurrecting the Burns guitar line Again due to the agreement with Baldwin the Burns name could not be used so the first attempt was named Burns UK and the second called Jim Burns Actualizers Ltd Burns UK 1974 77 edit nbsp The 1977 release of the simpler LJ24 with new Mach Two pickups came too late to save Burns UK Burns UK appeared in 1974 and lasted until 1977 9 Burns UK guitars were manufactured close to Newcastle upon Tyne in Jim Burns native north east Only one guitar model sold well The Flyte which was originally to be named the Conchorde after the supersonic plane because of its shape Its design proved popular among glam rock performers of the time such as Slade and Marc Bolan 11 Despite their unconventional design which often added to the production cost the guitars had a rather conventional sound and again Burns ceased to produce guitars but not before of few examples of the Burns Mirage the successor to the Flyte had been produced Jim Burns Actualizers Ltd 1979 1983 edit Jim Burns Actualizers Ltd was established in 1979 at Littleport near Ely in Cambridgeshire and lasted another four years into 1983 and produced some more recognisably Burns guitars These were the Steer Scorpion Magpie and Bandit There was also the first attempt to recreate the Bison and Marvin in updated form 12 The Burns Steer a semi acoustic altered to reduce feedback was popularized by singer Billy Bragg A variant of the Scorpion was produced for Chris Stein of Blondie in very small numbers Burns London Ltd editAfter Jim Burns Ltd no more Burns guitars appeared on the market until 1992 when the company was restarted by Barry Gibson who employed Jim Burns as a consultant in the company 13 The original idea was to manufacture handmade replicas of famous Burns guitars from previous incarnations such as the Marvin and the Nu Sonic Gaz Coombes of Supergrass played a reissue of the Bison 5 Later on in 1999 the company began work on a budget line called the Club Series outsourcing production to Korea The Club Series became the first Burns guitars ever to be manufactured outside of Britain but the original Burns design ethics construction and style didn t suffer as a result with the range exploding in popularity throughout the following years The Club Series expanded quickly many Jim Burns designed guitars constructed from 1960 to 1983 receiving its own budget model such as the Marquee which was a budget version of The Marvin the Steer most famously played by Billy Bragg the London Steer being a copy of a Steer guitar built and given to Billy by Jim Burns many years ago the Bison and even the Barracuda six string bass baritone model Newer designs have begun to emerge in the last few years usually building upon the designs of the 60s originals such as the Batwing a Marquee with a Bison style headstock Burns also worked with Queen guitarist Brian May to produce a copy of May s Red Special guitar which uses Burns Tri Sonic pickups and this model was awarded Best Electric Guitar of the Year 2001 by Guitarist magazine 14 An even cheaper range manufactured in China has emerged with two new models the Cobra and the Nu Sonic The Cobra is the closest Burns have come to a straight copy in its lifetime The body is that of a Stratocaster but the model retains the sectioned pickguard Tri Sonic pickups and shrunken batwing headstock common to other Burns guitars Meanwhile the Nu Sonic borrows the name of an original Burns guitar and resembles more the Fender Telecaster albeit with a distinctly different pickup setup with two Tri Sonics and a bridge humbucker borrowing directly from the Steer As well as the pickups it also retains the shrunken batwing headstock of its cousin as well as a German carve around the front edge of the guitar Notes edit It was never my intention to try and mislead anyone Lee Anderton responds to Victory Amps ownership questions Guitar com Retrieved 5 November 2023 a b Bacon Tony 2012 British Makers Jim Burns The Ultimate Guitar Sourcebook MBI pp 142 43 ISBN 9781610588423 a b Baldwin Buys Firm Billboard 23 October 1965 p 6 Retrieved 10 April 2015 Hunter Dave 2014 Guitar Amps and Effects For Dummies Wiley p 108 ISBN 9781118900000 a b Bennett Joe 2002 Guitar Facts Hal Leonard p 25 ISBN 9780634051920 Day pp 84 87 Day p 33 Shapiro Harry Glebbeek Caesar 1995 Jimi Hendrix Electric Gypsy St Martin s Press p 683 ISBN 9780312130626 a b Gjorde p 35 Day p 36 Gjorde p 47 Gjorde pp 50 54 Gjorde p 55 Gjorde pp 62 63References editDay Paul 1979 The Burns Book pp Publishing Gjorde Per 2001 Pearls and Crazy Diamonds Goteborg Sweden Addit Information AB External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Burns guitars Official website nbsp Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Burns London amp oldid 1209686164, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.