Original Fender
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Fender 1962 Stratocaster Fiesta Red Original $63,490.41 |
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VINTAGE NEAR MINT 1957 FENDER STRATOCASTER – 100% ORIGINAL – 60+ PHOTOS $44,999.99 |
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1962 Fender Stratocaster Fiesta Red Original $41,268.21 |
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1961 Fender Stratocaster PRE CBS All original, Slab board $26,900.00 |
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1965 Fender Stratocaster Sunburst ALL ORIGINAL with Case $25,000.00 |
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1966 FENDER STRATOCASTER Guitar Vintage Candy Apple red Original Near mint!!! $23,995.00 |
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1957 FENDER TELECASTER WHITE BLONDE ORIGINAL AS THEY COME $22,999.99 |
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THE CLEANEST 1962 62 FENDER JAZZ BASS ON PLANET EARTH! ORIGINAL VINTAGE! INSANE! $19,950.00 |
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1958 Fender Precision Bass Blonde Ash Body Rare Original $19,841.25 |
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ORIGINAL VINTAGE 1965 FENDER STRATOCASTER ELECTRIC GUITAR W/ HARD CASE $19,000.00 |
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Ford : DELUXE COUPE 1940 FORD COUPE VERY NICE SOLID ORIGINAL FORD BODY W/NOS FENDERS PROJECT CAR $18,500.00 |
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THE CLEANEST 1960 FENDER PRECISION BASS ON PLANET EARTH ORIGINAL VINTAGE INSANE! $18,500.00 |
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Mercedes-Benz : SL-Class 280 1971 Mercedes 280SL Auto, A/C, NO RESERVE, Original Floors & Fender Spot Welds $18,100.00 |
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Original 1959 Fender Stratocaster 12/ 59 STRAT OHSC $17,275.00 |
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Original 1964 Fender Custom Telecaster $16,000.00 |
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1960 Fender Jazz Bass ALL ORIGINAL $16,000.00 |
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1962 Vintage Fender Jazzmaster Original Burgundy Mist Original Gold Hardware 62 $15,995.00 |
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Fender Rosewood Telecaster 1968 – 1969 Vintage Original Tele $14,999.00 |
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SWEET VINTAGE 1963 FENDER STRATOCASTER SUNBURST BEAUTY STRAT ALL ORIGINAL EX+ $14,488.99 |
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1962 FENDER STRATOCASTER ORIGINAL OLYMPIC WHITE $14,284.11 |
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All Original 63′-64′ Fender Jazz Bass- One Owner- Pre CBS # L25579 $14,100.00 |
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1964 VINTAGE FENDER JAZZMASTER GUITAR FIESTA RED OHSC 1 OWNER ALL ORIGINAL $13,995.00 |
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1953 Fender Precision Bass Original Pre CBS $13,900.00 |
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1953 Fender Telecaster Tele MINT restoration ORIGINAL ! $12,500.53 |
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1957 FENDER P-BASS ALL ORIGINAL $12,250.00 |
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20th Century Masters: Millennium Collection (Jewl) $2.55 The 20th Century Masters series is the best-selling single-artist line in music history and is being re-released by Universal Music Enterprises (UMe) in its ground-breaking, environmentally-friendly packaging format. A first for the music industry, the standard package (both sleeve and tray) will be completely paper-recyclable, continuing the company’s long-standing commitment to being “green.”To … |
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Music By Ry Cooder $9.24 Ostensibly a collection of Cooder’s film music, the two-CD Music by Ry Cooder delivers the cinematic quality of a good soundtrack album but packs the kind of ferocious jams–featuring crack players such as John Hiatt, Jim Keltner, David Lindley, and Jim Dickinson–that you’ll never hear on a John Williams score. Cooder’s melancholy acoustic and electric-slide moans are a constant, though the mater… |
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Lone Star: Original Soundtrack From The Film $16.98 Writer-director John Sayles’s complex, adult mystery delves deeply into borders at myriad levels, a theme echoed beautifully in this collection of country, blues, norteño, R&B, and folk songs that appear as source cues in the film. Sayles’s hand in picking them is evident in terms of both quality and thematic resonance: in a telling gesture, Ivory Joe Hunter’s mournful “Since I Met You Baby” is a… |
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Fender Original Telecaster String Guide Nickel $6.92 Allparts Org Tele String Guide NK… |
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Original Sears Craftsman Husqvarna Part # 170139X421 FENDER.CRD $265.33 Original Sears Craftsman Husqvarna Part # 170139X421 FENDER.CRD… |
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Original Sears Craftsman Husqvarna Part # 169465X603 FENDER.PNT.L $73.23 Original Sears Craftsman Husqvarna Part # 169465X603 FENDER.PNT.L… |
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Strat’ed for Cash $1.99 … |
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Strat’ed for Cash [HD] $2.99 … |
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Leo Fender’s Telecaster: Original Twang $29.99 … |
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HTC My Touch myTouch 3G with Google 2 Magic Battery SAPP160 1340mAh $1.50 OEM HTC 1,340mAh Lithium-Ion battery suitable for T-Mobile myTouch 3G and HTC Magic. Keep an extra battery handy at home, at work or in your travel bag. OEM HTC battery ensures your phone works at optimum performance and reliability. HTC model no. SAPP160. HTC part no. 35H00119-00M. Talk and standby times are estimates and vary depending on user habits, features activated, accessories connected, a… |
My dad has an original 70’s Fender Stratocaster?
I am just wondering on behalf of him are the originals really worth a lot of money. It’s in excellent condition with an ash body and rosewood fingerboard. He doesn’t want to sell but he is interested in how much it’s worth.
I am just wondering on behalf of him are the originals really worth a lot of money. It’s in excellent condition with an ash body and rosewood fingerboard. He doesn’t want to sell but he is interested in how much it’s worth. It is definitely an original – he bought it in the 70’s.
Some of the earlier fenders are worth a mint as pointed out by several of the people on here, I know one sold on ebay a couple of months ago for £2,700 but it was signed by Hank Marvin it wasn’t his guitar just his signature. However I did have a good laff at gorillaz very witty answer jump on it to make sure it was an original like mastercard…….Priceless…..lmao

Perhaps one of the most famous and best known names in the world of electric guitars is that of Fender, and it was in 1946 that Clarence Leonidas Fender, usually referred to simply as Leo Fender, created the design for the first electric guitar to have a solid body, and a pickup that worked through the use of a single magnet. Originally a radio repairman who also created amplifiers for instruments, Fender’s design was originally named the Esquire, and was a significant step away from the guitars of the time, as they were still hollow body designs, and generally used more for jazz. Fender’s Esquire was immediately popular with the country and western performers, especially in California.
Originally using just a single magnetic pickup, Fender later developed a two pickup version which was originally named the Broadcaster, but when it was later discovered that a drum set manufactured by Gretsch had a name which was very similar (Broadkaster) Fender decided to change the name of his two pickup electric guitar and so the Telecaster was born. As the names of these instruments suggests, this was during the dawn of television, when the western world was waking up to a new phenomenon.
Leo Fender’s Telecaster was essentially a solid body guitar made from ash, with a maple neck. The neck of the telecaster was available as either a 21 or a 22 fret version, and this was attached to the ash body using four bolts, with extra strength gained through the use of a steel neck plate. The pickups were two single coils, positioned at both the bridge and the neck of the guitar, and the Telecaster came with two adjustments for both volume and tone. Additionally, the performer could select which pickup or combination to use through the inclusion of a switch. A jack fitted onto the body of the guitar for direct output to the amplifier added to the amount of cabling and wiring embedded in the guitar, and a black pickguard, manufactured from Bakelite, was included to hide the wiring and cables from view.
Although it is sometimes believed that manufacturing a guitar with a solid body in a single piece of wood, including the neck, Leo Fender did not pursue this idea, and the Telecaster had a bolt on neck for a very good reason. It was Fender’s belief that creating a guitar in this modular fashion allowed for improved consistency in manufacturing techniques, as well as providing a much easier way of mending or repairing the guitar later in its life. It is partly for this reason that today it is possible to find a very rare example of what is dubbed a ‘nocaster’. This is because the creation of these modular guitars was occurring at the same time as the clash of names between the Broadcaster and Broadkaster brands. The modular parts of the guitar were made, and the Fender logo attached, but no model name – as this was in dispute. The very early examples still have Broadcaster stamped on them, and of course later models had telecaster, but a few very rare examples were caught in between, and have no model on them – and these now fetch a very high price if you can find one!
It was seven years after Fender first created his Esquire model that he developed the Stratocaster, which offered a wide range of improvements and technical advancements over the Telecaster. The body design was created from either ash or alder, with the wood very well dried beforehand, and the body shape was a double cutaway creating a very distinctive visual style, as well as providing very comfortable body contours for holding the guitar. An integrated mechanism was created to provide a vibrato effect, named a synchronized tremolo by Fender – a misnomer that has caused no end of confusion ever since, since tremolo and vibrato are quite different – one being volume, the other a rapid pitch change; unfortunately Fender chose the wrong name, but it has stuck ever since! The Stratocaster also included three single coil pickups.
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