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G&L Guitars Out of Business
Posted on 10/6/25 at 12:33 pm
Posted on 10/6/25 at 12:33 pm
Looks like they closed the factory late last month and are looking for a buyer. Some speculation Fender is most likely since G&L owns Leo Fenders NIL. Still unclear if the guitar line will continue under new owners. I would also think Fender might want to incorporate some of Leo’s improved bridge designs and his MFD pickups into Fender production guitars. However, I doubt it.
Posted on 10/6/25 at 12:42 pm to SingleMalt1973
quote:
Looks like they closed the factory late last month and are looking for a buyer.
Wonder if they'll take a couple of vintage vehicles and some scrap metal?
Posted on 10/6/25 at 12:45 pm to SingleMalt1973
G&L made good stuff, but I think they killed themselves. Go try to find a guitar shop where you can try a new one out. Not good at getting themselves out there.
MFD pickups are way too hot.
MFD pickups are way too hot.
Posted on 10/6/25 at 1:28 pm to wareaglepete
Definitely did not do a great job of marketing and dealer relations. I like the MFDs in my ASAT Special, I do know bass players say they are way to hot in a bass. I always thought they were the best value for money in used gear.
Posted on 10/6/25 at 1:31 pm to SingleMalt1973
The pickups do sound good, but yeah, on bass there is just no headroom. If you have a really good compressor at the front of your chain, you can compensate for them.
Posted on 10/6/25 at 3:37 pm to SingleMalt1973
That sucks, they made really good guitars. I have an ASAT tribute that's really good, and I got it for cheap several years ago.
Posted on 10/6/25 at 3:38 pm to SingleMalt1973
quote:
Looks like they closed the factory late last month and are looking for a buyer.
Strange. They just announced not very long ago that they were re-releasing the Rampage... the model that Jerry Cantrell made famous.
Posted on 10/6/25 at 9:15 pm to SingleMalt1973
This guy claims he got the last one....
Posted on 10/6/25 at 9:48 pm to beauxgy
I think,he meant it as Last Guitar? I saw the video, and Phil has a great channel if you are into guitars. I think he gives good honest reviews even if the guitar is sent to him by a manufacturer.
Posted on 10/7/25 at 6:47 am to wareaglepete
Im a headstock snob and just can't get past how ugly G&Ls are. It's right up there with Tyler guitars atrocious atrocious headstocks. 
Posted on 10/7/25 at 7:35 am to SingleMalt1973
G&L's biggest problem historically was their inability to effectively tell what could be (have been) American guitar-making's best story, at least in a way that that was able to convert ads, impressions, page views, etc., into actual sales.
If I was the CEO of FMIC, knowing I have the personnel and the ad/marketing budget to work with ... I'd pay whatever reasonable price I could to acquire G&L. What's at stake? Not only the G&L name, but Clarence Leo Fender's name and signature in all forms; rights and usage to every G&L, CLF and/or Leo-owned Music Man patent and IP I could get my hands on; the actual G&L facility (the old pre-CBS plant, down to tooling and Leo's office, untouched since his passing); unfinished prototypes; all of Leo's notes; and the list likely goes on.
First thing I'd do would be to move the Fender Custom Shop and the Fender Museum "back" to the old Fullerton plant. Then I'd execute a MASSIVE ad/marketing/promo campaign telling G&L's "coming home" story and why anyone should care. You'd be surprised how the people who know the story behind the G&L headstocks, MFD pickups, the Dual Fulcrum and Saddle Lock bridges, the PTB circuitry, etc. ... focus on Leo's ingenuity and innovation and reasoning for it, rather than surface cosmetics.
Here's my '96 Legacy. I've owned it longer than any guitar in my playing history. It has my pickups, my preferred wiring circuit, a Fret Shack refret with super jumbos, a trunk and fingerboard conversion from the stock satined poly finish to hand-rubbed Danish oil. I've had people offer me trades worth ten times more my G&L's value, the guitar is just such an incredible example of a S style solidbody. Not for sale. Especially now.
If I was the CEO of FMIC, knowing I have the personnel and the ad/marketing budget to work with ... I'd pay whatever reasonable price I could to acquire G&L. What's at stake? Not only the G&L name, but Clarence Leo Fender's name and signature in all forms; rights and usage to every G&L, CLF and/or Leo-owned Music Man patent and IP I could get my hands on; the actual G&L facility (the old pre-CBS plant, down to tooling and Leo's office, untouched since his passing); unfinished prototypes; all of Leo's notes; and the list likely goes on.
First thing I'd do would be to move the Fender Custom Shop and the Fender Museum "back" to the old Fullerton plant. Then I'd execute a MASSIVE ad/marketing/promo campaign telling G&L's "coming home" story and why anyone should care. You'd be surprised how the people who know the story behind the G&L headstocks, MFD pickups, the Dual Fulcrum and Saddle Lock bridges, the PTB circuitry, etc. ... focus on Leo's ingenuity and innovation and reasoning for it, rather than surface cosmetics.
Here's my '96 Legacy. I've owned it longer than any guitar in my playing history. It has my pickups, my preferred wiring circuit, a Fret Shack refret with super jumbos, a trunk and fingerboard conversion from the stock satined poly finish to hand-rubbed Danish oil. I've had people offer me trades worth ten times more my G&L's value, the guitar is just such an incredible example of a S style solidbody. Not for sale. Especially now.
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