The Hohner Zambezi was a guitar only briefly available from around from mid 1961 until perhaps mid 62. It was one of Hohner London's first electric guitars; made in London, but one that would disappear as quickly as it arrived. By the summer of 1962, Hohner had focused their efforts on the distribution of Kay guitars, imported from America from America. It was available with a stop tailpiece, or, as shown here, a Fenton Weill vibrato.
Hohner were an absolutely huge player in the musical instrument market of the 1950s and 60s, but their speciality was very much in harmonicas, accordions and keyboards. Of course with the rise of the electric guitars at this time, it is no surprise that the company would attempt to grab a slice of the pie. The United Kingdom subsidiary, Hohner London commissioned a number of early models, debuting in 1960 (Hohner Kingsway, Hohner Holborn) and 1961 (Hohner Apache, Zambezi and Amazon, and Ambasso bass). The '61 models were built in the United Kingdom by Fenton Weill in Acton, London, and like many guitar lines, were designed to follow a "good / better / best" approach, with the Hohner Zambesi, or model 333, taking the middle position.
How it got the name Zambesi is not clear. Perhaps after the river; it was, after all, launched alongside the Hohner Amazon. But the instrumental track Apache was an absolutely massive hit for the Shadows in 1960, and Zambezi (note different spelling) was an equally massive song of the time.
These were actually very nicely made guitars, especially for a British built instrument in the very early 1960s. The Zambesi had a nice mahogany body and set mahogany neck, with a thin sycamore veneer to the front and back. There is no truss rod adjustment, but the neck is suitably thick that it doesn't feel like it would move anyway! These are actually very playable guitars, certainly a notch above most other British solid bodies of the period.
They are very much of their time though, having a floating bridge and no easy pickup adjustment. It may seem peculiar today, but at this point, there was still no consensus on every aspect of guitar design. The Hohner Zambesi demonstrated this fact in requiring a 'midget' output jack (1/8" or 3.5mm). The rigid neck and raised neck profile, whilst totally functional, do feel a little 'odd' in comparison to modern guitars. Fenton-Weill would certainly have benefited from studying some of the guitars available from their competitors at the time, specifically in terms of adjustability.
The Zambesi was described as follows in advertising (May 1961):
So the May 1961 launch price of the Zambesi was 45 gns (£47 5s). In comparison, the UK price of the Vox Ace was 37 gns (£38 17s), the Vox Escort 65 gns (£68 5s) and the Fender Stratocaster £125.
The Zambezi is equipped with a floating (ebony?) bridge and Fenton-Weill vibrato. Pickups are mounted to the single ply black perspex scratchplate.
The three way pickup selector switch has a tall red, cover, unfortunately snapped off in this example. Controls are a volume for each pickup and a master tone.
1961 Hohner Zambesi reverse headstock detail with open gear Van Ghent tuning keys
Subscribe to the vintageguitarandbass youtube channel for more vintage guitar and bass demos. Also, check out the other Hohner Zambesi videos (different amps, different settings) in the supporting members area.
Find out more about these instruments here: 1961 Hohner Zambesi, 1965 Vox AC4
This is a really interesting early British guitar, and nicely built, with electronics by Fenton Weill, and woodwork by furniture manufacturer Stuart Darkins. It sounds pretty dark, with a fat woody tone - in part the result of it's solid mahogany body and set mahogany neck - far more like an early Gibson than an early Fender. The neck is deep and solid - and doesn't feel like it could move much - there is no adjustable truss rod. In fact there isn't much adjustability at all - the pickup height is set, and the floating bridge requires manual placement. But despite all this, it is a very playable guitar! And it works well with this mid-sixties Vox AC4. Great guitar (despite some hardware peculiarities), great amp!
There is a much longer video of this guitar exploring more settings from this guitar / amp in the vintageguitarandbass supporting members area here.
Recorded here with a Heil PR-40 (left channel) and a Shure SM57 (right channel), through a Focusrite Scarlett 2i2 interface - highly recommended gear!
Extra content on this guitar is included in our Supporting Members area here
£1250