The Jedson Jet, model 4444 was an early 1970s Gibson Les Paul copy built by Matsumoku for UK distributor Dallas Arbiter / Dallas in the early 1970s. It took its name from its jet black finish - the classic look of the Les Paul Custom.
The Jedson Jet was launched in late 1971 with a list price of £66.33. It was described in the 1971/72 Dallas Arbiter catalogue as follows:
The Jet was described as follows in the Dallas Arbiter 71/72 guitar catalogue
Incorporates two high sensitivity, gold plated pickups, each with separate volume and tone controls plus toggle pick up selection switch for further tonal variation. Fast, low action neck with fine tuning gold plated machine heads. Micro tune gold plated bridge provides height adjustment and individual bridge saddle. Jet black gloss finish plus white purfling edges, lead and the outfit includes carrying case.
Matsumoku produced guitars for distributors worldwide and the same guitar had been marketed by other brands from as early as 1968: Aria sold it in Japan as model 5522; whilst in the USA Merson sold it as the Univox 1982 'Rhythm and Blues'. In the UK, Dallas Arbiter competitor Rose-Morris had offered it as the Shaftesbury 3400 since late 1969 - so Dallas were quite late to the game, but the model sold well for both companies.
The Jedson Jet was a good quality instrument. It did not have the high-end appeal of a genuine Gibson (no set neck, no carved top), but was well-built, nicely appointed, and a great-playing guitar, very much better than some of the other Les Paul copies flooding the market in the 1970s. It had a thick solid body with humbuckers made by Maxon - lots of lesser Les Paul copies had thinner semi-hollow bodies and single coil pickups. These differences make for a far better playing instrument, but are not apparent on a first glance. As mentioned, the Jedson Jet was effectively the same guitar as the Shaftesbury 3400, with the same construction, the same hardware, and the same Maxon humbuckers. But there was one big difference: whilst the Jedson had a silk-screened headstock logo, the Shaftesbury had a far nicer pearl inlaid logo. But that's it.
Early seventies Japanese guitars are a mixed bag. Some are clearly way better than others, and Matsumoku-made guitars are certainly some of the best. Matsumoku-built brands like Aria and Univox command a premium, whilst some of the lesser known brands (especially those that are associated with non-Matsumoku guitars too) like Jedson can go for very little money indeed. As vintage guitars go, the Jedson Jet offers exceptional value for money!
£157
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£195
AU $795