Page 5 details three well-known models from Gibson, the fully hollow thinline ES-330TD, the classic ES-175D jazz guitar, and its soon-to-be-deleted sibling, the ES-125CD.
The ES-330TD was described as follows:
A wonderful instrument with truly magical tone. The double cutaway body and thin silhouette make it wonderfully easy to hold and play. The slim neck provides fast, low-action and perfect response. A beautiful guitar in finest curly maple and rosewood; nickel-plated metal parts. Slim, fast, low-action neck joins body at 16th fret. One-piece mahogany neck, adjustable truss rod. Rosewood fingerboard, pearl inlays. Adjustable Tune-O-Matic bridge. Powerful pick-ups with individually adjustable polepieces. Separate tone and volume controls. Three-position toggle switch to activate either or both pick-ups.
The cutaway version of the ES-125, the ES-125C (and its dual pickup equivalent ES-125CD) launched in 1965, but never sold in huge numbers, with final instruments shipping from Gibson's Kalamazoo plant in 1970.
August 1971 UK prices for these guitars were as follows:
code | model | finish | price |
---|---|---|---|
5420/02 | ES-330TDC | Cherry | £294.50 |
5420/05 | ES-330TD | Sunburst | £294.50 |
5421/06 | ES-345TD | Natural | £388 |
5421/05 | ES-345TD | Sunburst | £361.50 |
5410 | ES-125CD | Sunburst | £274.50 |
The suggested cases for the ES-330TD were shaped-case 5906 or (Yamaha) plush-lined case 5992, and shaped-case 5908 for the ES-175D and ES-125CD (see cases, page 44).
$37799
$14995
$9995
$9300
$8000
$6395
$5950
$5300
$4800
$4500
$4495
$4395
$3795
$3249
$2472
£10500
£7600
£7500
£6450
£6085