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SHAFTESBURY | 3400 | 1971 3400

1971 Shaftesbury 3400 electric solid body

Japanese Les Paul copy built by Matsumoku for UK distributor Rose Morris

This page has extra content in the Supporting Members area, including additional images, video content, circuit diagram and scratchplate tracing. If you are a supporting member you can access this here

Shatesbury was a house brand of UK musical instrument distributor Rose-Morris, who were based in Shaftesbury Avenue - the beating heart of London's music scene; an area then full of music shops, venues, music publishers etc. Model 3400 sold in the United Kingdom between 1969 and 1975, though in reality most seem to have been sold in the first two or three years of the seventies. It was certainly a popular model. At this time there was exceptional demand for Les Paul styled guitars, but a real dearth of instruments matching the brief. The Shaftesbury 'Les Paul' was produced by Japanese manufacturer Matsumoku who were certainly establishing a reputation for very playable, but not too expensive guitars.

Although Matsumoku made variations of this guitar for different distributors worldwide, the Shaftesbury 3400 was emulating the 'Black Beauty' - a Les Paul Custom, with its black finish and contrasting gold hardware. True, it didn't have a set neck, carved top, or split diamond headstock inlays, but it was pretty well built, with a solid body, inlaid headstock logo, pearl block markers and humbucking pickups. Early Japanese guitars are often viewed as entry level instruments, but this was an intermediate not budget guitar, retailing at about 1/5 - 1/6 the price of the (very expensive) Les Paul Custom. In June 1971, the Shaftesbury 3400 was listed at £69.50, but the Les Paul Custom had risen to £403 - according to Hansard, the average weekly wage for men over 21 years of age was just £28.

1971 Shaftesbury 3400, front
1971 Shaftesbury 3400, back
Model: 1971 Shaftesbury 3400
Manufacturer: Matsumoku (Matsumoto, Japan)
Pickups: Two humbuckers
Controls: 2 volume and 2 tone controls, three-way pickup selector switch.
Scale: 24 3/4"
Body: Length 17 1/4", width 12 3/4", depth 1 3/4" at edge, rising to 2" in the middle. Three-ply bound front and back
Neck: Bolt on. Rosewood fretboard with eight pearloid block inlays. Three-ply binding. 22 frets. Width at nut 43.6mm (approx 1 23/32").
Hardware: gold plated throughout.
Weight: 4.20kg

Prior to 1970, the vast majority of Matsumoku-built solid bodies were not copies of other guitars. Matsumoku designs, although not especially outlandish, could not be described as derivative of existing models. The unfulfilled demand for Les Pauls, particularly in the UK, seems to have been the tipping point into Matsumoku producing copies of Fender, Gibson and other models over the next few years.

Model 3400 was a substantial instrument with a similar weight and feel to the Gibson it was emulating. This example weighs a shade under 4.2kg - pretty heavy as electric guitars go! The neck shape is pretty comfortable and comparatively wide: width at nut of 43.6mm. These characteristics help produce an easy-playing and great sounding guitar. There is a lot of love for the Shaftesbury 3400, especially from those who had them in the 1979s as first or second guitars.

Although it doesn't have a hand-carved top like the Gibson, the top is arched. This is achieved by fixing a small 1/4" thick plate just beneath the bridge and tailpiece, with a separate laminate cap above that. The arch is created by bending the top over this raised section. Consequently there is a slight air gap below the top visible from within the bridge pickup route.

1971 Shaftesbury 3400

Available specifications for this guitar are fairly limited, with little information published by Rose-Morris, Matsumoku, or indeed the other distributors that sold (effectively) the same model. The fretboard is rosewood, but the body and neck woods are currently unknow.

Model 3400 was described as follows in the 1970 Rose-Morris 'Exciting Electrics • Wonderful Westerns • Celebrated Classics' guitar catalogue

Solid body with contoured top, finished overall in black polyester with white purfled edges. Detachable neck incorporating adjustable truss rod. Rosewood fingerboard with Pearloid position markers and white bound edges. Individual, all-metal covered machine heads. Two pickup units with separate polepieces. Two volume and tone controls plus pick up selector switch. All–metal bridge with individual string adjustment saddles. Polished black plastic finger plate. The all-metal covered machine heads and other metal fittings are gold plated

1971 Shaftesbury 3400 humbucking pickups

Model 3400 was equipped with dual humbuckers, each with a gold-plated cover. Some other Matsumoku 'Les Paul' guitars were given other pickups, notably the Univox U1983 'the Mother'.

1971 Shaftesbury 3400 bridge and tailpiece

This guitar is fitted with a Gibson-style stop tailpiece and HTF bridge - both gold plated.

The earliest examples of the Shaftesbury 3400 (most likely all Matsumoku Les Pauls) were fitted with pickups with just two height adjustment screws. In very late 1970 or very early 1971 this changed to three, as seen here. This allows adjustment of pickup angle as well as height, and is a feature of most Matsumoku Gibson-copies throughout the decade: Les Pauls, SGs, Flying Vs etc; aswell as some Epiphone guitars: EA-255, ET-290 etc - effectively all guitars using these pickups.


1971 Shaftesbury 3400 neck plate

The neck plate of Matsumoku guitars of this period typically contains the text (in larger font) "STEEL ADJUSTABLE NECK", sometimes "MADE IN JAPAN" and a seven digit serial number.

1971 Shaftesbury 3400 control knobs

Just about all Matsumoku guitars of the late 1960s and early 1970s were equipped with the same metal-capped Matsumoku control knobs; gold to match the other hardware.

1971 Shaftesbury 3400 headstock front

The headstock has five-ply binding and a pearl "Shaftesbury" logo. Some early examples of the 3400 had a larger logo filling the entire width of the headstock. Note the "open-book" headstock profile - this is still some years before the famous Gibson lawsuit which defined headstock shape as a protected Gibson feature.

The two-ply truss rod cover is the same size as fitted to other Matsumoku guitars of the time: 54mm x 32mm.

1971 Shaftesbury 3400 headstock reverse

Gold plated tuning keys. The original Rose-Morris model code / serial number label is still present. Whilst the Matsumoku serial number on the neckplate (above) was allocated during the guitars production in Japan, this label will have been applied by Rose-Morris in the UK. The serial number is 71073: all guitars examined to date start with numbers 70 or 71; it is tempting to believe that this relates to a year, with this guitar being the 73rd instrument of 1971. Although conjecture at this stage, this theory does, so far, seem to fit.

1971 Shaftesbury 3400 headstock logo detail

The real mother-of-pearl Shaftesbury logo has flashes of green and pink that do not appear well in photographs, but set the Shafesbury 3400 above some other equivalent models (such as the Jedson 4444 Jet with silk-screen logo or Aria 5522 with headstock badge).

1971 Shaftesbury 3400 with case

1971 Shaftesbury 3400 'supporting members' content

Extra content on this guitar is included in our Supporting Members area here

  • extra images (with description): large detailed images including body routes, circuitry, components
  • Detailed wiring diagram
  • Pickguard tracings (PDF for accurate printing)
Got an opinion on the contents of this page? Disagree with something written above? Please comment

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1965 Gretsch catalogThe 1965 Gretsch catalog, or catalog #32, featured 10 hollow body electric guitars, including the newly launched Gretsch Viking; four solid body electrics, including the Astro Jet - making it's only catalog appearance; just one bass, the single pickup PX6070; nine acoustics and 12 tube amplifiers. Pride of place went to the Chet Atkins Country Gentleman that adorned both the front and back covers. 24 pages, six of which are in full color.

Guitar Repair: fixing fret buzz and sharp fret ends

Guitar Repair: fixing fret buzz and sharp fret endsLoose frets are especially problematic in certain old guitars, but are generally very easy to fix. You'll be amazed at the difference you can make with just a few tools, a bit of knowledge, and a little time. Fixing loose frets can eliminate fret buzz, remove sharp fret ends, and greatly improve the tone of any guitar. If your luthier bill will be greater than the value of your guitar, definitely time to have a go yourself!

1966 Hagstrom 'worlds fastest playing neck' catalog (Merson USA)

1966 Hagstrom guitar catalogHagstrom guitars were distributed in the mid-1960s United States by Merson of USA. This eight page 'worlds fastest playing neck' catalog, printed in two-colors contained six solid body electrics, three solid body basses, two electric acoustic guitars, two electric acoustic basses and five acoustics.

1965 Hofner President

1965 Hofner PresidentThe President was produced by Hofner in Bubenreuth, Germany, specifically for Selmer, who distributed the brand in the United Kingdom, Australia, New Zealand, South Africa, and other commonwealth nations. The President was a hollow body electric acoustic, available as a full body or thinline, and with blonde or brunette finish. It was a great playing guitar that sold fairly well in the second half of the 1950s, throughout the 1960s, and into the very early 1970s. The example shown here is a full-body depth guitar in blonde - and as a 1965 guitar, one of the last to feature the rounded Venetian cutaway. From late 1965 until 1972, the President sported a sharp Florentine cut. Naturally, such an electric acoustic suggests jazz and blues, but many of the original British Hofner President players were part of the rock 'n roll, skiffle and beat scenes of the late 50s and early 60s.

1963 1964 Fender catalog

Fender 1963 catalogue"The Choice of Professional and Student Musicians Everywhere" This eight page catalogue was included as an insert in the 1963 annual "school music" issue of Downbeat magazine (September 1963). As well as keyboards and pedal steels, this catalog contains seven guitars, three basses and ten amplifiers - from student guitars such as the Musicmaster and Duotone to professional models like the new Jaguar.