By the time this guitar was built, the Shaftesbury 3400 had been in production for several years, with the first examples arriving in Britain in the Summer of 1969. Shaftesbury was a house-brand of UK distributor Rose-Morris, who were based in London's Shaftesbury Avenue (hence the name), and the 3400 (a copy of Gibson's Les Paul Custom) was built by Matsumoku in Japan. But Matsumoku supplied numerous distributors worldwide, and effectively the same guitar was also sold as the Aria 5522, Univox "Rhythm and Blues" U1982, and in the UK, the Jedson Jet 4444 (distributed by Dallas Arbiter).
Accurate dating of early 1970s Matsumoku-built guitars is not always easy. Although these were allocated a serial number during assembly, there is no known system of dating these guitars from that - although they are (to some extent) sequential. Furthermore, the Japanese potentiometers used hold no date codes either. This guitar, however, does have date codes on its Maxon-brand pickups. 13106 signifies a pickup production date of February 6th 1973. No doubt this guitar was assembled over the next few weeks / months in early-mid 1973.
As mentioned above, importation of model 3400 began in 1969, and probably ran to about 1974, though Rose-Morris may still have had it in stock for some time beyond this. Over the five year production period, there were some minor refinements to the design. The very earliest guitars (approx. 1969 - early 1971) were notable for their larger headstock logo, and two-adjustment screw pickups. Circa 1971-72 the logo decreased in size, and pickups changed to three-screw mounting (see a 1971 Shaftesbury 3400. Later guitars, (late 1972/early 1973 onwards) like the example on this page are equipped with a bolt-through tailpiece, and a new design pickguard. There is one other very subtle change that occurred over this time, although invisible without disassembling the guitar: the neck pocket length changes by about 3mm, thanks to the absence/presence of a strip of wood between the neck pickup route and the heel. The 1971 guitar mentioned above does not have this, whilst this 1973 example does, as do other 1972/73 Jedson guitars examined. Whether this is a deliberate change or an idiosyncrasy of an individual guitar is currently unclear. However the presence of this strip results in a 3mm longer guitar. It also means that swapping necks between older / newer bodies can be problematic!
The Shaftesbury 3400 was a substantial instrument not dissimilar in weight and feel to a Gibson Les Paul. This example weighs 4.19kg - pretty heavy as electric guitars go. The neck is comfortable and comparatively wide: width at nut of 43.4mm. Of course looks and weight are not everything and there are big differences in terms of construction to a Gibson: no set neck, no carved maple top, and without the legendary Gibson pickups, but if you could not afford a Gibson Les Paul in 1973, this was probably the next best thing. It is certainly a step up from many of the similar looking guitars available at the time from other Japanese manufacturers.
The Shaftesbury 3400 was equipped with two Maxon humbuckers with gold-plated covers, long since worn away in this guitar (and most others!).
This guitar has the second pickguard style fitted to model 3400 - compare this guitar to a 1971 Shaftesbury 3400.
Although the pickups are pretty much stripped of their gold plating, the HTF bridge and tailpiece have fared much better. This tailpiece has a bolt-through design, and differs from the more traditional wrap around tailpiece fitted to earlier examples of this guitar.
One original part very often missing on these guitars is the two-ply plastic jack plate. They are somewhat fragile (this one has very small cracks around the jack itself) and break quite easily.
Almost all guitars built in the Matsumoku factory between the late 1960s and early 1970s were shipped with these metal-capped control knobs, either in black, silver, or as seen here gold.
The pickup selector switch is gold plated (though somewhat worn) with no plastic tip. Like most guitars with this style switch it allows neck pickup only (up), both pickups (middle), bridge pickup (down).
Shaftesbury 3400 headstock front with "Shaftesbury" logo with five-ply binding. Note the "open-book" headstock profile - this is a traditional Gibson feature, and was the basis behind the famous lawsuit which (a few years later) ended the direct copying of so many of their instruments.
Headstock reverse with gold plated closed gear tuning keys.
The pearl inlaid Shaftesbury headstock logo sets this guitar apart from some of the other 'Les Paul' type guitars produced by Matsumoku at this time - compare with the Jedson Jet for example.
Extra content on this guitar is included in the Supporting Members area here
£193
£27
£27
£375
£450
€500
£420
£400
£465
£32