Murph Guitars

User avatar
brutus
Top Producer
Posts: 562
Joined: Sun Jun 08, 2008 8:05 pm
Location: IOWACITY IA.
Contact:

Murph Guitars

Postby brutus » Tue Nov 16, 2010 10:31 pm

http://www.murphguitars.com/Murph_Gallery.html
Anyone know about these? Seems to be a contemporary of Mosrite. Made in California also.

User avatar
Sarah93003
Master Contributor
Posts: 3810
Joined: Tue Mar 10, 2009 4:26 pm
Location: Westlake Village, CA
Contact:

Re: Murph Guitars

Postby Sarah93003 » Tue Nov 16, 2010 11:12 pm

The blue ones are called Smurphs. ;)
____________________
1965 Mosrite Celebrity Prototype with Vibramute
1972 Mosrite Celebrity-III
1977 Gibson MK-53
1982 Fender Bullet
1994 Gretsch Streamliner G3155 Custom
2005 Gibson Les Paul Standard Plus
2006 Jude Les Paul 12 String

User avatar
Veenture
Master Contributor
Posts: 4127
Joined: Sat Jan 03, 2009 12:07 pm
Location: The Netherlands
Contact:

Re: Murph Guitars

Postby Veenture » Wed Nov 17, 2010 12:13 am

A very clever 12-string headstock configuration with the pegs placed in such a way. Have a look, I certainly haven't seen that before on any 12 :shock:

jfine
Top Producer
Posts: 391
Joined: Sun Nov 08, 2009 2:41 am
Location: Vallejo, CA and Springfield, OH
Contact:

Re: Murph Guitars

Postby jfine » Wed Nov 17, 2010 2:41 am

Those were made in Southern California in the 60's by (I think his name was Pat) Murphy. There was a good article on them in Vintage Guitar magazine a while back. In 1977 I was playing with a country singer who had a booth at FanFair in Nashville (now known as CMA FanFest) that year, and right next to our booth was Jimmy Bryant's booth. Wow! As Jimmy was (and still is, although he's gone now) one of my favorite players, you can imagine that I was really looking forward to meeting him. He never came by the booth (I guess he was having some health problems), but running the booth was his wife, Pat, who turned out to be the daughter of the aforementioned Mr. Murphy who built Murph guitars. A very nice lady, and she was tickled to find out that I actually knew about Murph guitars--one of the stores in San Francisco got one when I was a teenager in the '60's, so I'd actually tried one. Pat said that she and her siblings had a family band, and that her dad started out making guitars for them.

User avatar
Sarah93003
Master Contributor
Posts: 3810
Joined: Tue Mar 10, 2009 4:26 pm
Location: Westlake Village, CA
Contact:

Re: Murph Guitars

Postby Sarah93003 » Wed Nov 17, 2010 8:16 am

After reading the History page it's quite interesting to see the similarities between the Murph and Mosrite companies. Surprisingly the Murph company made a lot of different models. Our own Deke Dickerson owned at least one of them for a while. It would be very interesting to know how these play and sound compared to Mosrite. I wonder if Fender was the "giant" that put the pressure on the company.

They are pretty neat guitars all in all. I've never heard of them before.
____________________
1965 Mosrite Celebrity Prototype with Vibramute
1972 Mosrite Celebrity-III
1977 Gibson MK-53
1982 Fender Bullet
1994 Gretsch Streamliner G3155 Custom
2005 Gibson Les Paul Standard Plus
2006 Jude Les Paul 12 String

User avatar
brutus
Top Producer
Posts: 562
Joined: Sun Jun 08, 2008 8:05 pm
Location: IOWACITY IA.
Contact:

Re: Murph Guitars

Postby brutus » Wed Nov 17, 2010 8:33 am

I find them appealing in the same way as Mosrite, although I don't think Murph had the quite the talent of Semi I can appreciate his little guy verses the giant story line.
They look cool would love to get a hands on review. Plus they made amps!
Hey Veenture i think that 12 string head is a Ricky idea (The Byrds )

User avatar
Veenture
Master Contributor
Posts: 4127
Joined: Sat Jan 03, 2009 12:07 pm
Location: The Netherlands
Contact:

Re: Murph Guitars

Postby Veenture » Wed Nov 17, 2010 10:05 am

brutus wrote:Hey Veenture i think that 12 string head is a Ricky idea (The Byrds )
Ah, yes Brutus, good to know!

.....................................Image
Here he is, Roger McGuinn with his trusty ol' 'jangling machine'

"For many who hear the name Roger McGuinn, the first thing that comes to mind is that unmistakable Rickenbacker 12-string guitar. Roger has been associated with that guitar since his earliest days as a member of The Byrds, a group that was influenced by George Harrison and another groundbreaking British band, the Searchers. Although McGuinn has played other electric guitars over the years, and is also known as an acoustic folk artist of considerable magnitude, he still remains the undisputed king of the Rick 12"

User avatar
Dennisthe Menace
Moderator
Posts: 4981
Joined: Mon May 05, 2008 8:40 pm
Location: Ft Lauderdale Florida
Contact:

Re: Murph Guitars

Postby Dennisthe Menace » Wed Nov 17, 2010 10:06 am

Nice find Brutus!! I never knew that Murph had that many guitar and bass models available not to mention
the 9 or 10 amps that were available. And for Deke to find ANOTHER one, this time a 12 string 'Satellite' complete
with the special built guitar stand and brochures,,,,well Deke, you hit another home run!! ;)
Sarah I think you are right about the offset body thing with Fender. But what I would like to find out is this.........
It's mentioned that 'No other guitar design influences are apparent in the heart shaped instrument-so how DID the
design come into being?' And they mentioned that they were pretty sure that the Satellite was designed by Murphy himself.
My question is did Murphy really design that shape himself, or could it be possible that he subblimally thought he
designed an original after seeing the 'Hallmark Swept Wing??' :shock:
make the Mos' of it, choose the 'rite stuff.
.........Owner of 9 Mosrites...
.....proud owner and documented:
1963 "the Ventures" Model s/n #0038
http://www.thevintagerockproject.com/

User avatar
rynaro
Top Producer
Posts: 201
Joined: Wed Apr 15, 2009 9:03 pm
Location: Melbourne, Australia
Contact:

Re: Murph Guitars

Postby rynaro » Sat Nov 20, 2010 5:21 am

WOW they are cool guitarz
i have a Murph trem on my Tym Guitar... Tim said he bought 20 NOS Murph trems years ago (when i got the sweptwing) i never knew who murph was until now.
-Ryan
Tym Sweeping Wing Jr #Z0094 (murph trem & mastery bridge)/ Tym vibratone #A0080 (jag trem/pickups)>Heaps of pedals>Vox AC15HW
http://www.facebook.com/tenderbones
https://tenderbones.bandcamp.com
http://ryanlhumphreys.bandcamp.com

User avatar
TerryTNM
Top Producer
Posts: 353
Joined: Thu Jan 22, 2009 2:34 pm
Location: Nashville, TN
Contact:

Re: Murph Guitars

Postby TerryTNM » Sun Nov 21, 2010 9:43 am

Deke and Murph (on the right) came by my shop back in 2002 for a visit. The guy in the middle, I'm sorry to say I can't remember his name, came over from Australia for the most part to meet Deke and Murph. He is an historian of the Murph guitars and wanted to meet Murph first hand. I've tried to connect with him a couple of times but with no luck. Haven't had any contact with Murph since then either. Maybe Deke can fill in more information about this photo.

I put the year at 2002 because that's was the date generated by the photo properties but it might be later than that.

Image


Return to “Other Instruments, Equipment, Accessories & Projects”

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 50 guests