Regal Guitar Serial Numbers
More Than You Really Wanted To Know About the Dobro By Ken Brown April 11, 1995 INTRODUCTION: The Dobro as a Misunderstood Stepchild The sixth member of the bluegrass family of instruments (the orphan child that Bill Monroe still refuses to recognize) and the only one invented in America, the dobro is still the least understood. Comments like 'Wow!
It's hard to describe, but what I mean is that the serial number is where they normally go, (on the top of the head stock)but to one side, not centered and only 3 numbers. The lacquer on the serial numbers appears to be the same that is on the rest of the guitar. 8 is the decade of manufacture (8=1980s). 2 or 3 or 4 numerals in center are serial number for year. Numeral y before letter is last digit of year. Last character is body type: D=wood, B=metal. Free download program pocketdate boy crack 2017.
How to hack impero consoledownload free software programs online. Lookit the action on them strings!' Or basic questions like 'Say, how do you tune that thing, anyway?' Indicate the average picker or onlooker doesn't know much about the dobro. And it never fails to surprise me when I find that even seasoned bluegrass veterans (and I'm talking here about folks who have won banjo contests, played in for decades in the top amateur bands, and have worked in the recording studio) don't know very much at all about the dobro, unless they happen to play one (questions like 'Hey! What's that thing?' Are an immediate tip-off). This essay on dobrology will, I hope, fill in some of those knowledge gaps, but most of all may help you, as banjo, guitar, mandolin, bass, or fiddlepickers to interact with those of us who, as Waldo Otto of the Trailblazers likes to say, 'have a metal block.'
And at the end of this essay you'll find a list of recommended readings. Much of this essay is based on those sources, and the rest is based a personal viewpoint that comes from 15 years of opinionated dobro picking. Here we'll discuss such matters as dobro serial numbers, the value of pre-war dobros, how the thing works (ie., a look at the intestines of the dobro), tuning, and proper miking. HISTORY OF THE DOBRO: This Section Not for the Faint of Heart The history of the dobro is a labyrinthine nightmare, one that is only sketchily documented and based on sometimes contradictory sources.
Personally, I wish both you and I could skip this section and go on to the next, but I've got to stick with it. The only undisputed fact seems to be that the dobro was NOT invented by French Canadian fur trappers. As far as I'm concerned, the most definitive source is Wheeler (1990), specifically the chapters on National, Dobro, Valco, Regal, and Mosrite, but other details can be found in King (1991) and Gear (1978). The details given below may seem to be of little intrinsic interest, but they show why it is often impossible to tell how old a given instrument might be. Almost everyone knows that the dobro was developed by the Dopyera brothers (who later Americanized the spelling to 'Dopera'), Czechoslovakian immigrants who came to America in 1908, and that Dobro is an anagram formed from 'DO pyera BRO thers.' All five of the brothers, John, Robert, Rudolph, Louis, and Emil were involved to some extent, though John, Rudy, and Ed (Emil) were most involved in production. But when was the dobro invented?