The Exact George Harrison Model
This "top dog" of the Chet Atkins models weighs just 8.00 lbs. and and has a nut width of just under 1 11/16 inches and a scale length of 24 1/2 inches (like all of the Chet Atkins models). Laminated maple body with two fake (painted) f-holes with no white border, three-piece rock maple neck, and ebony fretboard with 22 frets plus zero fret and neo-classic inlaid pearl thumbprint (half-moon) position markers. Four-ply (white/black/white/black) binding on the top and the back of the guitar and single binding on the headstock and the fretboard. Headstock with inlaid pearl Gretsch "T-roof" logo and "The Chet Atkins Country Gentleman 68135" gold nameplate. Individual Grover Imperial tuners with stairstep metal buttons. Two Gretsch patent-number Filter'Tron pickups with gold plastic surrounds and balanced outputs of 3.89k and 3.88k. Gold Lucite pickguard with Gretsch "T-roof" logo engraved in black from underneath. Two volume controls (one for each pickup) plus a three-way stand-by switch on the lower treble bout, one master volume control on the upper treble bout, plus two three-way selector switches (one pickup and one tone) on the upper bass bout. The potentiometers are stamped "134 6147" (Centralab November 1961). Gretsch "Arrow-through-G" knobs with cross-hatch pattern on sides. Two individual string dampers with the original black sponge pads, the rectangular holes for the dampers lined with red felt, and two string damper controls with red felt pads. Gold-plated bar bridge on the original rosewood base and gold-plated V-cutout B-6 Bigsby ("Gretsch by Bigsby") vibrato tailpiece. All hardware gold-plated. Original black imitation leather pad with gold trim and eight push-button fasteners on the back of the guitar. This guitar is in near mint (9.25) condition. There is a little bit of playing wear on the back of the neck behind the fourth and the eighth fret, and a tiny amount of finish checking, but the gold plating is bright and fresh and this guitar has all of the features of the George Harrison model. Housed in the original Gretsch two-tone gray hardshell case with five latches and with burgundy plush lining (9.00).
"In [1958 in] the tradition of the Western-appointed Models 6120 and 6121, Gretsch continued its New York-to-Nashville connection by introducing the Model 6122 Country Gentleman, bringing to four (the Model 6119 Tennessean was also debuted this year) the number of Atkins-inspired and endorsed models. The Country Gentleman was the grand marque of the Chet Atkins line; at a prodigious $525 it ranked only behind the White Falcons in price. Finished in 'rich, mahogany-grained, country-style finish' the [single cutaway] Country Gentleman features a closed, 17-inch-wide, 2 3/4-inch-deep hollowbody design...The introduction of the Electrotone Hollowbody in 1962 led to the singularly most successful guitar ever produced by Gretsch the double cutaway Country Gentleman. Influenced primarily by Beatle George Harrison's use of the model, Gent sales soared...Like the 1962 and '63 White Falcons, the features of the first two years' double-cutaway Country Gentlemen are identical and the model itself is sometimes referred to among collectors as the 'Harrison' model because George Harrison did, in fact, use a 1962 or '63 Model 6122. The characteristics that distinguish the Harrison model from subsequent (1964 and on) versions are: Grover Imperial tuners [ with 'stairstep' buttons], two Filter'Tron pickups, a pickguard that only says 'Gretsch' and not 'Country Gentleman', a very dark-brown mahogany finish, and red felt pads under the double muffler switches...The 1965 catalog presented the Country Gentleman on its cover and this represents the third incarnation of the model. Produced in 1964, '65 and '66, it differs from the 1962 and '63 Harrison model in the following ways: the Grover Imperial tuning machines are replaced with Grover tuners with kidney-shaped buttons in 1964; the headstock nameplate no longer carries the guitar's serial number beginning in late-1965 with the introduction of coded serial numbers imprinted on the back of the headstock; a Super'Tron II pickup replaces the rhythm Filter'Tron in 1964; black felt pads appear beneath the two muffler switches in early 1965" (Jay Scott, The Guitars of the Fred Gretsch Company, pp. 180-190).
"Gretsch Country Gentleman: When The Beatles started getting more and more famous, George switched to this splendid guitar. According to himself, you can hear George playing on it for the first time on 'She Loves you'. In 1965, sadly enough, the instrument feIl to pieces on one of the band's tours. On February 19th, 1964, the group played on the famous Ed Sullivan Show. Especially for that show, George received his second Country Gentleman from the factory. The manufacturers saw it all very cleverly, judging by the considerable production-increase of the Gretsch Country Gentleman that followed: up to a hundred guitars a day. The Country Gentleman was a curious guitar with a large, closed body. The guitar's f-holes were painted on" (George Harrison part 1, George the G[u]itarist, THE BEATLES HOME PAGE (NEDERLANDS TALIG) at http://home.quicknet.nl/mw/prive/boslibos/george_harrison_e.htm).