Fender / Telecaster, Jeff Buckley Owned / 1983 / Butterscotch / Guitar

SOLD...

Jeff Buckley's guitar... Yes, We were selling Jeff Buckley's Telecaster, the one he used throughout his short performing and recording life. The guitar was owned by a close friend of Jeff's who sadly needs to sell it. With all proof and paperwork.

 

Read more about this Jeff's Telecaster here: 

http://www.vintageandrare.com/blog/2011/04/jeff-buckley-fender-telecaster-1983-for-sale/

 

This was just featured in Guitar World Magazine.

When we lose a favorite artist, there's an amazing feeling of loss that takes place -- like losing a family member or friend.

That's because the artist seems to know your deepest feelings, seems to share with you their own inner-life.

I think for most of you, and for me, music and musicians seem to resonate the most and will always resonate our core in the deepest, most intimate way.

Jeff Buckley, who passed away way too soon, has been gone for almost 15 years. Fifteen years! And yet his music, fame and popularity is larger than at anytime during his life, with two (two!) movies being filmed as we speak, all kinds of re-mastered box sets of his recording out and new fans discovering him every day.

Which brings me to the real point of this missive: I'm holding his guitar, and it's for sale at my shop.

Jeff used to stop by my store once in a while, get something adjusted, buy strings, kick my cat, etc. Nice guy, and I was a big fan of his father, Tim Buckley. Funny -- I don't ever remember talking to him about his dad ...

Normally, I speak to everyone as if I've known them for years; you'd think I'd be all over him. I guess it didn't feel right at the time, and I knew just enough of the story to think it was kinda sad, anyway. I just knew him as an up-and-coming singer/songwriter with a semi-famous father ...

I also remember the day I was told he was gone -- how shocked, saddened and, well, pissed off at the universe I was ... I mean, What the Fuck?!! With all the little shits runnin' around the world today, why do we always seem to lose the good young ones with somethin' to say?

Anyway, time goes by and I'm visited by a person I know through a mutual friend, and this person has a guitar case. In it was Jeff's famous Tele. Now, this is not a particularly pleasant meeting. The owner of the Tele, who, by the way, always owned the guitar and lent it to Jeff early on and only got it back after Jeff's memorial service, loved Jeff and did not want to sell the guitar. Sadly, money these days is hard to come by, and the person had no choice.

Now, guitars, icons on their own, take on a deep resonance when owned and used by a musician who has touched your center. This particular Tele, an '83 Standard, is one of those guitars. To me, someone whose main focus has been the instruments of the earlier half of the 20th century, an '83 Telecaster is nothing special. This one, however, has resonance, especially for someone who knew the young man and his music.

American Standard Fenders, along with better Ibanez guitars, less expensive Gibsons, etc., helped define the sound emanating from downtown New York and Brooklyn back in the '90s. For a whole generation of kids whose older brothers and sisters played and listened to this music, these are the guitars they want now that they've grown up.

This particular guitar, the Tele with the mirror pickguard that Jeff Buckley used to record "Hallelujah," is gonna go for around $50K, I think. Trust me, Jeff is shakin' his head and laughin' his ass off right about now.

"Remember," he'd say. "I never paid a dime for the fuckin' thing!"

 

 

Instrument sold

Chelsea Guitars, USA  

Contact name:
Dan Courtenay
Brands:
A lot! - Vintage specialty and Home of the Chelsea Hotelecaster
Languages:
English
Specialties:
Vintage & Boutique
Opening hours:

If you love old, classic guitars you owe it to yourself to check this place out. The place is tiny; basically what you see in the display window is most of what they got. Go inside and it's like dropping in to a friend's apartment, albeit a tiny apt. But it's cool; Dan and whoever else is there are just hanging out. If you need help, they're glad to do it but if you just want to hang, they'll give you space. They let me put a lot of time in with the guitar that I eventually bought and also let me play an incredibly expensive guitar just so I could see what it felt like.

But what I really like is that they're just regular, no BS kinda people who obviously love old guitars for their character. Some of what they've got is collector-level expensive but I bought an awesome Japanese tele copy at a really reasonable price. So whatever

We are also home of the Chelsea Hotelecaster - Telecasters made out of civil war era pine from the legendary Chelsea hotel NYC. Made by our resident luthier Dean Gordon.

More info at https://www.deangordonguitars.com/

chelseaguitars@gmail.com

Phone +1 (212) 675-4993

Address 220 W 23rd St, New York, NY, 10011-2301

chelseaguitars@gmail.com

Phone +1 (212) 675-4993

Address 220 W 23rd St, New York, NY, 10011-2301

5-10% restocking fees apply to our sales. 

 
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