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Gibson The Paul

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The Paul
ManufacturerGibson
Period1978 – 1982 (The Paul)
1981 - 1984 (Firebrand)
Construction
Body typeSolid Walnut (Mahogany 82-84)
Neck jointSet
Scale24.75 in (629 mm)
Woods
BodyWalnut
NeckWalnut
Fretboard22 fret - Ebony
Hardware
BridgeTune-O-Matic
Pickup(s)2 T-tops

The Paul is an electric guitar made by Gibson, manufactured from 1978 to the 1980s.

History and design

The Paul Standard had a single sharp cutaway Les Paul-style walnut body, set walnut neck, 22-fret ebony fingerboard with pearl dot inlays, walnut headstock overlay with gold Gibson logo (1978-1981), three-per-side tuners, tune-o-matic bridge, stop tailpiece, two exposed humbucker pickups, four knobs (two v, two tone), three-way pickup switch, chrome hardware, available in Natural Walnut finish, 24.75 in. scale, 1.6875 in. nut width, mfg. 1978-1982. It included such high end items as the Grover tuning keys and the Tune-O-Matic bridge. Affectionately called by some, "The Coffee Table Burst" because of its natural finish[1].

The Paul Deluxe (Firebrand) is similar to The Paul Standard, except it has a mahogany body and three-piece mahogany neck, available in Antique Natural, Ebony (1985–86), Natural Mahogany, or Wine Red (1985–86) finish, mfg. 1980-86. A standard Gibson logo branded into the headstock in the deluxe model.

In 1996, the model was resurrected with the Paul II, with a mahogany body and carved top like a Les Paul Studio instead of the flat top of prior models of The Paul The body is 2/3 as thick as a normal Les Paul and features a rear belly cut as well. In 1998 The Paul II was replaced by The Paul SL, itself discontinued in 1999.