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'The Red Special' is the affectionate name for  Brian May's distinctive guitar which he made by hand with his  father in the early 1960's. It is undoubtedly one of the most  famous guitars in the world, and has a number of unusual features  which give it it's unique sound. 
  
  The photographs below are all of a reproduction Red Special,  purchased from Brian May Guitars in 2016 (the BMG Special), while  the details are mostly taken from the 'Brian May's Red Special'  2014 book, co-written by Brian. My knowledge of guitars is very  limited, so if you have any corrections, please email me.
The guitar was hand-crafted by Brian and his  father Harold, beginning in August 1963. It took two years to  complete, and Brian's first public performance with it was in  1966. The guitar is known by a number of names, most commonly the  Red Special, the Fireplace, or the Old Lady. 
  
  The guitar is notable for using a number of household objects in  it's construction. The neck of the guitar is made from a hundred  year old fireplace, with matchsticks used to fill worm holes,  while the centre body is from an old oak table. The tremelo  system itself is unique, and features a hardened-steel knife  edge, with two British Norton motorbike valve springs to provide  tension. The tremelo arm was made from a push bike saddlebag  support, with the tip from a knitting needle. The fret markers  have a bespoke arrangement and were crafted from mother of pearl  buttons. 
  
  The unique sound of the Red Special partly comes from the pick-up  arrangement, which features the three pick-ups wired together in  series, rather than in parallel, while each one also has it's own  on/off and reversal switch. This means that any combination of  pick-ups can be in use at the same time, so the guitar is capable  of producing a much wider range of sounds. It was also  intentionally designed to produce feedback, which is an essential  part of Brian's guitar solos.
  
  Over the years, a number of replicas and reproduction models have  been produced. The first was made by John Birch, as a back-up for  live performances, and features in the promo videos for 'We Will  Rock You' and 'Spread Your Wings' (as Brian didn't want to expose  the original to snow). This is noticeably different as it was  made out of maple and is a much lighter colour. At some point,  Brian destroyed it, then had it repaired some 20 years later and  still owns it. 
  
  The first commercially available models were manufactured by  Guild Guitars from 1983 to 1985 (known as BHM-1) and 1993-1995,  and a further model was produced by Burns Guitars in 2001, with  guidance from Brian. Brian May Guitars is now, unsuprisingly, the  only authorised manufacturer, and models are available in a  variety of colours. The BMG Special is aimed at budget players,  while the BMG Super is aimed at enthusiasts. The company also  produces a left handed version, a bass guitar, a ukulele, and an  acoustic guitar (the Rhapsody). 
  
  Brian's original guitar was restored between 1996 and 1998 by  Greg Fryer, who took extensive measurements and photographs of  the elements of the guitar, and produced three models named John,  Paul and George Burns. Brian himself owns two copies (one as a  backup for live performances, and one which is used when playing  songs in a different key, such as 'Fat Bottomed Girls') and the  other belongs to a Japanese collector. An interesting page about  his restoration is available here.
  
  Andew Guyton produced 50 models (40 in red, 10 in green) in 2004,  to mark the 40th anniversary of the guitar. As part of this,  X-rays were taken at St Batholomews Hospital in London, some of  which were used in the 'Brian  May's Red Special' book. 
  
  
  The below details are taken from the book:
  
  Body: Cambered blockboard with central oak insert, mahogany  veneers, white front and rear binding, and black perspex  scratchplate, pickup surrounds and vibrato cover
  Neck: Mahogany
  Fingerboard: English oak, painted with black plastic coating, 16  pearl button dot markers, 184.15mm (7.25") radius
  Scale length: 609.5mm (24")
  Body thickness: 40mm
  Width at nut: 46mm
  Width at 12th fret: 50mm
  Width at 25th fret: 51.5mm
  Weight: 3.63kg (7.99lbs)
  Strings: Optima Gold 2028BM, 0.009-0.42 guage set, steel core  plated with 24 carat gold
  Frets: 24 plus zero fret
  Pickups: Three Burns Tri-Sonic single coils, wired in series
  Controllers: Volume and tone, plus three on/off pickup switches  and three pickup phase reversal switches
  Hardware: Aluminium bridge with individual steel roller saddles,  sprung vibrato tailpiece comprising mild steel block and  case-hardened steel knife-edge, aluminum control knobs and  Schaller locking M6 tuners
  Finish: Mahogony red with Rustin's clear plastic topcoat
The Red Special guitar....
....the body of the guitar....
....the body and tremelo system....
....the head of the guitar....
....outer box and soft guitar case....
....a cleaning cloth and sticker....
  (these came with the guitar as part of an accessory pack)
....and plectrum
  (this came with the guitar as part of an accessory pack; the  surface makes it hard to photograph)
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