The EDS-1275, while never selling in great quantities, was used by a number of notable musicians. Chicago bluesman
Earl Hooker is seen holding one on the cover of the 1969 albums
Two Bugs and a Roach and
The Moon is Rising, and
Elvis Presley sports a cherry doubleneck in the 1966 movie
Spinout.
John McLaughlin In the early 1970s, jazz-rock musician
John McLaughlin played an EDS-1275 in his first years with the
Mahavishnu Orchestra.
Charlie Whitney Another guitar player who was known for playing the EDS-1275 was
Charlie Whitney, the principal guitarist for the British underground band
Family. Clips of Whitney performing with his EDS-1275 are readily available on YouTube from Family appearances on
Beat-Club and
The Old Grey Whistle Test, along with a similarly equipped (EBS-1250)
John Wetton.
Jimmy Page The EDS-1275 was popularized by
Jimmy Page of
Led Zeppelin, most notably during live performances of "
Stairway to Heaven." The doubleneck eliminated the need to switch guitars mid-song: Page's influence was such that after him other guitarists picked up the EDS-1275, including
Alex Lifeson of
Rush, who used it to play the song "
Xanadu" live.
Eddie Van Halen also had one in his collection which he used live and in the studio on the track "Secrets" from Van Halen's album
Diver Down (1982).
Tommy Shaw of
Styx had a custom double neck which had two 12-string necks which he used on the band's live performances from 1977 to 1983.
Don Felder Don Felder's white EDS-1275 was most famously used for playing "
Hotel California" live with the
Eagles and now (via Gibson Custom Shop replicas) in solo shows. It can be seen in any number of clips from the mid to late 1970s. Felder customized his EDS-1275 by removing one of the pots (bridge pickup tone control) and replacing it with a second output. This allowed for the signal to be sent to two separate amplifiers: for "Hotel California", an
Echoplex and a
Leslie for the swirling tones (played on the 12-string neck capo at the seven fret), and then later through his standard guitar amp (a Blackface
Deluxe Reverb or
Tweed Deluxe) using the six-string neck for the duet/harmony guitar solo shared with
Joe Walsh. Felder's original EDS-1275 is on display at the
Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in
Cleveland. ==Models==