Byrd initially favored Gibson archtop guitars and by the late 1940s was playing a
Gibson L-7C. In 1949 he was on the waiting list for a new solid-body electric guitar from noted guitar maker
Paul Bigsby and was informed that a novel, double-cutaway instrument initially constructed for guitarist
Jimmy Bryant had become available since Bryant had entered an endorsement deal with
Leo Fender and would no longer be taking it. This instrument, modified to prominently display Byrd's name instead of Bryant's, was then sold to Billy and became his featured instrument on recordings and film clips up until he took delivery of his own Byrdland guitar in 1955 (see below). This guitar was sold in the late 1950s to a Tulsa guitarist named Dick Ganders, and subsequently into a private collection on the U.S. East Coast, and is extensively documented in the section entitled "Jimmy Bryant / Billy Byrd Bigsby solid-body electric guitar #10749" on "The Bigsby Files" website. From 1955 onwards, Byrd was associated extensively with the Gibson guitar named after himself and Hank Garland, the
Byrdland, a thinline, electric, single cutaway archtop with a shortened scale that presaged Gibson's popular
Gibson ES-335 thinline series by several years. Byrd is believed to have received instrument #1, while Garland received #2 and subsequently also #3 which was supplied in a custom cherry sunburst finish. Later, Gibson also produced what was apparently a special order double cutaway version of the Byrdland for Billy's use, reverting to a standard scale length, which can be seen on the cover of 1964's "The Golden Guitar of Billy Byrd" and was later on loan to, and displayed at, the
Country Music Hall of Fame in Nashville. In his later years he was also pictured at home playing a late-1960s
Standel guitar which he claimed was his favorite. ==Discography==