John Lennon's 1966 Guild Starfire XII twelve-string , who famously played a Guild at
Woodstock, performing in 2006 with a D40 The first Guild workshop was located in
Manhattan, New York, where Dronge (who soon took over full ownership) focused on electric and acoustic archtop jazz guitars. Much of the initial workforce consisted of former
Epiphone workers who lost their jobs following their 1951 strike and the subsequent relocation of the company from Queens to
Philadelphia. Rapid expansion forced the company to move to much larger quarters, on Newark St. in
Hoboken, New Jersey, in the old R. Neumann Leathers building. The advent of the folk music craze in the early 1960s had shifted the company into production of an important line of acoustic folk and blues guitars, including a
dreadnought series (D-40, D-50 and, later, D-55) that competed successfully with
Martin's D-18 and D-28 models, and jumbo and Grand Concert "F" models that were particularly popular with blues guitarists such as
Dave Van Ronk. Notable also was the Guild 12-string guitar, which used a Jumbo "F" body and dual
truss rods in the neck to produce a workhorse instrument with a deep, rich tone distinctive from the chimier twelve-strings put out by Martin. The company continued to expand, and was sold to the Avnet Corporation, which moved production to
Westerly, Rhode Island, in 1966. As the folk scene quieted, a new generation of folk-rockers took Guild guitars on stage. The most notable Guild performance of that era was on the D-40 that Richie Havens played when he opened
Woodstock in 1969. During the 1960s, Guild moved aggressively into the electric guitar market, successfully promoting the Starfire line of semi-acoustic (Starfire I, II and III) and semi-solid (Starfire IV, V and VI) guitars and basses. A number of early West-Coast psychedelic bands used these instruments, notably guitarists
Bob Weir and
Jerry Garcia and bassist
Phil Lesh of
Grateful Dead, as well as
Jefferson Airplane's bassist
Jack Casady. Instrument maker
Alembic started their transition from sound and recording work to instrument building by modifying Lesh & Casady's Starfire basses. The rare S-200 Thunderbird solid body electric was used by
Muddy Waters and
the Lovin' Spoonful's
Zal Yanovsky. Inspired by seeing Muddy Waters,
Ross Hannaford acquired a Thunderbird, which he used extensively in the period that he played in popular Australian 1970s band
Daddy Cool. Guild also successfully manufactured the first dreadnought acoustic guitar with a "cut-away" in its lower shoulder to allow better access to the upper frets, the D40-C. In 1972, under Guild's new president Leon Tell, noteworthy guitarist/designer Richard "Rick" Excellente came up with the design. It is still made, copied by virtually every guitar manufacturer. The decline of the folk and acoustic market in the later 1970s and early 1980s put severe economic pressure on the company. While instrument specialists generally concede that quality suffered at other American competitors, Guild models from the 1970s and 1980s are considered still made to the high-quality standards that the Westerly plant was known for. In the 1980s, Guild introduced a series of
superstrat solid bodies including models such as the Flyer, Aviator, Liberator and Detonator, the Tele-style T-200 and T-250 (endorsed by
Roy Buchanan) and the Pilot Bass, available in fretted, fretless, and 4- and 5-string versions. These guitars were the first Guild instruments to bear slim pointed
headstocks, sometimes called "pointy droopy", "duck foot" and "cake knife" for their distinctive shape. ==Fender era==