Gibson has been shaping the sound of music since 1894, when Orville Gibson designed and built his earliest-known musical instrument in his workshop in Kalamazoo, Michigan. 130 years later, you can still play it and it sounds better than ever. The innovative and forward-thinking carved top design that revolutionized the mandolin and guitar world delivering a louder, more durable, more playable instrument, remains the DNA of every Gibson.
Over the past 130 years, Gibson’s groundbreaking instruments have been the catalyst for some of the loudest and most resonant moments in pop culture. Many of these have been genre-defining—think of Maybelle Carter’s transformative impact on country music with her Gibson L-5™, “Father of Bluegrass” Bill Monroe and his F-5 mandolin, Eric Clapton picking up the torch from “Blues Fathers” Robert Johnson and Freddie King and blazing a new trail with the fabled “Beano” Burst, “Mother of Rock N ‘Roll” Sister Rosetta Tharpe’s SG Custom™, Tony Iommi inventing the vocabulary for heavy metal with his SG Special “Monkey,” Jimmy Page defining hard rock in front of a sea of people with a low-slung Les Paul™, and his double neck EDS-1275, Slash influencing generational movement and defying the laws of music with his own Les Paul, and Bob Marley popularizing reggae with his Les Paul Special.
The voices of Gibson instruments have been heard at seismic cultural events, such as Bob Dylan’s performance at the 1963 March on Washington. Or they have inspired new generations to pick up the guitar in iconic appearances on the silver screen, such as the unforgettable Enchantment Under the Sea dance scene in the 1985 movie Back to the Future.
Over the years, Gibson has expanded from its humble Kalamazoo origins to its current home base in the heart of Nashville, Tennessee. The company’s headquarters are anchored by the world-renowned Gibson USA craftory, where the most popular electric guitar designs in history are still handcrafted, including the Les Paul, SG, Flying V™, Explorer™, and ES-335.
Nearby, the artisans at Gibson Custom create the new instruments, including stunning recreations of vintage instruments expertly aged in the Murphy Lab, signature models for Gibson artists, and custom-built Made-to-Measure pieces for the most discerning and uncompromising guitar fans worldwide. Meanwhile, at the state-of-the-art Gibson Acoustic craftory in Bozeman, Montana, the highly skilled team constructs celebrated models such as the J-45™, SJ-200, Hummingbird™, and Dove™ alongside artist signature acoustics, vintage reissues with Murphy Lab aging, and more.