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Here's another video of Nuno talking about how his sig model started with a Warmoth:
Shoot… I was really hoping to grab a Nele at some point.Nuno just left Washburn.
You can throw Ed Van Halen in there too.It makes me wonder how many artists signature models came from Warmoth parts. There are three I know for certain:
Nuno - N4
Vivan Campbell - Night Swan
Chris Shifflet - Tele Deluxe
You can throw Ed Van Halen in there too.
His "Boogie Bodies" build (which he purchased from Wayne Charvel) was technically a pre-Warmoth product, but was manufactured by Lynn Ellsworth and Ken's father, Jim.
Chip Ellis has stated Ed's guitar body had a "Boogie Bodies" stamp in the routes.

Wow, absolutely wow!Yep, I know. Ken was running the neck department at Boogie Bodies and almost certainly worked on the neck.
We typically shy away from thumping our chests about that, but it's pretty apparent in photos:

This might as well be a prototype for a Joe Satriani signature guitar, decades later.
Look at the super-rounded body, offset horns for upper fret access, no pickguard, bridge humbucker, neck single-coil, tremolo bridge, etc.

That N1 looks like a normal rear routed Strat body with the upper (bass) side being sanded off, with a sanding drum or something like that.
IDK, it kinda looks like that on the album cover too...I wondered about that too. I'm thinking maybe it is just a distortion from the page being bent by the thumb that is holding it in the lower left.
Or not.
IDK, it kinda looks like that on the album cover too...![]()
Funny you should mention that. Joe has said in multiple interviews that the rhythm guitars on the Flying in a Blue Dream album, and I think Surfing With The Alien (I may be wrong about that one), were all done with a Boogie Bodies guitar with two different loaded pickguards. One had single coils, and the other had humbuckers. He'd swap the guards out between takes depending on what sound he needed.Pretty interesting.. this is an example of a Boogie Bodies build from 1979, right before the Warmoth/Ellsworth split.
This might as well be a prototype for a Joe Satriani signature guitar, decades later.
Look at the super-rounded body, offset horns for upper fret access, no pickguard, bridge humbucker, neck single-coil, tremolo bridge, etc.
View attachment 66701
That N1 looks like a normal rear routed Strat body with the upper (bass) side being sanded off, with a sanding drum or something like that.
I wondered about that too. I'm thinking maybe it is just a distortion from the page being bent by the thumb that is holding it in the lower left.
Or not.