I did not know that Ken had passed away. I retired from the military in 1998 and took up guitar repair and luthery against every friend’s and relatives advice but I was determined to begin a career that I enjoyed. As a guitar tech in a small music store, I thought that if I could show off instruments that I had built myself it would back up that I knew what I was doing. I began using necks from Warmoth and had a number of great conversations with Ken Warmoth who always was ready to answer questions and was patient with me. Ken gave me encouragement and never held back about things that I needed to know sharing with me good advice. Eventually I was able to build my own bodies and necks. I didn’t make a lot of money but I made a good living in luthery and instrument repair. Now I’m semi retired with clients who still look me up sometimes. I didn’t get famous but I was able to pay the bills doing what I loved. I call this a success. On many occasions I have recommended Warmoth to those who want to dip their toes into guitar making and I still do today. Thank you Ken if you’re listening and it makes me happy to know that Warmoth is still a family business.
I bought a Strat style body, neck and all hardware, including EMG single coils from Ken in 1987, when he was still working out of his home shop. I was living in Tacoma then and remember him letting me select the neck from his inventory, what he referred to as "curly maple," with a maple fretboard. I took the body (alder)and neck up to my then brother-in-law's home in Everett, where he owned a body shop, and sprayed several coats of clear on them. I still have that guitar, even though I have replaced the neck with a new Warmoth neck, and I play it at gigs. I keep that original neck, with the turtle engraved on her, on my mantle. Thanks for this video.
At a time when our country's small businesses and entrepreneurial spirit have been put under extraordinary pressure, this video is a nice reminder of why owning a small business, working for a small business, and being part of America's entrepreneurial passion is worth it. This is what it is all about. So glad Warmoth exists for me to do business with and get inspiration from! Nice work Aaron. Much appreciated.
I was a Warmoth customer, then worked at Warmoth for 2.5 years, then back to being a Warmoth customer. Proud to play my handful of guitars and basses with their Warmoth parts and proud to have worked there as well. And, thankful to have so many Warmoth family as my friends and neighbors!
Powerful story. I've known about Warmoth since I started playing guitar. Always meant to welcome the turtle in to my home. Some day. Here's to another 40 years of true American craftsmanship.
Aaron, Ken would be proud of this work. I've been a Warmoth customer for over 20 years and knew little of this info. Thank you for this labor of your appreciation for all that is Warmoth.
I ordered my first Warmoth guitar from one of those printed catalogs back in 1992. A double bound, tobacco sunburst left handed Tele that is still one of my favorites to this day. I keep her tuned to open G with the low E string removed and use it for all my Stones covers! I have bought / assembled 8 more Warmoth guitars since and currently have yet ANOTHER on order as we speak! Can't wait to build my fiesta red '60s Strat with roasted maple neck...
I'm not your biggest customer, but the Daphne Blue SoCal I built because of your fantastic company would be impossibly expensive anywhere else. Great customer service and a perfect shade of Daphne Blue!
nice video Aaron..been a customer since the early eighties, i still have those old adds also ,,everything has always been great..top quality..sorry to hear about the passing of Ken he will be missed,,keep up the great work..
Aaron is awesome, thanks you so much for the history of warmoth, tradition is so important to me, and found this video 📹inspiring 😀, as usual I enjoy these videos 📹, and by the end I was in tears of joy when I saw that guitar 🎸in the end. Simply the finest crafted instrument I have ever seen 😳😍🙌😀
This video makes me proud to have 3 Warmoth guitars in my collection. Thanks to all the hard-working people at Warmoth that make our guitar dreams come true.
Heck yeah it is... I'm in love with fender, gretsch, ric, and gibson... But here's the thing... Gretsch and ric still do consistent work. But the other two? Psh lol. Heritage is the REAL gibson guitar maker if you ask me. Real gibsons are made in kalamazoo. Sorry but the newer gibson factory in Tennessee has been very hit and miss. Fender is not as bad these days but definitely noticeably worse than in the past. Especially price wise... So since heritage is the REAL gibson. Who's the REAL fender? Welp... Prolly warmoth lol. They have more choices, more variety, and quality parts at reasonable prices. Even warmoth japans cheaper parts are made really well : )
Thanks so much for giving credit for the turtle drawings to my nephew, Barry Hochstrasser, who was working with us at Highstreet Advertising at that time. We had fun working with Ken and Paul, putting the creative magazine ads and printed catalogs together back then, when computers and related programs didn't have the creative capabilities that they do today. I was so sorry to hear about Ken's passing.
You pronounced it like Barry did, which is totally fine. I was surprised that the video didn't even mention Paul Warmoth, who was an important part of the company when I helped them with their advertising.
Warmoth is literally my favorite guitar company. I don't buy a whole guitar anymore. If I want something really nice I can budget, save up, get the parts one by one. Just did a baritone diamondback....I'm very happy with it.
Nice job on the video, Aaron. As an amateur luthier, I have always been fascinated with Warmoth. This filled in a lot of the gaps of history about it that I didn't know.
This is how the free market economy is ment to work but sadly very rarely does .A decent honest family business well done folks reguards from Ireland .
Everything a about Warmoth is awesome. I've NEVER read anything bad about these guys. I bet everyone is proud to work there, beautiful story, killer company.
What a great frickin' video! Excellent work as always, but this one was above and beyond!! Thank you Aaron and thank you Warmoth 🤘 Aaaaaaannndd, now I'm gonna start my next order...
I own 12 guitars that are made by Fender and Peavey and all of them have your necks. They are of the first order in quality and functionality. Thank you for all the great years of playing using your products!!!
What a cool history. For those who have worked there over the years, like threads woven in and out over time, to look back at what has been created, and is lasting, is a blessing and an honor.
I live not far from the factory...and am a customer... I'm so happy to have you guys near and am thoroughly impressed with your guitars! Cheers and God bless!
*stands up* 👏👏👏👏👏👏 Nice one Aaron, you’re like the David Attenborough of guitar build story telling. Such an awesome story, I’m so glad to be part of the family. A company with good intentions is unstoppable. To many more years 🍻 Sidefact: in the UK, a turtle (well, tortoise) featured prominently in the title sequence of a comedy TV show about a grumpy old man called One Foot In The Grave. Quality show.
That was fantastic! Aaron you are a man of many talents! Warmoth is lucky to have you. Great company and great people behind the company! I have been using Warmoth parts for decades and making some of the best guitars I have ever owned or played. I am happy to see that the rest of the world is catching up to the fact that Warmoth guitars are absolutely the way to go. You get to design and build the exact guitar you want from frets, to radius to scale length, to neck profile... to pickup routing... it really just doesn't get any better!
I met Ken while manning my Kharma Bodies NAMM booth in the late ‘70’s. We spent quite a bit of time gabbing about the history of Boogie Bodies and Charvel parts and who the real manufacturer was. It was the original Charvel ads in Guitar Player Magazine that inspired me to launch my own body and neck company. Ken was a down to earth genuinely nice guy to talk to. We shared manufacturing stories and solutions we had come up with and the business and marketing difficulties we experienced. I attribute his comfortable attitude with his distance from the hyper crazy guitar culture of LA, same with me being on the East Coast. Even though NY is considered high pressure business environment, in the go go music business, it takes a back seat to the ruthless inauthentic goings on of some of the LA folks. Anyway, I’m sorry to learn of his passing. Even though I left my guitar business behind in the early’80’s, Ken was still helpful in getting me sorted with a bass guitar neck I purchased about 10 years ago, for a friend to go along with a leftover body that I gave to him. I’ll always remember him fondly. And his company always had a well earned reputation for quality replacement parts.
Made me understand the ups and downs of life and a company, as long you are doing what you love, you’ll see it as part of the ride! And keep on picking !
Just a couple weeks away from receiving my first full build from you, I new the quality would be great and this video made me even happier that I can support a great company. Thanks for putting this out!!
Really great piece on Warmoth, Aaron! Makes me realize how much I have appreciated Warmoth over the last 20 years of using their products. Super glad that you’re the face of Warmoth, I always love watching the TH-cam vids!
Fantastic. Such a great company, great story, and great products. Here's to another 40 years! (I wish I had known of Warmoth when I was stationed at nearby Ft Lewis in the late 1990s.)
Thanks on the video. I remember about a year ago requesting if you could do a video about the history of the company. Always was curious about the turtle logo'd guitar neck/body replacement company.
I remember visiting that facility on 112th regularly back when I was in local bands. 😎 Every time a part broke, or someone sat on a guitar neck and broke the headstock, it was a trip to Warmoth! 😎😎😎 I still miss the ability to walk in and buy parts in person. Living 5 miles down the road and having to mail order sucks.
I remember seeing Warmoth ads in guitar magazines, but Aaron is the face and voice of Warmoth to me because of TH-cam. I plan on getting a Warmoth custom soloist body VERY soon 🙂
I wish you a really happy birthday, and promised when i got a small piece of this crazy thing called time, i’ll make you build THE Lescaster of my dreams. Love you Warmoth’ girls and boys. Keep on ... dreaming, BL.
I went to the old facility in 1984, my friend who was driving turned left right into on coming traffic and we narrowly avoided a giant wreck. I was like a kid in a candy shop, I have 2 amazing Gibson scale length necks. One is older from grumpy the hoarder. The other I got in 2021 ... probably going to get a Gibson scale length maple board with stainless frets on my next trip to America
I was just playing the P-bass I built in 1996 from Warmoth parts, then this pops up in my TH-cam feed! I remember the catalogs and the long wait for snail mail transactions. I bought my first parts in the '90s, and just bought a nice Vintage Strat body last month. Guess I'm hooked! Great video Aaron, Thanks.
Your parts built my first custom guitar (in profile pic) that has since been played for almost 10 years across the globe. Proud to be part of the Warmoth story!
I've been playing guitar for over 20yrs and has been dreaming for the day I can build my dream bass guitar I remember see my first catalog and my mind was blown away as I sat in high school that day I told myself some day I would build that dream even now I still have that dream but just keeps getting in the way kids,money,stroke,heart-attack and death.some day guys some day.but keep up peoples dreams.
Took me over 10 years to finally bite the bullet and order myself a Warmoth neck and body. Best decision I made, it turned out to be the best guitar I've ever had and will stay with me till hopefully, I pass it on to my daughter (if she ever decides to play). Long may Warmoth continue to be one of the best companies in the world.
Thanks Aaron, Ken made me my left handed Moderne, and he made me a lefty Tele bass, after he made me that, Warmoth put the Tele bass into their offerings. Video made me cry. I toured the original shop. Ken and Paul were always kind to me. Thanks Ken, Rest in Peace.
This was great! For a while I subscribed to ToneQuest. The issue on Warmoth motivated me to assemble 2 Warmoth Strats. I got chambered bodies with contoured heels, extra wide compound radius boatnecks, and stainless frets. Best decision I ever made. Super comfortable, great feel, fantastic tone.
I loved this one. I bought my first Warmoth neck from the catalog in 1994/1995. Made me feel connected to you guys, seeing where I landed in the timeline. That neck with a strat body from Stew Mac was my first partscaster. Never heard Puyallup said out loud before :)
Dating myself: bought my first neck from Warmoth in 1987. I may have called on the phone but I’m pretty sure I ordered it from a catalog… I was 16 years old and over a period of about five years I played the frets down to nothing and eventually got rid of it. Wish I still had it. That being said, I do still own necks and bodies from Warmoth and they are still fantastic. You guys make it possible to build a dream guitar at a price that is achievable and on behalf of the guitar world, I say thank you!
I got my first Warmoth neck back in the 80s through Subway Guitars. Strat neck made from some dark wood (Shedua?) with ebony fretboard. That thing still plays/sounds great and I gave it to a friend who adapted it to a Tele body. I currently have a few other Warmoth bodies and necks, most recently, a Fatback total vintage Tele neck. Thanks for the great parts over the years
I did not know that Ken had passed away. I retired from the military in 1998 and took up guitar repair and luthery against every friend’s and relatives advice but I was determined to begin a career that I enjoyed. As a guitar tech in a small music store, I thought that if I could show off instruments that I had built myself it would back up that I knew what I was doing. I began using necks from Warmoth and had a number of great conversations with Ken Warmoth who always was ready to answer questions and was patient with me. Ken gave me encouragement and never held back about things that I needed to know sharing with me good advice. Eventually I was able to build my own bodies and necks. I didn’t make a lot of money but I made a good living in luthery and instrument repair. Now I’m semi retired with clients who still look me up sometimes. I didn’t get famous but I was able to pay the bills doing what I loved. I call this a success. On many occasions I have recommended Warmoth to those who want to dip their toes into guitar making and I still do today. Thank you Ken if you’re listening and it makes me happy to know that Warmoth is still a family business.
Fantastic memory Mark! Thanks for sharing.
Up until a few years ago I lived a few miles from the shop and drove by it nearly every day.
Same. Used to live in Fife. Shoot, my band still rehearses in Puyallup lol
When we gonna see that FLUFFFFFF Build!?
Fan of yours.
What’s weird is I just figured out I’m around the corner from Musikraft
Have you built any Warmoth guitars? Just curious.
I bought a Strat style body, neck and all hardware, including EMG single coils from Ken in 1987, when he was still working out of his home shop. I was living in Tacoma then and remember him letting me select the neck from his inventory, what he referred to as "curly maple," with a maple fretboard. I took the body (alder)and neck up to my then brother-in-law's home in Everett, where he owned a body shop, and sprayed several coats of clear on them. I still have that guitar, even though I have replaced the neck with a new Warmoth neck, and I play it at gigs.
I keep that original neck, with the turtle engraved on her, on my mantle. Thanks for this video.
At a time when our country's small businesses and entrepreneurial spirit have been put under extraordinary pressure, this video is a nice reminder of why owning a small business, working for a small business, and being part of America's entrepreneurial passion is worth it. This is what it is all about. So glad Warmoth exists for me to do business with and get inspiration from!
Nice work Aaron. Much appreciated.
Well said.
Every bit of this was interesting, done pro with love. You can never leave Warmoth, Aaron. 👍✌
I dunno.....they still haven't granted me my request to build one guitar each month for free.....
@@warmoth guess you will have to have another online talk with the boss. :)
@@warmoth Do a through neck next time :)
Check out any time, but never leave... 😬
Can I just say the soundtrack to this video is incredible!
Brandon Brown. Check out his IG page.....great guitar player!
The literal American Dream right here! Warmoth rocks!!
I was a Warmoth customer, then worked at Warmoth for 2.5 years, then back to being a Warmoth customer. Proud to play my handful of guitars and basses with their Warmoth parts and proud to have worked there as well. And, thankful to have so many Warmoth family as my friends and neighbors!
Powerful story. I've known about Warmoth since I started playing guitar. Always meant to welcome the turtle in to my home. Some day. Here's to another 40 years of true American craftsmanship.
Jim Warmoth seemed like the guy that took so much pleasure in hand work. Just like any musician.
Aaron, Ken would be proud of this work.
I've been a Warmoth customer for over 20 years and knew little of this info.
Thank you for this labor of your appreciation for all that is Warmoth.
Wow, thanks!
Not me crying over a TH-cam video at work rn
I ordered my first Warmoth guitar from one of those printed catalogs back in 1992. A double bound, tobacco sunburst left handed Tele that is still one of my favorites to this day. I keep her tuned to open G with the low E string removed and use it for all my Stones covers! I have bought / assembled 8 more Warmoth guitars since and currently have yet ANOTHER on order as we speak! Can't wait to build my fiesta red '60s Strat with roasted maple neck...
Well you're beating me. I'm on my 5th warmoth guitar lolz.
I'm not your biggest customer, but the Daphne Blue SoCal I built because of your fantastic company would be impossibly expensive anywhere else. Great customer service and a perfect shade of Daphne Blue!
nice video Aaron..been a customer since the early eighties, i still have those old adds also ,,everything has always been great..top quality..sorry to hear about the passing of Ken he will be missed,,keep up the great work..
Aaron is awesome, thanks you so much for the history of warmoth, tradition is so important to me, and found this video 📹inspiring 😀, as usual I enjoy these videos 📹, and by the end I was in tears of joy when I saw that guitar 🎸in the end. Simply the finest crafted instrument I have ever seen 😳😍🙌😀
This video makes me proud to have 3 Warmoth guitars in my collection. Thanks to all the hard-working people at Warmoth that make our guitar dreams come true.
Makes me proud to own all Warmoth guitars!!! I love them, all 3
I only own one but it is my number one and will be the first of quite a few I suspect
very cool to see this history!
Heck yeah it is... I'm in love with fender, gretsch, ric, and gibson... But here's the thing... Gretsch and ric still do consistent work. But the other two? Psh lol.
Heritage is the REAL gibson guitar maker if you ask me. Real gibsons are made in kalamazoo. Sorry but the newer gibson factory in Tennessee has been very hit and miss. Fender is not as bad these days but definitely noticeably worse than in the past. Especially price wise...
So since heritage is the REAL gibson. Who's the REAL fender? Welp... Prolly warmoth lol. They have more choices, more variety, and quality parts at reasonable prices. Even warmoth japans cheaper parts are made really well : )
Thanks so much for giving credit for the turtle drawings to my nephew, Barry Hochstrasser, who was working with us at Highstreet Advertising at that time. We had fun working with Ken and Paul, putting the creative magazine ads and printed catalogs together back then, when computers and related programs didn't have the creative capabilities that they do today. I was so sorry to hear about Ken's passing.
I hope I pronounced it right! :)
You pronounced it like Barry did, which is totally fine. I was surprised that the video didn't even mention Paul Warmoth, who was an important part of the company when I helped them with their advertising.
Warmoth is literally my favorite guitar company. I don't buy a whole guitar anymore. If I want something really nice I can budget, save up, get the parts one by one. Just did a baritone diamondback....I'm very happy with it.
Glad to see them letting you do more and more vids. More Aaron please :).
This is amazing stuff. Thank you for sharing. Next guitar will be a Warmoth for sure.
Nice job on the video, Aaron. As an amateur luthier, I have always been fascinated with Warmoth. This filled in a lot of the gaps of history about it that I didn't know.
This is how the free market economy is ment to work but sadly very rarely does .A decent honest family business well done folks reguards from Ireland .
Everything a about Warmoth is awesome. I've NEVER read anything bad about these guys. I bet everyone is proud to work there, beautiful story, killer company.
What a great frickin' video! Excellent work as always, but this one was above and beyond!! Thank you Aaron and thank you Warmoth 🤘
Aaaaaaannndd, now I'm gonna start my next order...
It's always good to know who you're dealing with, their history, their spirit. Proud to be a, small, Warmoth customer
There’s a special place in my heart reserved for Warmoth.
This needs to be shared!
I own 12 guitars that are made by Fender and Peavey and all of them have your necks. They are of the first order in quality and functionality. Thank you for all the great years of playing using your products!!!
Love your products! Best in the biz. Thank you for being here!
Aaron, you’re the best part of Warmoth. Keep on picking’ and producing these videos 👍🏼
What a cool history. For those who have worked there over the years, like threads woven in and out over time, to look back at what has been created, and is lasting, is a blessing and an honor.
I live not far from the factory...and am a customer... I'm so happy to have you guys near and am thoroughly impressed with your guitars! Cheers and God bless!
I will be watching this again and again. Fantastic video.
*stands up* 👏👏👏👏👏👏 Nice one Aaron, you’re like the David Attenborough of guitar build story telling. Such an awesome story, I’m so glad to be part of the family. A company with good intentions is unstoppable. To many more years 🍻
Sidefact: in the UK, a turtle (well, tortoise) featured prominently in the title sequence of a comedy TV show about a grumpy old man called One Foot In The Grave. Quality show.
That was fantastic! Aaron you are a man of many talents! Warmoth is lucky to have you. Great company and great people behind the company! I have been using Warmoth parts for decades and making some of the best guitars I have ever owned or played. I am happy to see that the rest of the world is catching up to the fact that Warmoth guitars are absolutely the way to go. You get to design and build the exact guitar you want from frets, to radius to scale length, to neck profile... to pickup routing... it really just doesn't get any better!
Was aware of this company for years but finally made by first custom neck order; what a great history overview of a great family owned company.
I met Ken while manning my Kharma Bodies NAMM booth in the late ‘70’s. We spent quite a bit of time gabbing about the history of Boogie Bodies and Charvel parts and who the real manufacturer was. It was the original Charvel ads in Guitar Player Magazine that inspired me to launch my own body and neck company. Ken was a down to earth genuinely nice guy to talk to. We shared manufacturing stories and solutions we had come up with and the business and marketing difficulties we experienced.
I attribute his comfortable attitude with his distance from the hyper crazy guitar culture of LA, same with me being on the East Coast. Even though NY is considered high pressure business environment, in the go go music business, it takes a back seat to the ruthless inauthentic goings on of some of the LA folks.
Anyway, I’m sorry to learn of his passing. Even though I left my guitar business behind in the early’80’s, Ken was still helpful in getting me sorted with a bass guitar neck I purchased about 10 years ago, for a friend to go along with a leftover body that I gave to him.
I’ll always remember him fondly. And his company always had a well earned reputation for quality replacement parts.
Made me understand the ups and downs of life and a company, as long you are doing what you love, you’ll see it as part of the ride! And keep on picking !
Awesome Story!! Currently own a Warmoth custom guitar and love it. RIP Ken.....
Just a couple weeks away from receiving my first full build from you, I new the quality would be great and this video made me even happier that I can support a great company. Thanks for putting this out!!
All this time I thought this stuff was made over seas. Now I want to build one of these American parts guitars. Here’s to the turtle
Thanks for sharing the story... What a cool company.
Wow so awesome. I’ve been building your guitars since 2001. I’ve done about six. Every single one is immaculately crafted. Thanks Warmoth.
I appreciate you guys. I’ve been able to build several extremely high quality American made instruments on a reasonable budget because of you.
Independent of the content, which is frankly excellent, this is very well done. Props to all involved with the production.
Just bought my very first strat Warmoth neck. First build ever! Super exited! Thanks for sharing this awesome story :)
I remember seeing those Boogie Body guitars in a shop in Lakewood when I was a youngster. I`m 62 now.
Beautiful video Aron! Proud customer for more than 30 years!
Really great piece on Warmoth, Aaron! Makes me realize how much I have appreciated Warmoth over the last 20 years of using their products. Super glad that you’re the face of Warmoth, I always love watching the TH-cam vids!
Fantastic. Such a great company, great story, and great products. Here's to another 40 years! (I wish I had known of Warmoth when I was stationed at nearby Ft Lewis in the late 1990s.)
We are very close to Ft Lewis....plane and choppers fly over the shop all the time.
I’m always proud to tell people my basses are Warmoth
Loving the story, loving my Warmoth guitar, you guys rock!
Thanks on the video.
I remember about a year ago requesting if you could do a video about the history of the company.
Always was curious about the turtle logo'd guitar neck/body replacement company.
Great story telling, sir. Musical score is inspired. Nice way to showcase the artists, both graphically and musically.
I remember visiting that facility on 112th regularly back when I was in local bands. 😎
Every time a part broke, or someone sat on a guitar neck and broke the headstock, it was a trip to Warmoth! 😎😎😎
I still miss the ability to walk in and buy parts in person. Living 5 miles down the road and having to mail order sucks.
I remember seeing Warmoth ads in guitar magazines, but Aaron is the face and voice of Warmoth to me because of TH-cam. I plan on getting a Warmoth custom soloist body VERY soon 🙂
Such a great video! Thanks to Aaron and Warmoth for putting this together!
I wish you a really happy birthday, and promised when i got a small piece of this crazy thing called time, i’ll make you build THE Lescaster of my dreams.
Love you Warmoth’ girls and boys.
Keep on ... dreaming,
BL.
This was so great and answered so many questions I had about Warmoth. Nice job, Aaron!
I went to the old facility in 1984, my friend who was driving turned left right into on coming traffic and we narrowly avoided a giant wreck.
I was like a kid in a candy shop, I have 2 amazing Gibson scale length necks. One is older from grumpy the hoarder. The other I got in 2021 ... probably going to get a Gibson scale length maple board with stainless frets on my next trip to America
loved the logo guitar being now structurally correcto
I was just playing the P-bass I built in 1996 from Warmoth parts, then this pops up in my TH-cam feed! I remember the catalogs and the long wait for snail mail transactions. I bought my first parts in the '90s, and just bought a nice Vintage Strat body last month. Guess I'm hooked! Great video Aaron, Thanks.
Man! I love this! And, I love Warmoth necks and bodies!
Your parts built my first custom guitar (in profile pic) that has since been played for almost 10 years across the globe. Proud to be part of the Warmoth story!
Welp, now I’m going to become a Warmoth customer. What a story. This was fantastic.
Time to order and a galaxy sparkle tele and flame maple neck 🔥 🍁 🎸
Awesome man, phew.... blown away!!! What a story!!!
I've been playing guitar for over 20yrs and has been dreaming for the day I can build my dream bass guitar I remember see my first catalog and my mind was blown away as I sat in high school that day I told myself some day I would build that dream even now I still have that dream but just keeps getting in the way kids,money,stroke,heart-attack and death.some day guys some day.but keep up peoples dreams.
Cool soundtrack
Yep. Brandon Brown. Check out his IG page....the guy wails.
That was a lovely movie!
Can't wait to build a warmoth strat. Much love from Italy.
You cannot go wrong with Turtles.
Great job on this production! Very well written. Thank you Warmoth!
Thank you kindly!
Took me over 10 years to finally bite the bullet and order myself a Warmoth neck and body. Best decision I made, it turned out to be the best guitar I've ever had and will stay with me till hopefully, I pass it on to my daughter (if she ever decides to play). Long may Warmoth continue to be one of the best companies in the world.
Really well done. Engaging throughout. Aaron - excellent voiceover.
Thanks Aaron, Ken made me my left handed Moderne, and he made me a lefty Tele bass, after he made me that, Warmoth put the Tele bass into their offerings. Video made me cry. I toured the original shop. Ken and Paul were always kind to me. Thanks Ken, Rest in Peace.
I prefer the no branding myself, looks clean.
I was glad to see this video and learn about where my favorite necks really come from.
Finally, I now know why the logo is a turtle and most importantly, how to pronounce Puyallup. I've wondered for years.
This was great! For a while I subscribed to ToneQuest. The issue on Warmoth motivated me to assemble 2 Warmoth Strats. I got chambered bodies with contoured heels, extra wide compound radius boatnecks, and stainless frets. Best decision I ever made. Super comfortable, great feel, fantastic tone.
So, when can we expect the Warmoth line of custom acoustic guitars?
Awesome history. I am thoroughly impressed with my strat conversion neck.
Been playin my Warmoth Tele for years now - love it. Great Axe !!
I loved this one.
I bought my first Warmoth neck from the catalog in 1994/1995.
Made me feel connected to you guys, seeing where I landed in the timeline. That neck with a strat body from Stew Mac was my first partscaster.
Never heard Puyallup said out loud before :)
holy this company has came a long way and it had a great story. hope to buy some parts here soon cuz this company rules!
So interesting. I have a few Warmoth builds. Always wanting more.
1998 saved you guys with the popularity of the internet becoming a thing in just about every house hold. Such a great year 98 : )
Slow n steady wins the race!
This was really cool and interesting, well done and thank you Aaron!
A big thank you from Hong Kong, for making such wonderful products available via the internet. Congrats to your 40th Anniversary.
Awesome video. Such a good success story. I love my Warmoth tele body.
I absolutely love my Warmoth guitars! Thanks for sharing this story!
Dating myself: bought my first neck from Warmoth in 1987. I may have called on the phone but I’m pretty sure I ordered it from a catalog… I was 16 years old and over a period of about five years I played the frets down to nothing and eventually got rid of it. Wish I still had it.
That being said, I do still own necks and bodies from Warmoth and they are still fantastic. You guys make it possible to build a dream guitar at a price that is achievable and on behalf of the guitar world, I say thank you!
Your videos continue to bring comfort, joy and inspiration during these challenging days. Thank you so very much for your excellent work!!
❤ this video. Well done. Excellent music. And interesting to boot. Thank you!
Thanks Larry!
Very interesting. Great job! Now, let's see what I'll order!
I got my first Warmoth neck back in the 80s through Subway Guitars. Strat neck made from some dark wood (Shedua?) with ebony fretboard. That thing still plays/sounds great and I gave it to a friend who adapted it to a Tele body.
I currently have a few other Warmoth bodies and necks, most recently, a Fatback total vintage Tele neck. Thanks for the great parts over the years
what a great story, and such a great company...congrats to everybody down there..!!