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The Mosrite Guitar Company

The Ramones used the Mosrite
Mosrite’s were well known for design, engineering, and very thin, low-fretted and narrow necks, and high output pickups.

Moseley’s design for the Ventures, known as the “Ventures Model” (later known as the “Mark I”) was generally considered to be the flagship of the line, but all of his guitars bore his unmistakable touch.

Mosrite also produced an unusual double-necked guitar, which was the type favored by Collins and Maphis; this design was also used by Nick Nastos, lead guitar player for Bill Haley & His Comets, during 1968.

Semie Moseley began building guitars in the Los Angeles area around 1952 or 1953. He began by apprenticing at the Rickenbacker factory, where he learned much of his guitar making skills from Roger Rossmeisl, a German immigrant who brought old-world luthier techniques into the modern electric guitar manufacturing process.

One of the recognizable features on almost all Mosrites is the “German Carve” on the top that Moseley learned from Rossmeisl. Around the same time, Moseley apprenticed with Paul Bigsby in Downey, California, the man who made the first modern solid-body guitar for Merle Travis in 1948, and who invented the Bigsby vibrato tailpiece, which is still used today.

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