1975 JIM BURNS UK FLYTE NATURAL MAHOGANY ELECTRIC GUITAR

2,250 incl. BTW / VAT

Sold

Details

Description

early Burns Flyte in natural Mahogany finish. Real nice collector. Could be a prototype serie?

Burns UK guitars were not made in London as many believe, but instead were manufactured close to Newcastle upon Tyne in Jim Burns’ native north east.

Out of all the models Burns UK produced, The Flyte, which was originally to be named the Concorde, proved the most popular. Glam rock performers of the time, such as Dave Hill from Slade and Marc Bolan were notable Flyte players.

If the United Kingdom had a Leo Fender, it was probably James O. Burns. England’s most famous and prolific guitarmaker, his legacy is reflected in guitars still being produced.

Burns is most famous for the guitars he created before selling his business to Baldwin Piano and Organ Co. in 1965, including the Bison, Hank Marvin, and Jazz Split Sound (with the Wild Dog setting). But his career continued, off and on, until his death in 1998, and along the way he left a number of curious instruments, including this stealth-shaped ca. 1976 Burns Flyte.

But it wasn’t stealth aircraft that inspired the Burns Flyte, rather it was the supersonic transport (SST) – the “Concorde.” The Concorde was conceived in ’62 and begun as a joint project of the U.K. and French governments. The maiden voyages of the first Rolls Royce-powered prototypes occurred in 1969, and in January ’76 the first commercial flights commenced, to great media fanfare (and environmentalist protest due to its extreme volume). Indeed, the Flyte was originally to be called the Conchorde, although it’s not known if any were ever produced under this name.

The Flyte was Burns’ first design under his own name after he sold the business to Baldwin. In between, he worked for Dallas Arbiter, which produced his Hayman line of guitars in the early ’70s.

Following the demise of that company, in ’73 Burns hooked up with an outfit in Newcastle and began to work on guitars to be sold with the brand name “Burns UK Ltd.” There, the Conchorde/Flyte was developed and introduced in ’74. Basically, the guitars were made by Shergold and the electronics by Re-An.

Coming at the height of the “copy era,” the Burns Flyte was a pretty radical design for 1974. Its symmetrical, bi-level, swept-wing body styling and sharply pointed head were truly supersonic. The body was mahogany, the bolt-on neck maple. At least some of the fingerboards were, oddly enough, ebonized maple. The Flyte was outfitted with twin Mach One Humbuster humbuckers with unusual five-sided metal covers.

Building on some of Burns’ ’60s ideas, the Flyte had a Dynamic Tension bridge assembly with individually height adjustable saddles on a bridge plate. These came in several shades of silver, white, natural, and even with Union Jack graphics.