TAKAMINE
                         
GUITARS ARTISTS HISTORY TAKAMINE ARTISTRY ELECTRONICS SUPPORT NEWS VIDEOS WEARABLES
INTERNATIONAL DISTRIBUTORS
US/CANADA DEALER SEARCH
artists
Working with Glen Frey
Glenn FreyThe house lights go down and the excitement level goes up until it's almost off the charts. Just as the stage lights come on, the first familiar guitar hook of "Take it Easy" sings clearly through the PA and the Eagles lift off on another flight to a hotel in California and back. The guitar in the hands of Glenn Frey is the same one that he's played for nearly 20 years. It's a Takamine known to the crew as simply, "Glenn #1."

The family tree of Glenn Frey's Takamine extends back to an actual Sitka spruce tree deep in the interior of Canada. Around 1980, the tree that was to produce the top for Glenn's guitar - plus a few hundred other Takamine instruments - began a long and slow trip from forest to sawmill to kiln and then to a drying shed in the shadow of Mount Takamine in Japan.

Far from the stage lights and 50-kilowatt PA of a rock arena, the spruce - now a bookmatched top set - rested for three years, acclimating itself to the environment and relieving its internal stresses. When it was selected by Takamine inspectors to become the top for an EG360S model, it moved through the building process to become serial number 91072458 in 1991.

view pictures
Glenn Frey

2009 Eagles Tour Set List

Glenn Frey uses eight different guitars during an Eagles show. The photo shows the set list as it appears at the guitar tech workstation and includes notes about which guitar is used on each song and other details such as tuning and other prep.

view details
Glenn Frey

Glenn #1 and the EF360GF

That Takamine EF360GF is a reproduction of Glenn #1. It's made in the same way and uses identical components to those of Glenn Frey's favorite stage guitar. The non-cutaway body has a fullness of sound that is unmatched in most modern guitars.

view specs / guitar

INT. DEALER LOGIN