Up for sale is a New Tone Ranger Desert Star # 103425 in Natural. All Tone Ranger Guitars are hand built in Southern California. Weight: 7lbs. 1oz.
The stars are out tonight! A product of the Post-War Boom, the first commercially successful solid-body electric guitar—the Broadcaster—was released in 1950 and with it, Leo Fender changed the music industry forever. After seven decades, the “T-style” design remains a golden arrow in guitarists’ quiver to this day. With features uncommon with T-style guitars, such as a set-neck and a 24.75” scale length, the Tone Ranger Guitars “Desert Star” model is my take on the classic. From searing solos as hot as Death Valley in July, to warm rhythms as mellow as an evening under the saguaro, the Desert Star puts legendary tone in your hands.
A note from proprietor Jeff Mark Leavitt about Tone Ranger:
Tone Ranger Guitars grew from my love of the West: the culture, the environment, the music, and the history of the western American deserts and forests. As one of Ken Layne’s Holy Rangers and a disciple of Edward Abbey, I set out to create an instrument that is not only a part of the West itself, but also allows myself and players of my guitars to be stewards of the land. Lovingly hand-crafted in my one-man shop in LA with the finest components and pickups, Tone Ranger Guitars are made entirely from sustainable, local, urban trees from Los Angeles and her surrounding counties, yielding tonewoods with a unique sonic brilliance all their own.
These trees lined our city streets, shaded our parks, and grew in our backyards, but are felled due to storms, disease, or normal senescence. In the past, these trees would’ve been chipped on site and sent to landfills, but they are now rescued by arborists, such as Street Tree Revival and Angel City Lumber, who choose to repurpose these beautiful trees and give them a second life. Using wood from our municipal forests helps reduce our carbon footprint as these trees aren’t factory-farmed, nor do they contribute to deforestation. This guilt-free wood grew in our local neighborhoods and communities, and is a beloved part of our history. You’re a part of that history now as this wood continues its life as your creative partner wherever the trail may take you. You’re a Tone Ranger now.
Keep on truckin’
Jeff Mark Leavitt