Raving About Purple As It Bowls You Over
/Welcome To The 26 NAMM Fam Celebration
And shouldn’t it? After all, this could be the first Purple & Black Bowling Ball to be seen in over a decade – maybe even longer. Back in the early 90s, Purple & Black was the rare yet coveted Bowling Ball color for which those on the cutting edge clamored.
Now, with the re-rising of these striking Bowling Ball finishes in several colors, it was inevitable that Purple & Black would make its re-debut, and what more fitting place for it to appear than on our new, unguarded Raven?
Black Hardware punctuates this theme, most predominantly permitting pitch bending duties to not only fall under the control of fingers flying across highly polished and silky-smooth frets but also bend around, up, and down with the cooperation of a “Baby” Floyd Rose Bridge—presented in black.
And for this new Raven, it goes even further on up the road, with a twin, muscular, modern, and musical humbucker setup of H1- and H2+, relaying 6 sounds ranging from raging broad humbucker tonalities to interstellar and stellar single-coil applications.
The sharpest linguists among us may have already noticed that we said, “interstellar and stellar single coil…” We all know what the word stellar means. It means really outstanding and excellent. And in Anderson Guitarworks Pickup-land, it is the seemingly magical manifestation of robust and dimensional single coil sounds bounding forth from brilliantly designed, full-bodied humbucker pickups.
But why did we also use the word interstellar in that same sentence? What is the meaning of that?
Well, don’t tell anyone, but it is a secret signpost, an “Easter egg,” indicating the whereabouts of this first-ever Raven racked up in a coveted Purple & Black Bowling Ball finish.
Interstellar? Yes, Interstellar Guitars in San Antonio, Texas. Perhaps they could beam you over…or you could just call them. Either way, feel free to energize and enjoy.
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