Misplaced Pages

Gjika Amplification

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
This article has multiple issues. Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page. (Learn how and when to remove these messages)
The topic of this article may not meet Misplaced Pages's notability guidelines for companies and organizations. Please help to demonstrate the notability of the topic by citing reliable secondary sources that are independent of the topic and provide significant coverage of it beyond a mere trivial mention. If notability cannot be shown, the article is likely to be merged, redirected, or deleted.
Find sources: "Gjika Amplification" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (March 2023) (Learn how and when to remove this message)
This article reads like a press release or a news article and may be largely based on routine coverage. Please help improve this article and add independent sources. (March 2023)
(Learn how and when to remove this message)
Gjika Amplification
Company typePrivate
IndustryAmplification
FoundedBoston, Massachusetts, United States (1984; 40 years ago (1984))
FounderRobert Gjika
HeadquartersEscondido, California, USA
ProductsGuitar amplifiers
Websitewww.gjikaamplification.com
Bob Gjika with his Gold Amp 1988

Gjika Amplification was founded in Boston, Massachusetts in the early 1980s, by Robert (Bob) Gjika. Gjika amplifiers are original designs, and are completely hand-wired.

Origins

Robert Gjika began building his own guitars and amplifiers. By 1979, he had established himself in the local Boston area as a luthier, repairing and building guitars. He opened up his own shop in Boston. Some of the musicians and bands he did work for included popular Boston bands at the time, guitarists such as Reeves Gabrels, Joe Stump, and other guitarists from the Berklee College of Music scene.

Relocations

Gjika moved his business from Boston to Memphis, Tennessee in 1987. In 1989 he relocated to Los Angeles, California.

In 1990, Gjika left Los Angeles to go to Austin, Texas and at that time transitioned from his Gold Amps to his 3-Channel KT90 amplifier. In 1996 he again relocated, to Nashville, Tennessee. During these years he continued his amp designing and building, on a smaller scale, until in 2000 he went back to Escondido California. He now lives and works in Arizona.

Public reception

In Memphis, Gjika's Quality Guitars, on Union Avenue, was featured in a local music publication, in which Tim O'Shea said of Gjika's skills: "His technical expertise is most impressive, especially his "diagnosis to repair" knowledge of another rock necessity, the electric PA and amp... Gjika also builds and sells his custom, "Hot Box" amplifiers, perhaps the finest available anywhere." Of Bob's custom guitar designs: "Gjika builds three or four of his custom 'Wild Thing' guitars each year, at a cool five grand apiece. The prototype guitars are truly wonders to behold at any stage of construction."

Focusing on his own playing, as well as designing and building guitars and amps, Gjika acquired a reputation for being reclusive, resulting in many believing that he had retired from amp building. It was noted by Dave Hunter in his reverb.com article, "Dave's Corner: Guide to Boutique Amps", in which he wrote "This enigmatic amp maker and all-round tech extraordinaire goes to few (if any) lengths to promote his own work." As to the quality of the guitar tone produced by Bob's original design amps, he assessed that "Characteristics of Gjika amps include their thick, rich, harmonically saturated tone and fast playing response." Further, "Bob Gjika has worked with Eric Johnson, but might be best known for the scorching single-ended EL34-based amp that the late and largely underappreciated fusion virtuoso Shawn Lane used on his Powers of Ten...a massive beast with four EL34s (or eight in its stereo configuration) and possibly the largest transformers I’ve seen on a guitar amp, giving it earth-shaking body and tremendous gain."

In an interview by Guitar Player magazine, Shawn Lane referred to his use of his Gjika Gold amp on his album Powers of Ten in glowing terms: "It's class-A power, all-tube, and just one of the most amazing amplifiers I've ever heard. It has a harmonic richness that really responds to a certain kind of touch."

Premier Guitar covered the Premier Builder's Guild's booth at the NAMM Show featuring Gjika Amps, with highly positive reception.

Worked with

Some of the artists Gjika has worked with: Shawn Lane, Tony Rombola, Eric Johnson, Joe Stump, Reeves Gabrels, Keith Scott, Webb Wilder, Steve Earl, Joe Strummer, Joe Bonamassa, George Benson, Stephen Bruton, Leo Howard.

References

  1. "Gjika Custom Guitar & Amplifiers". Manta. Manta.com.
  2. O'Shea, Tim (July 1988). "The Custom Guitar and Mother Memphis". Memphis Star: 52.
  3. Hunter, Dave (15 September 2016). "Dave's Corner: Boutique Amp Guide Part VIII". Reverb. reverb.com. Retrieved 16 September 2016.
  4. Olbrecht, Jas (October 1992). "Shawn Lane, A Cult Hero Surfaces". Guitar Player Magazine: 112.
  5. Hammond, Shawn (18 February 2011). "NAMM '11 - Fano TC6 & Gjika Amps SE-30 Demos". Premier Guitar.

External links

https://www.facebook.com/robert.gjika.1/

Categories: