Throughout the 1960s, Gibson Les Paul guitars were in huge demand. Some of the biggest names in popular music were finding it the perfect guitar for the overdriven blues rock of the second half of the decade. But Gibson themselves had ceased production in favour of the SG, and the original 1950s Gibsons were hard to find. Even when Gibson started production again in 1968, they were naturally unobtainable for most guitarists - both due to price and availability. So the conditions were just right for the very first copy guitars. Japanese 'Les Pauls' started appearing - with the earliest examples coming from the Matsumoku factory in Japan. This 'Les Paul' looked very good indeed. It didn't have the same Gibson construction (no carved maple top or set neck, and no Gibson patent number humbuckers) but for the money it was a fantastic stand in. By 1968 it was selling in Japan as the Aria 5522, whilst Merson offered it in the USA as the Univox U1982 ("Rhythm and Blues"). By 1969 it was available in the UK from Rose-Morris as the Shaftesbury 3400. The success of these early copies was immediate, and many more distributors got on board: in the UK, the early 1970s saw Matsumoku Les Pauls with brand names such as Eros (Rosetti), Jedson (Dallas Arbiter), and Kimbara.
Kimbara were somewhat late to the game. Although the brand name was registered in the UK in early 1968 by London distributor Fletcher Coppock & Newman Ltd, the first Kimbara electric guitars didn't appear until the second half of 1974. The Kimbara version was available in four finish options: models N114 (black), N115 (gold), N116 (sunburst) and N117 (natural). In mid 1976, black (N114) and gold (N115) were dropped from price lists, with N116 and N117 discontinued in 1978.
The N114-N117 were launched alongside an SG copy (model N118), and three Stratocaster copies (models N119-121).
| Model | Type | Price |
|---|---|---|
| N114 | black | £97.59 (with case) |
| N115 | gold | £97.59 (with case) |
| N116 | sunburst | £97.59 (with case) |
| N117 | natural | £97.59 (with case) |
Electric guitar advertisements originally published from 1976 onwards. Click on the images for larger copies. Check out other vintage Fletcher, Coppock and Newman advertisements

Fletcher, Coppock and Newman N115 - Kimbara - Classic Folk Jumbos Electrics (1976)
Early advertisement for Kimbara guitars and Kent drums, both distributed by Fletcher, Coppock and Newman Ltd.
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Fletcher, Coppock and Newman N116 - Electric Country Rock Classic (1977)
1977 advert for the Kimbara range offered by Fletcher, Coppock and Newman. Four guitars are shown: N116 solid body electric (Sunburst Les Paul copy), N124 bass (Jazz bass copy), a jumbo flat top an...
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£425