top of page

2009 Gibson Pearly Gates Les Paul Billy Gibbons Tom Murphy Aged #46

€30,000.00Price

“You gotta have the right guns when you enter the town of tone,” says raconteur, bon vivant, and ZZ Top guitar-slinger Billy F. Gibbons. Translation: If you’re heading into a recording studio or onto a stage, it helps to bring some really good guitars with you. And there are few hotter guns in all guitardom than Gibbons’ 1959 Gibson Les Paul, better known to guitar aficionados worldwide as Pearly Gates.

Gibbons acquired the instrument in 1968, just as ZZ Top were getting underway and Pearly Gates has played a starring role on every one of the band’s records ever since - from ZZ Top’s legendary "First Album" in 1971 to the present day. 

Threads of fortunate karma, both cultural and personal, crisscross the tale of how Billy acquired Pearly. It was the seminal 1966 album, Blues Breakers with Eric Clapton, that set him on a quest to own a sunburst Les Paul like the one Clapton is seen holding on the disc’s rear-sleeve picture. “A dear friend of mine,” Billy recalls, “a fellow musician, Mr. John Wilson, was playing in a band called the Magic Ring out of Houston. He told me, ‘There’s a rancher outside of town who played in a country band but has turned his attention toward wrangling cattle. Rumor has it that the guitar still resides under one of the beds in his ranch house.’” So Gibbons drove about an hour out of Houston and found the elusive rancher. “The guy was big,” Billy recalls. “He was like a John Wayne guy. I had $250 in my pocket. And when he pulled out that ’59 ‘burst, the deal went down.”

Billy had freshly obtained the cash as the return on a favor. He’d loaned an aspiring actress a 1939 Packard automobile that he collectively owned with some friends so that she could drive from Houston to Hollywood for a screen test. “We didn’t think the car would make it past El Paso,” Billy says. “But it brought her all the way to Hollywood, and she got the part! We figured the car must have divine connections, so we named it Pearly Gates. Meanwhile, she called and said, ‘Should I send the car back or sell it?’ We said, ‘Sell it!’ She did, and my portion of the settlement arrived the very day I drove out to see the rancher.”

And so it came that the name Pearly Gates, with all its attendant magic, was transferred to the guitar, which was in mint condition when Billy obtained it. “It still had the original set of flatwound strings from the Gibson factory on it,” Billy marvels. “Plus an extra set of Black Diamond flat wounds in the case. I still got ’em. Also in the case was a love note, which I also still have, from a girlfriend of the original owner. She said, ‘I like what you do. Meet me later. You might like what I can do...’” 

Over the years, the instrument has acquired a patina of scratches, scrapes, dings and dongs including some belt buckle wear on the rear of the body. “I call that ‘thrash rash,’ ” Billy says. But one of the first signs of wear and tear on Pearly was on the pickguard. Following in the footsteps of Clapton, Segovia, and others, Gibbons grew out the fingernails of his right hand. “What I hadn’t counted on was that the fingernail of the little finger started digging into the pickguard, leaving scratches,” he says. Still, Billy has kept Pearly 100 percent stock. Even the frets are original. What might such an instrument be worth today? “There was a Japanese gent who offered $5 million U.S.,” Billy says. “Which is an attractive offer, but then again, I’ve spent plenty of money putting together a collection of guitars attempting to find something to replicate Pearly, and it just hasn’t happened yet. That’s what led to this closet full of hardwood that I have.” It is safe to say that this guitar will stay will Billy to the end, when the final curtain draws. And who knows what will happen then, but lets just hope it will end up in the hands of one of the great guitarists at the time so it will be played and heard. It's magic. And magic should never end.

Anyway... This particular Pearly Gates Les Paul is #46 of only 50 Aged versions made in 2009 and it features an absolutely spectacular flamed maple top with beautiful grain and mineral streaks, finished and aged to perfection by the legendary Tom Murph. This example perfectly matches the legendary 1959 burst Pearly Gates with serial 9 1171 Gibbons has owned for so long... 

The instrument is in mint collector grace condition and comes complete with the original case with Gibbons' signature stencilled on top of it and the full set of case candy, Billy Gibbons personally hand signed COA Certificate of Originality plus some extra case candy like Billy Gibbons plectrums, a set of Billy Gibbons strings, an original 90's ZZ Top concert stubb, an original ZZ Top T-shirt, 2 original plectrums acquired from Dusty Hill etc.

bottom of page