The 2013 Pipeline Convention DVD included a special feature, 'My First Guitars' with Billy Kuy (lead guitar, The Outlaws), Ted and John Barber (guitar and bass, The Scorpions) and Malcolm Lenny (lead guitar, The Packabeats). These guys from the great days of instrumental rock music gave me interviews in which they described the guitars that they were using in their early recordings.
I interviewed Billy Kuy in his studio (where he is still making music) and he told me that the guitar that he used for The Outlaws' album
Dream Of The West was a Burns-Weil Super Streamilne RP2G, the 'Martian Cricket Bat'
The RP2G was made in 1959 by the partnership of Jim Burns and Henry Weil before Jim Burns set up his own company in late 1959. The 'RP' refers to Roy Plummer, a session guitarist of that time who presumably had some input on the design.
Billy recalled that The Outlaws were auditioned by Mike Berry in Billy's front room and Mike was 'very impressed' by the 'Martian Cricket Bat'. Now if Billy had it then (late 1960) and he was still using it for recording
Dream Of the West (released December 1961), then it would have been in use for Mike's
Tribute To Buddy Holly (Sept 61) as well as The Outlaws' singles
Swingin' Low/Spring Is Near (March '61) and
Valley Of The Sioux/Crazy Drums (Sept 61).
Later singles (
Last Stage West/Ku-Pow, Feb '62 and
Sioux Serenade/Fort Knox, Oct '62) came after
Dream Of The West so I can't be certain if the MCB was used for those, but the next guitar that Billy mentioned in the interview was a Maton, which he bought for his time with The Innocents, after he had left The Outlaws.
It's not unknown for publicity pictures to show guitars that are just loaned for the photo session, so it's unwise to place too much faith in the accuracy of what you see in the picture. After all, if all the band's guitars are locked up in the group's van and you've come to the photo session by Underground, then if the photographer says "Hold this guitar that I borrowed from the music shop down the road and s-m-i-l-e!", that's what you do.
Ray