Postby WildcatOne » Mon Jun 25, 2007 7:16 pm
Thanks, Doc...there were 3 guys who were all working on making electric guitars, back in the beginning. Les Paul (Lester Polfus), whose music teacher sent him home with a note telling his parents that there was no way he'd ever be a musician, Leo Fender out in Fullerton, California, and his collaborator, Merle Travis, the country star. Between Leo, who was not a musician but an extraordinarily creative guy, and Merle, who gave him a lot of his ideas concerning solid-body, styling and the violin-shaped headstock, Leo Fender started producing handmade solidbody electrics other than the lap-steel and pedal-steel guitars he'd already been doing, in around 1947-48. His first creation was called the "Nocaster" because it didn't have a name yet, but it soon reached stores as the Broadcaster. With the advent of TV, it became the Telecaster. The basic design principles and construction haven't changed since then on the Tele...there have been a few improvements, but mine is essentially the same brand-new as the ones Leo made back in the late 40s. His next creation was the electric bass guitar, which came in a Telecaster-style except the body had "double cutaways" like a Stratocaster, which started appearing around selected venues in around 1954. The Fender Precision and Jazz bass models have yet to be topped, in my opinion. Same thing with the Strat, it really hasn't changed. They make more powerful shielded pickups for these instruments now...back then they were hand-wound and dipped in wax to seal off the copper and protect the magnets. The first guy I remember that helped popularize the Strat in rock 'n roll, outside of the country music environment that all these instruments were designed for was Buddy Holly. Then Ritchie Valens picked one up, and it took off from there. A Stratocaster is a unique and yet simple instrument...Jimi Hendrix took it to undreamed of levels of sonic ecstasy with his powerful Marshall amps and a few simple effects...but originally, Leo Fender made those guitars for country music. The Telecaster has "twang", it's a certain tone that kind of snaps to the note and produces a ringing, almost echo-like sound when the string is plucked...Telecasters sound best "clean"...played straight into a Fender amp...a Strat, on the other hand, will blow a hole in your mind through your ears. The Strat is virtually limitless in its power, tonal capability and it has a unique look, along with the Tele and the Les Paul and later the SG, that has been imitated but never bettered. The Les Paul guitar has a "fat" sound that can be manipulated to sound like 10 guitars playing at once...the playability and sound of a Les Paul made it one of the top 4 electric guitars of all time...along with the others, the Gibson SG (Solid Guitar) is another creation of Les Paul worthy of note, even though he never liked it. I LOVED my SG, the Six-String Devil. By the time I auctioned it off at Blues For Becky in early 2004, I'd had it for nearly 30 years and I had played it to death...it was ready to be replaced, I had planned to give the guitar to my son Kyle but I ended up giving him the Les Paul, and I gave Nick (I don't have to say "I mean Chris" anymore, he decided to keep Nick as his name) my Strat. The Telecaster's mine now, but Kyle claims it when I, uh, won't be playing it anymore...Kyle has a couple of modern hardcore guitars, an Ibanez Giger model that looks like something they'd mount on an assault vehicle, and the ESP LTD-400 chiseled-look electric we got him for his 18th birthday. Nick wants a Jackson V, like Randy Rhoads played in Ozzy's band. He totally shreds on guitar, and he's playing drums now all the time. They make guitars now that will get you thrown in jail for how loud they are, but it has to do with the pickups and amps...as for me, I'm playing an American Fender Telecaster, new, into a mid-70s Fender American Twin Reverb with Peavey Scorpion speakers...best sound I ever had...I could rave on all night, but I wanted to blab some more about electric guitars...that Les Paul post opened up Pandora's box over here! Cheers, WC1
In an interview back in the 70s, Les Paul was hanging out at his shop, working on stuff...like Big Daddy, he kept EVERYTHING...he was fixing his guitar to double-track live or something and his son, who was the drummer for his band, pulled up in his car outside. Les Paul turned to the interviewer and said "I've got a quarter of a million dollars' worth of guitars here, and he's got to beat on those G.D. things..." Cat
Last edited by
WildcatOne on Mon Jun 25, 2007 10:55 pm, edited 3 times in total.
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