Inventor of the Electric Guitar Is Dead

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Inventor of the Electric Guitar Is Dead

Post by Sionnach Glic »

Guitar legend-inventor Les Paul dies at age 94

WHITE PLAINS, N.Y. - Les Paul, who invented the solid-body electric guitar later wielded by a legion of rock 'n' roll greats, died Thursday of complications from pneumonia. He was 94.

According to Gibson Guitar, Paul died at White Plains Hospital. His family and friends were by his side.

As an inventor, Paul also helped bring about the rise of rock 'n' roll with multitrack recording, which enables artists to record different instruments at different times, sing harmony with themselves, and then carefully balance the tracks in the finished recording.

The use of electric guitar gained popularity in the mid-to-late 1940s, and then exploded with the advent of rock in the mid-'50s.

"Suddenly, it was recognized that power was a very important part of music," Paul once said. "To have the dynamics, to have the way of expressing yourself beyond the normal limits of an unamplified instrument, was incredible. Today a guy wouldn't think of singing a song on a stage without a microphone and a sound system."

"Without Les Paul, we would not have rock and roll as we know it," said Terry Stewart, president of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Museum. "His inventions created the infrastructure for the music and his playing style will ripple through generations. He was truly an architect of rock and roll."

A tinkerer and musician since childhood, he experimented with guitar amplification for years before coming up in 1941 with what he called "The Log," a four-by-four piece of wood strung with steel strings.

"I went into a nightclub and played it. Of course, everybody had me labeled as a nut." He later put the wooden wings onto the body to give it a tradition guitar shape.

In 1952, Gibson Guitars began production on the Les Paul guitar.

Pete Townshend of the Who, Steve Howe of Yes, jazz great Al DiMeola and Led Zeppelin's Jimmy Page all made the Gibson Les Paul their trademark six-string.

Over the years, the Les Paul series has become one of the most widely used guitars in the music industry. In 2005, Christie's auction house sold a 1955 Gibson Les Paul for $45,600.

Guitarist Joe Satriani called Paul "the original guitar hero," saying: "Les Paul set a standard for musicianship and innovation that remains unsurpassed."

In the late 1960s, Paul retired from music to concentrate on his inventions. His interest in country music was rekindled in the mid-'70s and he teamed up with Chet Atkins for two albums. The duo were awarded a Grammy for best country instrumental performance of 1976 for their "Chester and Lester" album.

With Mary Ford, his wife from 1949 to 1962, he earned 36 gold records for hits including "Vaya Con Dios" and "How High the Moon," which both hit No. 1. Many of their songs used overdubbing techniques that Paul had helped develop.

"I could take my Mary and make her three, six, nine, 12, as many voices as I wished," he recalled. "This is quite an asset." The overdubbing technique was highly influential on later recording artists such as the Carpenters.

Released in 2005, "Les Paul & Friends: American Made, World Played" was his first album of new material since those 1970s recordings. Among those playing with him: Peter Frampton, Jeff Beck, Eric Clapton and Richie Sambora.

"They're not only my friends, but they're great players," Paul told The Associated Press. "I never stop being amazed by all the different ways of playing the guitar and making it deliver a message."

Two cuts from the album won Grammys, "Caravan" for best pop instrumental performance and "69 Freedom Special" for best rock instrumental performance. (He had also been awarded a technical Grammy in 2001.)

Paul was inducted into the National Inventors Hall of Fame in 2005.

Paul was born Lester William Polfus, in Waukseha, Wis., on June 9, 1915. He began his career as a musician, billing himself as Red Hot Red or Rhubarb Red. He toured with the popular Chicago band Rube Tronson and His Texas Cowboys and led the house band on WJJD radio in Chicago.

In the mid-1930s he joined Fred Waring's Pennsylvanians and soon moved to New York to form the Les Paul Trio, with Jim Atkins and bassist Ernie Newton.

Meanwhile, he had made his first attempt at audio amplification at age 13. Unhappy with the amount of volume produced by his acoustic guitar, Paul tried placing a telephone receiver under the strings. Although this worked to some extent, only two strings were amplified and the volume level was still too low.

By placing a phonograph needle in the guitar, all six strings were amplified, which proved to be much louder. Paul was playing a working prototype of the electric guitar in 1929.

His work on taping techniques began in the years after World War II, when Bing Crosby gave him a tape recorder. Drawing on his earlier experimentation with his homemade record-cutting machines, Paul added an additional playback head to the recorder. The result was a delayed effect that became known as tape echo.

Tape echo gave the recording a more "live" feel and enabled the user to simulate different playing environments.

Paul's next "crazy idea" was to stack together eight mono tape machines and send their outputs to one piece of tape, stacking the recording heads on top of each other. The resulting machine served as the forerunner to today's multitrack recorders.

In 1954, Paul commissioned Ampex to build the first eight-track tape recorder, later known as "Sel-Sync," in which a recording head could simultaneously record a new track and play back previous ones.

He had met Ford, then known as Colleen Summers, in the 1940s while working as a studio musician in Los Angeles. For seven years in the 1950s, Paul and Ford broadcast a TV show from their home in Mahwah, N.J. Ford died in 1977, 15 years after they divorced.

In recent years, even after his illness in early 2006, Paul played Monday nights at New York night spots. Such stars as Led Zeppelin's Jimmy Page, Dire Straits' Mark Knopfler, Bruce Springsteen and Eddie Van Halen came to pay tribute and sit in with him.

"It's where we were the happiest, in a `joint,'" he said in a 2000 interview with the AP. "It was not being on top. The fun was getting there, not staying there - that's hard work."
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Re: Inventor of the Electric Guitar Is Dead

Post by Reliant121 »

RIP...Serious RIP. You let the almost the entirety of my phones playlist exist...
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Re: Inventor of the Electric Guitar Is Dead

Post by Mikey »

I saw this in the news the other day, but didn't get a chance to comment. While Paul is well-known as the inventor of the solid-body electric guitar, he's less well-known (though equally deserving of it) for his musicianship. He broke ground for the construction of odern music in both ways. RIP.
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Re: Inventor of the Electric Guitar Is Dead

Post by Sionnach Glic »

Damn right he did, and far too few people have heard of him.

If there's an afterlife, he's rocking the halls of Valhala as we speak.
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Re: Inventor of the Electric Guitar Is Dead

Post by Sonic Glitch »

Rochey wrote:Damn right he did, and far too few people have heard of him.

If there's an afterlife, he's rocking the halls of Valhala as we speak.
If there's a Rock and Roll Heaven, you know they've got a hell of a band.
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Re: Inventor of the Electric Guitar Is Dead

Post by Tsukiyumi »

I still can't afford one of his guitars, but Les Paul was an innovator in the industry. RIP.
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Re: Inventor of the Electric Guitar Is Dead

Post by Mikey »

Tsukiyumi wrote:I still can't afford one of his guitars, but Les Paul was an innovator in the industry. RIP.

The Epiphone clones aren't terrible - bolt-on necks instead of neck-through bodies, IIRC - but same shorter scale and double humbuckers.
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Re: Inventor of the Electric Guitar Is Dead

Post by Tsukiyumi »

Mikey wrote:
Tsukiyumi wrote:I still can't afford one of his guitars, but Les Paul was an innovator in the industry. RIP.

The Epiphone clones aren't terrible - bolt-on necks instead of neck-through bodies, IIRC - but same shorter scale and double humbuckers.
Meh. I've got two humbuckers and a single-coil on my Ibanez. I'd like to get a Les Paul Standard at some point, just for more mellow stuff.
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Re: Inventor of the Electric Guitar Is Dead

Post by Mikey »

The Ibanez is a Fender scale though, isn't it?
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Re: Inventor of the Electric Guitar Is Dead

Post by Tsukiyumi »

Mikey wrote:The Ibanez is a Fender scale though, isn't it?
Mine's almost identical to this:
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Re: Inventor of the Electric Guitar Is Dead

Post by Mikey »

Got it. Well, the Epiphone clone will still be closer - it's got a Les Paul-type, 24-1/4" fretboard instead of the Fender-type 25-12.

I'd like a PRS myself, but I don't think anyone's giving them away.
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Re: Inventor of the Electric Guitar Is Dead

Post by Monroe »

Its really too bad. He made music in the 20th century and beyond possible. If not for him we'd still be listening to the same slow pace things from the 40s and before.
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Re: Inventor of the Electric Guitar Is Dead

Post by Tyyr »

Rochey wrote:Damn right he did, and far too few people have heard of him.

If there's an afterlife, he's rocking the halls of Valhala as we speak.
How does anyone who likes any modern music not know Les Paul?
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Re: Inventor of the Electric Guitar Is Dead

Post by Tsukiyumi »

Tyyr wrote:How does anyone who likes any modern music not know Les Paul?
How does anyone who travels to Hawaii not know James Cook? Stupid people are everywhere.
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Re: Inventor of the Electric Guitar Is Dead

Post by Mikey »

Tyyr wrote:How does anyone who likes any modern music not know Les Paul?
I think he's known well enough as the inventor of the modern electric guitar; he's less well-known, however, for his musicianship.
Tsukiyumi wrote:How does anyone who travels to Hawaii not know James Cook? Stupid people are everywhere.
When I went, I tried to meet him but everybody told me he was on vacation.
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