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Отговорено

"1943г.,а през 1949г. започва да продава своята Fender Eskuir,която по-късно се превръща във Fender Broadcaster."

 

Сори за опонирането колега ама имаш неточност. Смея да съм запознат с историята.

 

Fender Esquier никога не успява да се превърне в Broadcaster защото Лео е осъден за названието Broadcaster.

По-скоро Ескуайърът се преименува в Телекастър.

а след това иде и Stratocaster- / през 1955-та/

Отговорено

Хайде сега и аз да се намеся... Ами Nocaster??? Защото Broadcaster преминава към Nocaster и чак тогава към Telecaster :blink:

Отговорено
Хайде сега и аз да се намеся... Ами Nocaster??? Защото Broadcaster преминава към Nocaster и чак тогава към Telecaster :blink:

 

Хаха Йеах! Прав си. :)

Отговорено

ОК,мисля че това трябва да внесе малко яснота по въпроса за кое и как в началото на електрическата китара.Копирал съм от NPR-National Public Radio,което е доста достоверен и доказан източнник на научна информация.

 

"In the 1930s, American bands got their "swing" from the drums, the bass and the strum of an acoustic guitar. Trouble was, no one could hear the guitar very well, and it pretty much stayed in the background as a rhythm instrument.

 

"Then something new appeared on bandstands -- a musician sitting on a chair with something that looked like a miniature banjo in his lap," Joyce reports. "A wire connected the instrument to a box. And out came a strange new sound."

 

That new sound was simple physics. A vibrating metal object -- in this case, a guitar string -- moving in a magnetic field creates a signal that can be picked up by a wire coil. Inventor and musician George Beauchamp, who played Hawaiian music in Los Angeles, is said to have created the first crude electric guitar on his dining room table.

 

Why was Hawaiian music key to the invention of the electric guitar? "You had the Hawaiian musicians where... the guitar was the melody instrument," says guitar historian Richard Smith. "So the real push to make the guitar electric came from the Hawaiian musicians."

 

Beauchamp applied for a patent for his invention -- a small guitar body with two horseshoe magnets on the top, with the strings running between the magnets' arms. Beauchamp dubbed the instrument the "frying pan." In 1931, he and engineer Adolph Rickenbacker created their first electric guitar. But Beauchamp didn't get a patent until 1937, and by then several other companies were making their own electric guitars.

 

The selling point to musicians was volume. For the first time, a guitar could hold its own against the horn section, and guitarists could pick out melody lines instead of just strumming the rhythm. In the late 1930s, guitar pioneers Floyd Smith and Charlie Christian brought the electric guitar into the jazz world, and redefined the role of the guitar in the swing orchestra ensemble.

 

There were a few technical headaches with the earliest models. Western swing music leaders such as Milton Brown liked the Spanish-style, hollow-body electrics. These looked like real guitars and less like frying pans -- but the sound resonating in the guitar body often created a harsh feedback loop. Musicians often stuffed rags and newspapers into their guitars to eliminate the problem.

 

The permanent solution was a solid-body guitar. With electric pickups, a guitarist didn't need a big, hollow body to resonate and project sound. Companies had built solid-body guitars since the 1930s, but another guitar pioneer, Les Paul, took this concept to its logical extreme.

 

Paul built his own guitar, using telephone parts for a pickup and a wood post as the body. He called it "the log," and he says that when he first played it in a New York City night club, the audience didn't know what to think. "You come in with a four-by-four, people look at you like you're freaked out," he says. Paul went home, cut the body off a Spanish-style guitar and glued it to his log -- "and it went over great."

 

Electric guitars had volume, but it would take a second wave of innovation to turn the instruments into the icons of a new generation of music. In 1943, California radio repairman Leo Fender and musician Doc Kaufman built a prototype solid-body guitar that was a lot like the original "frying pan," but with a better pickup and tone controls.

 

But most importantly, says Smith, it was relatively cheap. Suppliers provided parts for production on an assembly line. It was a guitar for the masses.

 

By 1950, the Fender company was pumping out copies of the Esquire, then the Broadcaster, and then the Telecaster. In 1952, Gibson -- until then the nation's biggest guitar company -- introduced its own solid-body guitar, the Les Paul."

 

 

И няколко снимки да илюстрираме ситуацията:

rick_fryingpan_sketch.jpgIllustration for the 1937 patent application for the Rickenbacker "frying pan" electric guitar.

Photo courtesy the Smithsonian National Museum of American History -- The Lemelson Center

 

rickenbacker_1972.jpgIn this 1972 photo, Adolph Rickenbacker holds the original prototype of the "frying pan" electric guitar.

Photo copyright 1997 Rickenbacker International Corporation, all rights reserved

 

charlie_christian.jpgElectric guitar pioneer Charlie Christian helped re-define the role of the guitar player in the swing band ensemble.

Photo courtesy the Smithsonian National Museum of American History -- The Lemelson Center

 

lespaul_log.jpgThe original Les Paul "log" electric guitar, with two halves of a Spanish hollow-body guitar glued to a wooden four-by-four post.

Photo courtesy the Smithsonian National Museum of American History -- The Lemelson Center

 

telecaster.jpgThe Fender Telecaster (pictured here with amplifier) was first produced in 1952 and is still one of Fender's best-selling electric guitar models.

Photo courtesy Fender Musical Instruments Corporation

 

fender_strat_sketch.jpgIllustration from the 1954 patent application for the Fender Stratocaster, a model popularized by guitar legends such as Jimi Hendrix and Eric Clapton.

Photo courtesy the Smithsonian National Museum of American History -- The Lemelson Center

 

 

 

Владо

 

П.С. Голям респект към Чарли Крисчън,истинският пионер на електрическата китара :godbless::godbless:

Отговорено

Това вече е истинската история, а не изсмуканата от пръстите ми за нула време.

Както казах в моята дейност има неточности. Благодаря за поправките и на Владо за пускането на далеч по-точната информация! :godbless:

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