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[It is with sadness that we report Les Paul's death today, at the age of 94. I had the pleasure of meeting Les a couple times when I was playing guitar with Pat Martino. Pat and Les were good friends, and the three of us had drinks once when Les had his standing gig at a small, now defunct jazz club across the street from Lincoln Center. That night, I asked Les if he really loved the guitar named after him, and he said dryly, "It pays the rent."In honor of Les, I thought we'd rerun this post, which, curiously, went up earlier this week. Goodbye Les, we'll all miss your music making...]
Each guitar on this list helped define either a genre, a sound, or in some cases, a career. Think of it as an introduction to some of the most popular guitars in the world. For the companion post on 5 Legendary Keyboards, click here.
1. Gibson Les Paul
Design: In the early ‘50s, Gibson president Ted McCarty approached jazz phenomenon Les Paul and asked if the guitarist would lend his name to a new guitar, then in design stages. Paul agreed, and also lent some minor advice along the lines of color schemes. In 1952, one of the world’s most famous guitars of all-time was unveiled. Except for a period of time in the mid ‘60s, it’s been in production ever since.
Les Paul with his LesPaul
Look/Feel/Sound: The signature sound of the Les Paul is warm and full, with lots of sustain. In fact, the instrument’s sustain is so well known, it was used as a joke in This Is Spinal Tap. Nigel Tufnel is showing mockumentarian Marty DiBergi his guitar collection and holds up a Les Paul Standard, showing off the sustain without actually playing a note. While there are many different models and styles, with slightly different pickup configurations and cut-aways, all Les Paul’s, like all Gibson’s in general, feature top-mounted strings, rather than through the guitar body, as seen in competitor Fender’s designs.
Guitarists who helped make it a legend: Les Paul, of course, but just about every important guitarist over the last half century has recorded with one. The most famous devotee is probably Jimmy Page, who, when he wasn’t playing his trusty double neck, was generally armed with one. Coupled with his Marshall stack amplifiers and sometimes a cello bow, Page was able to pull even more sustain out of the instrument.
Hear it in action:
2. Gibson Flying V
Design: Orville Gibson, a mandolin maker from Kalamazoo, MI, founded Gibson way back in the late 1800s. But the Gibson Flying V didn’t hit the market until three quarters of a century later, in 1958, and was a flying flop that Ted McCarty, Gibson’s then-president, immediately discontinued.
Albert King
Look/Feel/Sound: In 1955, Gibson introduced its classic double-coil “humbucking” pickup, which was incorporated onto this odd, V-shaped guitar, clearly ahead of its time. Between the mahogany body and the double-coil pickup, the Flying V quickly became known for its powerful sound.
Guitarists who helped make it a legend: Bluesman Albert King got a hold of the Flying V in ’58 and never let go. But it wasn’t until Dave Davies started using one in the ‘60s that Gibson decided to reissue the guitar in 1967. Other famous guitarists who helped popularize the instrument include Hendrix, Billy Gibbons, Rudolph and Michael Schenker, Kirk Hammett, and Eddie Van Halen.
3. Fender Telecaster
Design: Another Leo Fender creation, the Telecaster hit the market in 1949 and has been going strong ever since. It is considered the very first solid-body guitar to make a significant impact on the music scene. It was also the first solid-body guitar mass-produced on an assembly line.
Keith Richards
Look/Feel/Sound: Like the Fender Strat, the Telecaster (aka Tele), is known for it’s bright, rich tone. It has two single-coil pickups, as opposed to the Strat’s traditional three. One of the most famous solos ever recorded with the Tele is Jimmy Page’s “Stairway to Heaven” solo.
Guitarists who helped make it a legend: The Father of Chicago Blues, Muddy Waters, was an early signature user, as were many other blues players such as Roy Buchanan and Albert Collins, who was sometimes called “The Master of the Telecaster.” The Clash’s Joe Strummer was rarely seen without one, and it was a favorite of Andy Summers, as well as Keith Richards.
Hear it in action:
4. Fender Stratocaster
Design: Fender first put out the “Strat,” the brilliant work of Leo Fender, George Fullerton and Freddie Tavares, in 1954.
Look/Feel/Sound: The Strat features a double-cutaway, sleek, contoured body, often referred to by Fender as a “Comfort Contour Body.” Those three single-coil pickups in the middle of the body further define not only the look of the Strat, but the famous sound, which is clean, crisp, and twangy.
Buddy Holly
Guitarists who helped make it a legend: While it’s hard to find a well-known guitarist who hasn’t recorded or owned a Strat, there are definitely certain musicians who relied heavily on the guitar during their careers. Early on in the guitar’s history, Buddy Holly helped turn the instrument into a familiar icon, using it almost exclusively in the late ‘50s, and most notably on his Ed Sullivan performance in 1958.
In the ‘60s, it was Jimi Hendrix who really helped push the guitar to legendary status. Because Hendrix was left-handed, yet generally used a right-handed Stratocaster flipped upside-down and strung left-handed, he got a bit of a different tone out of the instrument because the pickups were reversed. This gave a brighter punch to the lower strings, and warmer tone to the higher strings. Since his death, Fender has released many Hendrix “tribute” Strats, both left-handed versions, and right-handed versions, in attempt to try and recreate the Hendrix Stratocaster sound.
Hear it in action:
5. Gibson SG
Design: In 1961, Gibson added some horns to the cutaways of the Les Paul and slimmed down the body. The result was a really cool looking solid body (or SG) that Les Paul didn’t like at all. So he made Gibson take his name off the instrument, and like that the SG was born. It’s been in production in one form or another ever since.
Angus Young
Look/Feel/Sound: Gibson advertised the SG as having the “fastest neck in the world”, because the neck profile was slender. This, combined with the thinner body, means less sustain than the Les Paul, but the SG still packs quite a punch. It’s like Gibson’s answer to the Fender Strat, only with a slightly warmer tone.
Guitarists who helped make it a legend: Another long list here, including George Harrison, Tony Iommi, Elliot Easton, The Edge, Dave Grohl, and Frank Zappa. But perhaps the most famous is Angus Young, of AC/DC fame, who was rarely seen with anything but the SG. Gibson even produced an Angus Young Signature SG model.
6. Gibson Explorer
Design: For one brief year, between 1958 and 1959, Gibson put out one of the most unusual looking guitars to leave a major imprint on the scene, ever. Thing is, at first it was an exploratory flop, way ahead of its time. When other guitar manufacturers brought out Explorer knock-offs in the ‘70s, Gibson re-issued the once-futuristic looking guitar, and it became an instant favorite of heavy metal bands like Iron Maiden, and glam metal rockers like Mötley Crüe.
James Hetfield
Look/Feel/Sound: Obviously the look is unique. The same can’t really be said about this guitar’s sound, which is rather average. Although, in the early ‘80s, when metal bands were using them nearly to a fault, Gibson introduced an Explorer with high-output, “Dirty Fingers” humbucker pickups. This made an already ‘loud’ design, a really loud instrument. So loud, you would expect a Spinal Tap joke about how the guitar went to 14, four louder than 10.
Guitarists who helped make it a legend: Again, we’re talking loud bands here, so James Hetfield, Eddie Van Halen, and Dave Murray, for sure. But some others have helped bring the Explorer to center stage, including: The Edge, and bands like ZZ Top and Cheap Trick.
[If you're wondering why songs weren't used as examples in this post, mental_floss is no longer able to offer excerpts from copyrighted music. We apologize.]
Check out past On Music posts here >>
ummm….#1 is just some chick talking to some guy, not a sample…so fail!
posted by dre on 8-10-2009 at 8:43 am
Are there no \legendary\ acoustic guitars?
posted by botanycreek on 8-10-2009 at 9:28 am
All your sound clips need to be looked at.
posted by Steven on 8-10-2009 at 9:31 am
Your “Hear In Action” links are all messed up. Instead of hearing some awesome guitar riffs, we hear someone giving instructions. Help!
posted by Katie on 8-10-2009 at 9:42 am
What — no mention of Springsteen with the Tele? As an admitted fan of Bruce (at least since you left NJ), I’m surprised, David!!
Botanycreek – perhaps that’s a good suggestion… though I’m struggling to come up with any specific models that would be as recognizable as any of these.
posted by Josh on 8-10-2009 at 9:57 am
You guys missed the Gibson ES-345, the guitar Mary McFly played in Back to the Future. (Side note, that guitar wasn’t released until the mid 1960s, well after 1955, when he played it (and no, Doc didn’t have it in the Delorean before Marty went back in time).
posted by Ben on 8-10-2009 at 9:59 am
You’ve also forgotten Lucille.
I find it striking that Mr. Clapton isn’t even mentioned, despite playing just about all the guitars listed, specifically his Strats of course, but also Les Pauls and his famous psychedelic SG from the Cream days.
Recaptcha: 14 strays – sounds like a good name for a blues tune.
posted by Bert on 8-10-2009 at 11:02 am
James Hetfield is not playing a Gibson Explorer. It is an ESP.
A better picture would probably be Allen Collins, the late guitar player from Lynyrd Skynyrd. He often rocked out on an Explorer.
posted by Glenito73 on 8-10-2009 at 11:11 am
It appears to me that James Hetfield isn’t actually playing a Gibson Explorer at all, as they put the Gibson logo out on the end of the headstock. he appears to be playing an ESP brand guitar that is modeled after the explorer.
posted by steven wade on 8-10-2009 at 11:11 am
For what it’s worth, the Gibson SG is also a favorite of slide guitarists, because it gets a rich warm tone, but the fat neck and double cut away make it easier to move the slide into the higher notes. Duane Allman and Derek Trucks both swear by them. (of course Derek Trucks is the current reincarnation of Duane Allman so that’s not really surprising)
posted by Nick on 8-10-2009 at 11:20 am
Awesome article, well written and researched. I was always a Strat and Tele fan, but the first time I picked up an SG, I understood why it’s a fave of so many. It plays so easy, it’s almost like cheating!
posted by richard dixon on 8-10-2009 at 11:31 am
Taylor Guitars just started making solid body guitars and they are pretty amazing.
Not to mention that the design allows you to replace the entire pickup housing in about 5 minutes so you can get any sound you want out of the guitar.
http://www.taylorguitars.com/guitars/electric/
posted by Troy Lee Wells on 8-10-2009 at 11:49 am
if anyone is having trouble with the soundbites, please drop a comment with the type of browser and platform you’re using. thanks! and apologies for the bad code earlier.
posted by David K. Israel on 8-10-2009 at 11:55 am
YAY! sound clips! They’re working now!
posted by Steven on 8-10-2009 at 12:02 pm
Jimi Hendrix was actually not left-handed. That is a myth. He was a righty, but preferred to play left-handed.
posted by L on 8-10-2009 at 1:06 pm
Not so sure that Cheap Trick is the best example of a band that popularized the Explorer. Although Rick Nielsen does own a couple, he mostly plays Hamer guitars, which have a similar headstock and sometimes the same body shape.
posted by JW on 8-10-2009 at 1:46 pm
No mention of Gretsch? Brian Setzer?
posted by QuincyK on 8-10-2009 at 2:12 pm
I think the JazzMaster is more important than the Explorer. So is the 335 for that matter.
posted by skook on 8-10-2009 at 2:16 pm
You forgot Selmer, who manufactured guitars from 1932 to 1952, and was the guitar of choice for Django Reinhardt, who pioneered jazz guitar, gypsy swing, and string picking. Without Django we wouldn’t have Rock!
posted by Morgan Day on 8-10-2009 at 2:27 pm
What? No Rickenbacker? Say it ain’t so! What would life be like without the fabled humbucker pickup?
Poor Jim McGuinn, relegated to the back pages of guitar hero history.
posted by Tom on 8-10-2009 at 2:55 pm
As cited in example #2, Eddie Van Halen NEVER played a Gibson Fying V. Eddie popularized the bastardized Fender Strat (known now as the Frankenstrat), with only an individual humbucking pickup (initially a PAF from a Gibson ES-335), in the treble position, a single volume knob, and no tone control. Ed assembled this axe with strat-copy parts purchased cheaply from Wayne Charvel’s Boogie Bodies company.
In the early days, Eddie also played a Ibanez Destroyer,(a copy of a Gibson Explorer), used live and on a couple tracks off of VH’s first album. Ed ended up ruining the distinct sound of the Destroyer,(known as “The Shark), by cutting a large chunk of wood out of the body with a hacksaw. Occasionally, on VH’s first tour, Eddie used a Les Paul,(minus the neck position pickup), as a backup guitar.
The “Frankenstrat” configuration quickly inspired dozens of major guitar manufacturers,(including Fender), to copy its simple, bare-bones design, and was immediately adopted by countless players great and small. It remains a favorite among guitarists even today.
posted by Alfred E. Neumann on 8-10-2009 at 2:57 pm
I think Springsteen played a broadcaster (early one-pickup version of a tele if i recall correctly).
Gretsch definately overlooked. (Chet Atkins Country Gentleman, White Falcon!!)
A rather uninspired list to be honest…
posted by Luke on 8-10-2009 at 3:51 pm
my comment got deleted?? why??
posted by dre on 8-10-2009 at 4:51 pm
My God, David, you’ve heard of Michael Schenker??
reCAPTCHA: fact-finding pincer.
I can almost picture it…
posted by Bubba on 8-11-2009 at 4:13 pm
I just heard Les Paul died today at 94..i guess this is irony?
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/music/music-news/6023419/Electric-guitar-innovator-Les-Paul-dies.html
posted by Amitcdn on 8-13-2009 at 1:46 pm
When did Eddie Van Halen play a Flying V? In an otherwise great article, that’s my only beef. Eddie has been pictured playing an Explorer, but that’s not the guitar he is most associated with by any stretch of the imagination. Eddie will always be known for his Frankenstein Strat.
posted by Justin on 8-13-2009 at 4:25 pm
Aside from all the gribble and babble over who was forgotten on this list, I’ll choose to say that we lost one of he ORIGINAL Guitar Heroes.. some one who changed the face of music and who’s gift gave birth to some of the greatest talents scene. Some of the greatest blues, jazz, and rock greats wouldnt be where they are with out the man and his guitar…. Les, you’ll be sadly missed. Tell Jimi, Stevie and Randy I said hi…
posted by Gregg G on 8-13-2009 at 5:35 pm
“in honor of less” ?? Don’t you mean In honor Of Les?
posted by Vickey on 8-13-2009 at 6:14 pm
PRS!!!! How do you leave out the greatest guitars currently in production.
FAIL
FAIL
FAIL
FAIL
posted by Ian on 8-14-2009 at 8:28 am
That isn’t a Gibson Explorer that Hetfield is playing…
posted by Aaron Hansen on 8-14-2009 at 12:59 pm