Should You Build Your Dream Guitar?
I think of this story when I see guitar designs that attempt to push the envelope of what is considered mainstream. Sometimes they work, other times not so much. Was the builder high? No doubt there have been groundbreaking changes in the electric guitar world. The humbucking pickup, the Flying V, the Stratocaster, wireless, the Floyd Rose tremolo, and DSP come easily to mind. For the most part the guitar marketplace was pretty staid up until those times, but Fender had fired the first shot in a space-race to capture a brave new guitar market that didn’t yet exist.
That isn’t to say that there hadn’t been advances in construction or presentation—there obviously had. Although the Telecaster presaged what was soon to come and had the attention of guitar manufacturers, it really wasn’t taken all too seriously. It’s arguable that the P-bass in 1951 may have been a wakeup call. Gibson and the old guard responded with 6-string solidbody variants of their own, but they were mostly scaled-down versions of their previous products in the classic “violin” mold. With the arrival of the Strat, things got real. And so, the first electric guitars of the modern era were born and fledged out into the world. It was a lukewarm reception at first.
“Valeno, Kramer, and Travis Bean married wood and aluminum, while Bunker and Steinberger broke the mold completely.”
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