Guitar, Studio Wizard Les Paul Dies At 94 227
beeshman noted that Les Paul has died.
Paul was quite the hardware hacker of his day, innovating with guitar hardware, and later multi track recording. The Gibson Les Paul is one of the single most iconic instruments associated with Rock 'n Roll, and was of course played by Pete Townshend. Someday I'm going to get me one.
Played by? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Played by? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Played by? (Score:4, Interesting)
Not always [thewho.net] .
This has always been one of my favorite pics of Pete.."This Guitar Has Seconds To Live"
Re:Played by? (Score:5, Funny)
Godo Frock? Is that his Lord of the Rings name or something? Why is it one of the tags?
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(It's "God Of Rock")
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And then his roadies would glue it back together so he could use it again.
Re:Played by? (Score:5, Informative)
Pete has played with the LP for a bit, but, has never been quite as associated with any one guitar like Jimmy Page.
Page == Les Paul (and a telecaster in early days)
Jimi Hendrix == Strat
To me...I always picture Pete mostly with a Gibson SG during the 60's.
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I'll add Slash to the list. Not that when I think of a Les Paul I think of Slash, but when I think of Slash I do think of his black LP. Zakk Wylde has a spot in there also.
Re:Played by? (Score:4, Interesting)
Townsend also played/smashed a lot of Fender Stratocasters.
If there's any rock artist closely associated with the Les Paul, it's Jimmy Page. He played the occasional Telecaster on some album tracks, but almost never played live with anything other than an LP.
Which is kind of a silly thing to bring up when talking about the inventions of Les Paul anyway. His total contribution to that design consists of a tailpiece (which they ended up not using), and his signature. Everything else about the guitar was designed by other people.
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Page is still the first person I think of as well when I think of a Les Paul guitar.
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The first person that I think of is Duane Allman.
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I don't think I've seen Slash play anything but a Les Paul.
Right, with a notable exception: The screechy sound in "Since I don't have you" is Slash playing Gilby Clarke's Telecaster
May I be the first to say... (Score:5, Funny)
Don't fret.
Re:May I be the first to say... (Score:4, Funny)
Who is Pete Townshend
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What a perverted statement.
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No, Who is 1/4 Pete Townsend.
Re:May I be the first to say... (Score:4, Funny)
Pete Townsend's grandchildren!
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Who is Pete Townshend
Come on, tell me, who are you?
Oh, who the fuck are you?
HEY ABBOT!!!! (Score:5, Funny)
Yes.
Who is Pete Townshend?
Yes.
Pete Townshend is Yes?
No, Jon Anderson.
Who is Jon Anderson?
No, that's Pete Townshend.
Who?
Yes.
Ah-ha, I have it now..
No thats Morten Harket.
Re:May I be the first to say... (Score:4, Funny)
I just told you. The rest of the band.
Re:May I be the first to say... (Score:5, Funny)
No, Pete Townshend never played with The Band.
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Of course he did! Then who was on stage with him?
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Exactly!
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YES
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No, he never played with Yes.
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Guess Who?
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No, that's not Who.
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Who played with Yes?
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Guess Who played with Yes?
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The Band?
Re:May I be the first to say... (Score:4, Funny)
This is not the time to string us along with silly puns.
Re:May I be the first to say... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:May I be the first to say... (Score:4, Funny)
If people don't like the puns, they should just tune them out.
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We all have coping mechanisms. This death really struck a chord for us.
Re:What, too soon? (Score:5, Funny)
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wonder if they've picked out the Paul bearers yet?
A true innovator (Score:3, Insightful)
He left his mark upon the music world for sure. I'm sure our world would be a different place if he hadn't been inspired to monkey around with the status quo.
Re:A true innovator (Score:5, Insightful)
Les Paul actually invented the first true electric guitar. All the ones before it were simply acoustic guitars with mocrophones. If it weren't for Les Paul, rock and roll might possibly have never come about.
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Re:A true innovator (Score:4, Informative)
actually,George Beauchamp made solid aluminum body electric guitar in 1931 and sold them through the company Ropatin (we now know as Rickenbacker), intended for Hawaiian music that was popular during the 30s. Popularly called a "frying pan" because of round body.
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There's a lot of misinformation about the early years of guitars as people like Bigsby didn't keep
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Les Paul made his first prototype solid body in 1945. Leo Fender and Doc Kauffmann built one in 1943.
Prior to both, craftsman had been experimenting and building one-off electric guitars since the 1920's. Gibson had been building the LS-150 hollow-body since the 1930's.
The first solid-body "production" electric guitar was the Fender Esquire, which was developed in 1949 by Leo Fender and started production in 1950 after 50 esquires were made they added a pickup and renamed it to the Broadcaster which
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it was pbs and it was part of "The Masters" series.
you can get it on netflix under the name "Les Paul: Chasing Sound"
it's even available for Instant Watch
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Les Paul, as well as Robert Moog, Leon Theremin, and others created the tools that made 20th Century music a wonderfully alien thing, producing sounds without precedent in the history of music. This always leads me to wonder, though: Where will the next revolutionary sound come from? We can simulate nearly anything in software now, so what does that mean for the future of new instruments?
Actually, maybe we're already well into the world of the next sonic revolutionary: Andy Hildebrand, inventor of Auto-Tune
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Yeah, but the "Buffy" musical would have been impossible without it.
You're absolutely right, though. Just like how the "click-track" has replaced the need for solid time-keeping in the studio, even GOOD singers rely on a smidge of auto-tune in order to meet modern audience expectations.
Les Paul, real Guitar Hero (Score:3, Insightful)
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Chet Atkins and now Les Paul (Score:5, Insightful)
What a loss. I love everything Chet Atkins and Les Paul did together. I loved hearing Chet and Les banter back and forth before doing a song. Their music was so technical but because of their great skill it ended up sounding effortless (the trademark of truly great musicians).
Most people will obviously associate Les Paul with a particular guitar, and although that particular piece of hardware will be his legacy, his musical skills will be greatly missed. His style was so unique and is almost impossible to emulate.
Thank you for all your wonderful contributions to the musical world, Les. You will be greatly missed.
Re:Chet Atkins and now Les Paul (Score:5, Insightful)
Its not a loss. Its a great success! Look at all the stuff he got done before today! At 94 I'd say his lifes work was complete. And we still have all of his inventions. No need to miss him. Don't miss him, celebrate his work with the epic sustain of a Les Paul Standard.
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Or did you mean "hear, hear!" http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hear,_hear [wikipedia.org]
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Re:Chet Atkins and now Les Paul (Score:5, Interesting)
As a kid, my favorite story about Les Paul was the one briefly alluded to here [aarpmagazine.org]. Apparently, Les broke his arm badly (shattered would be a better description). So, he had the doctor set his arm in a bent position so that he could still play the guitar since it would never really be mobile again. That is a true guitar player.
Thank you, Les, for everything. We will rock on in your honor.
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You can't always believe the doctors' prognosises. A guitarist friend of mine cut his left arm nearly completely off, and the doctors told him he'd never be able to play again. It seemed to me that although he didn't have complete use of his fingers, they still worked. I told him to play anyway, and the guitar playing was actually a good therapy. He's not the guitarist he was before going throgh the plate glass window, but he's not all that bad, either.
Les Paul's accident and the story you linked are also r
And then there was Tony Iommi (Score:3, Informative)
A guitarist friend of mine cut his left arm nearly completely off, and the doctors told him he'd never be able to play again. ... I told him to play anyway, and the guitar playing was actually a good therapy. He's not the guitarist he was before going throgh the plate glass window, but he's not all that bad, either.
And then there was Tony Iommi, a left-handed guitarist who lost the tips of some of his right-hand (fretting) fingers in an industrial accident at his day job. After trying unsuccessfully to pl
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most of Les and Mary's 10" recordings were not multi track but they were overdubbed.
there is a difference
he did however invent both.
Re:Chet Atkins and now Les Paul (Score:4, Informative)
The electric guitar wasn't his only nerdy accomplishment. The wikipedia article lists a lot of firsts, including the first multitrack recording.
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"Sheik of Araby" by Sydney Bichet is the first multitrack recording of the same artist. Les Paul was just the first major artist to do it with magnetic tape.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sidney_Bechet [wikipedia.org]
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According to the wikipedia article [wikipedia.org], Les Paul was the first, and didn't use tape.
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Just in case you never saw it, here's Chet surprising Les in the middle of a song. Nice to see a look back at the times when musicians actually performed live.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ByGsHTlKmWk [youtube.com]
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I'd just like to point everyone to The Les Paul Show [archive.org], available for free download on archive.org. Early stuff, just him, Mary Ford, and a drummer, and lots of showing off with overdubbing. Pretty good quality for such an old recording too. Give it a listen, hear the master at work.
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i associate Les Paul with multi track recording more than a single guitar.
after all, without his multi track recording (and overdubbing before that) music wouldn't be what it is today.
the beatles and beach boys wouldn't have been able to create their iconic albums, and people like Tom Dowd would have never been able to mix some of the arguably greatest recordings of all time.
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What a loss. I love everything Chet Atkins and Les Paul did together. I loved hearing Chet and Les banter back and forth before doing a song. Their music was so technical but because of their great skill it ended up sounding effortless (the trademark of truly great musicians).
Most people will obviously associate Les Paul with a particular guitar, and although that particular piece of hardware will be his legacy, his musical skills will be greatly missed. His style was so unique and is almost impossible to emulate.
Thank you for all your wonderful contributions to the musical world, Les. You will be greatly missed.
Very nicely said. Too many people seem to only know him for the guitar that bears his name and few have any knowledge of his music.
I remember in my teen years, absorbing the culture of rock music, and when I came across the knowledge that Les Paul was the name of a guitarist, I had asked my musician friends if any of them had heard any of Les Paul's music. Invariably, I would be told that he was some "old-time" guy, some kind of country music that nobody listened to in that time and place. A few years
Pete Who? (Score:5, Informative)
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randy rhoads, jimmy page and slash are all covered on that link and definitely what i would consider posterboys for the lp. i've always associated billy gibbons (zz top) with the les paul too; kinda surprised he wasn't on that list...
back on topic, r.i.p. les - a true superman to guitarists everywhere, and a real nerd to boot. congrats on a life full of great achievements. as others have said, don't mourn his passing - celebrate it.
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Eric Clapton has always been a Fender Stratocaster man. Never heard of him playing a Les Paul.
Re:Pete Who? (Score:4, Informative)
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Clapton mostly plays Strats, and the occasional Gibson 335.
Niel Young is worth mentioning though. His Les Paul (with a Bigsby tailpiece attached) is iconic.
'Guitarhero' (Score:5, Insightful)
Whoever tagged this article 'Guitarhero' was absolutely correct.
The man's influence on music cannot be stated highly enough.
Between the design (and implementation of the electric guitar) to multitrack recording to delay effects, he really was a renaissance man.
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Put Les Paul up in the lineup for GH. He deserves a stage call.
Ah well... (Score:4, Funny)
Oblig. Wayne's World (Score:5, Funny)
Oh yes, she will be mine
Butchered by CmdTaco:
Someday I'm going to get me one.
Rest in peace you musical genius... (Score:4, Insightful)
My Guitar Gently Weeps...
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My Guitar Gently Weeps...
"And the rosewood bitters help me through the night when I feel blue"
(for non-guitarists: a guitar's fretboard is made of rosewood. I can't remember whose song the above line is from.)
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It can be rosewood.
Other fretboard materials include maple (which Clapton uses), ebony (common with Gibson guitiars w/mahogany necks) and even graphite or carbon fiber (yuck).
Pairing a guitar neck with a fretboard material can dramatically change the sound of the guitar.
FREX, pure maple sounds quite different than maple/ebony or mahogany/ebony.
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I should have said "a guitar's fretboard is often made of rosewood".
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What the world would could have been like... (Score:2, Insightful)
...had he not invented the electric guitar. Someone else may have done it but Les truly took it to the next level.
It boggles the mind that this man's invention would have such an impact on the world. What would Woodstock have been without the electric guitar and Jimmy Hendrix's Star Spangled Banner.
-R-
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Err....that was a Stratocaster that Jimi Hendrix played the Star Spangled Banner on...
You might wanna go rent the movie..it is really good on DVD these days, restored, and with extra filmed content and performances not in the original movie.
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Err....that was a Stratocaster that Jimi Hendrix played the Star Spangled Banner on...
Right... and a Stratocaster is, in fact, an electric guitar the last time I checked.
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Perhaps innovator would be a better term. No doubt, I am sure that folks were making hollow acoustic guitars with electric pickups before the solid-body electric guitar. Some sources do claim that Les Paul did, in fact, invent the solid-body electric guitar some time between 1939 and 1941. A story on NPR claims it was a collaboration between Les Paul, Paul Bigsby, and Leo Fender [npr.org]. According to some other sources I found via google. It seems that until Les Paul sawed his spanish-style hollow guitar in two a
Ah, nuts. (Score:5, Insightful)
Of course, I never did.
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That was exactly my reaction when I first read this headline. Ever since I first moved here a decade ago, I'd been meaning to check him out at Iridium before it was too late, but stupidly never made the time. The same thing happened with Tommy Flanagan with his regular gigs in town.
It's amazing to me that these musicians continue to perform live shows with as much passion as ever to the very end of their lives. I'll never forgive myself for missing out on this, their incredible life-long gift to the world.
Sad (Score:2)
How often does he die? (Score:2)
Would you say he dies every day, or once a week or once in a while?
Seems to me he'd just die the one time like everyone else. Unless he's a fictional character. Hamlet dies at the end of the play, every time the play is performed.
I will play today (Score:2, Insightful)
It's a sad day for everyone who loves the electric guitar. I am going to play loud for him today!!
wow (Score:3, Insightful)
Les Paul was a great man (Score:3, Interesting)
...but the Gibson Les Paul has never really been my kind. I did play on one, for a while, and it is nice but not my favorite el. guitar. The Fender Telecaster's simplicity and directness suits me much more.
Rest in peace, Les Paul, and thank you for the music.