The Les Paul is arguably the most recognizable and iconic electric guitar to ever feature in Gibson’s lineup, but had history panned out slightly differently, it might not have been a Gibson model at ...
Innovation is about more than the people who create a product, or the companies that back them. The history of the electric guitar shows that the musicians who worked the instrument were as much a ...
Pardon thereductio ad absurdum, but most cultural histories of the era don’t deviate that much from that standard script. Thankfully, the definitive corrective has arrived in Ian S. Port’sThe Birth of ...
Before Jimi Hendrix infamously and famously lit his guitar on fire at the Monterey Pop Festival, he kissed it first. He sparked a match, threw it on his black Fender Stratocaster, poured lighter fluid ...
How exciting, telling rock's story via the development of the solid-body electric guitar, the music's defining instrument. Former San Francisco Weekly Music Editor Ian Port accomplishes this in a fast ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Credit: Express/Express/Getty Images/Future A recently resurfaced interview has detailed how Leo Fender wanted to work with Les ...
Electric guitars are as American as baseball and apple pie. In his new book from CBS sister company Simon & Schuster, author Ian Port dives into the rivalry that shaped the evolution of the electric ...
The rock ‘n’ roll revolution, it could be argued, didn’t start in a smoke-filled nightclub or raucous juke joint where blues and country were being transformed into a new music form or at least given ...
Asked to picture an electric guitar, most people will immediately bring to mind inventor Leo Fender’s most famous creation. Upon its introduction in 1954, the Stratocaster not only redefined the sound ...
Jim Marshall’s name will forever be associated with loud music thanks to his amplifiers, which are still used today. Following the announcement of Marshall's death, legendary Guns N' Roses guitarist ...
A titanic rivalry is rendered in highly personal terms by this loud, racketing history of how two men’s obsession for perfecting the electric guitar shaped the post-WWII music scene. Music critic Port ...