Guitarist

STEEL GOT IT

“The Tricone is the sweetest: it’s the ultimate acoustic slide guitar. The three cones give it a tone and a resonance that no other instrument has"

- Words jamie dickson ILLUSTRATI­ONS MAR K MAKIN

WSlide guitarist Michael Messer is one of Britain’s foremost acoustic blues artists, but he’s also an expert on the history of resonator guitars. He takes us on a journey through the evolution of the loudest acoustic instrument­s ever built, whose shining, engraved bodies and bold, heart-piercing tone is indelibly associated with slide

hy were resonator guitars created in the first place? “They were created because it was in the days before amplificat­ion, and even, really, before the days of PA systems. So acoustic guitars were having trouble being heard.

“The fashionabl­e music at the time was Hawaiian music. It was kind of like the hit music all over America, and instrument makers such as Weissenbor­n were trying to make Hawaiian guitars louder by making instrument­s with hollow necks and great big bodies. Then, in 1926, John Dopyera invented the first resonator guitar, a Tricone, which was for playing Hawaiian lap-steel guitar on. It went into production in 1927.

“There were only square-neck instrument­s to begin with, and that was all they did. Then they went into round-neck Tricones, like regular guitars, because people wanted the volume. During those first two years, they developed ukuleles, mandolins, and single-cone guitars. Single-cone guitars came in 1929, in fact.” What are the tonal difference­s between the Tricone and single-cone designs? “The Tricone is the sweetest: it’s the ultimate acoustic slide guitar. The three cones give it a tone and a resonance that no other instrument has. Nothing else produces harmonics and tones like that: it’s probably nearer to an electric guitar than it is to an acoustic. A single cone is louder – more attack, more power, less sustained.” How did Tricones and single-cone designs differ in terms of constructi­on? “In Tricones, there were two body materials: German silver [an alloy of copper, zinc and nickel] and then they went to brass. German silver’s pretty hard to work with, and it’s expensive. So the ‘golden period’ of Tricones was German silver, but later models were made of brass – and most modern Tricones are made of brass.

“In single-cones, you’ve got four materials. You’ve got steel, brass, wood and German silver. German silver was the top of the range, but most of the shiny nickelplat­ed ones are brass-bodied. The painted bodies are generally steel.

“The first metal-bodied, single-cone guitar was steel, but before they went into any of that, they made wood-bodied, single-cone guitars: Triolians. That was the first single-cone guitar, and it’s sort of National’s best-kept secret, because it looks like it came out of a toy shop: it’s bright yellow with hula girls on it, and that puts off a lot of people. But that is the ultimate single-cone National, in my opinion.” National and Dobro were the big players in resonator guitar – but they were linked by the name Dopyera. How did they differ? “The Dopyera brothers owned National, but there were all kinds of political rows and John Dopyera, who was the inventor, walked away from the National company very early. He didn’t like what was going on. He was overpowere­d by business people, and so he formed the Dobro Company.” People associate resonator guitars with blues slide guitarists – but how often did early bluesmen really use them? “Well, you would find Tampa Red in Chicago in 1928 with a Tricone. Blind Boy Fuller, Son House, those were the sort of early players. I heard a great interview recently with Son House – it’s just turned

up on the Internet. He was asked about his National steel guitar, and he said, ‘Yes, it’s brilliant: it’s rainproof. You can take them out in the rain – wooden guitars get ruined’. And that was it. He didn’t talk about the tone or anything [laughs].

“But there’s a lot of mythology attached to the blues and National guitars, and also bottleneck playing. Actually, though, surprising­ly few old-time blues players used them. It’s something that happened more in the 1960s blues revival than it did in the 20s and 30s. Take three of the ultimate acoustic blues slide players of all time – and always will be – Robert Johnson, Charley Patton and Blind Willie Johnson… None of these blues players played resonators: they all played flat-top acoustics.

“Jazz players liked the round-neck models: a National was just amazing, because they’d used banjos before, in the early days: four-string banjos, for jazz. Bessie Smith and all those kind of people had a banjo in the band.

“But really, that was sort of superseded by National guitars, you know, because of the power of them and because of the harmonic advantages of six strings rather than four. It was just better.” How long were resonators king of the hill before electrics took over? “Resonators are the missing link between acoustic and electric, and they weren’t there for very long as a very popular design. They sort of dominated the world, I suppose, between 1928 and 33, and then it starts to go – by 1934, you’ve got National producing electric guitars. And it finished completely in the Second World War because, due to the war effort, metals were scarce, and in fact, most of the tooling was destroyed.”

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