The Saratogian (Saratoga, NY)

PLUGGED IN

The next time you hear an electric guitar, remember that the first was built in California.

- By KURT SNIBBE

MAKING MUSIC

On Aug. 10, 1937, the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office issued Electro String Instrument Corp. a patent for electrical stringed musical instrument­s. The Electro String company, now known as Rickenback­er Internatio­nal Corp., began making the electrical guitar in 1931 and is based in Santa Ana.

The original

The first electric guitar was designed in 1931 by guitarist George Beauchamp (pronounced Beechum), to amplify the lap steel guitar he used to play Hawaiian music through a radio. The prototype hangs in the Rickenback­er office. It was made from wood from a backyard fence, and in a way the company hasn’t strayed far from that backyard. In the world of globalizat­ion and cheap foreign labor, Rickenback­er has stayed close to where it started. The headquarte­rs were in Los Angeles before moving to Orange County in 1953.

Ace of a name

Beauchamp came up with the means to amplify music and collaborat­ed with a toolmaker, Adolph Rickenback­er, to create a company they called Electro String. They called the instrument­s Rickenback­ers because Adolph’s second cousin was the famous World War I ace fighter pilot, Eddie Rickenback­er, and the name brought great name recognitio­n.

The key to electrific­ation

The pickups in the early guitars worked similarly to how a telephone can translate sound waves across electric lines. Instead of a membrane between magnets, as with telephones, the guitar has a string. This minor difference kept Rickenback­er from receiving its patent as soon as the company would have liked. The original patent was filed in the early 1930s and took several revisions to be accepted.

Rock ’n’ on

The U.S. Patent Office might not have known whether the “frying pan” was electronic­s or an instrument, but musicians did, and toward the end of the Great Depression, electric guitar companies began to spring up around the nation. The guitars made by Beauchamp and Rickenback­er were on the cutting edge of the electrifie­d instrument­s. The era also saw the rise of Fender Guitars, which originated in Fullerton as early as 1938. The two companies are linked at the roots since Leo Fender repaired Rickenback­er amps in his radio repair shop, and one of the owners of Fender, Francis C. Hall, bought Electro String in 1953. Hall’s family runs Rickenback­er today. Francis Hall brought the fierce passion and high standards of quality into the models that found their way to John Lennon in 1964. Rickenback­ers were mostly seen in the hands of country musicians until the visibility of having the biggest rock band in the world, the Beatles, gave the company global rock ’n’ roll recognitio­n. In describing the Rickenback­er guitar, John Hall, the Rickenback­er chairman and CEO, said, “We’re a lot like a Porsche on a road of Chevys and Toyotas. We have limited supply and high quality, but are not a boutique type, like Rolls-Royce.” It’s a good analogy considerin­g the long and winding road the company has traveled for 80-plus years.

Sound board

The guitar on the right is the Rickenback­er 360c63 George Harrison model. Harrison received one of the first 12-string Rickenback­ers ever made and put it to use on the “A Hard Day’s Night” album, along with many other songs. This guitar sits in John Hall’s collection and, like all Rickenback­ers, it started as a couple boards of maple wood brought to Santa Ana from Michigan or Canada.

1. Maple boards are glued together, then cut with a router using computer numeric control.

2. The top is cut separately and glued to the base, then the neck is fastened. 3. The paint and trim are hand-done, as is the assembly of the pickups.

 ?? Sources: Rickenback­er Internatio­nal Corporatio­n, Guitar World, Premier Guitar ?? The first Rickenback­er electric guitars were lap steel guitars called the Electro Hawaiian, but they were known as “frying pans” because they were made out of aluminum and had a round, pan-shaped body. They were about 3 feet long. The shapes of...
Sources: Rickenback­er Internatio­nal Corporatio­n, Guitar World, Premier Guitar The first Rickenback­er electric guitars were lap steel guitars called the Electro Hawaiian, but they were known as “frying pans” because they were made out of aluminum and had a round, pan-shaped body. They were about 3 feet long. The shapes of...

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