Guitar Player

JACK WHITE

MADE CHEAP GUITARS COOL (AND EXPENSIVE)

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As most fans will agree, never has so mighty a sound been made on so humble an instrument. But it would be difficult to call Jack White’s 1964 Montgomery Ward Airline Res-O-Glas cheap anymore, after his use of the ’60s catalog fodder sent values and collectibi­lity soaring sky high. From the start, though, the White Stripes’ ethos was firmly rooted in the power of minimalism, and giving the band’s sparse ingredient­s room to breathe often translated “less is more” into “less is huge!”

White wasn’t the first guitarist to discover the conversely massive, dynamic tone that an erstwhile cheapo instrument can generate, but when he strapped on his red Res-O-Glas beauty, the guitar world quickly recognized the full achievemen­t of this silk-purse-out-ofsow’s-ear-like conversion. The fiberglass body, assembly-line constructi­on, and dual Valco single-coil pickups (humbuckeri­sh though they appear) add up to an edgy, characterf­ul snarl, and definitely get the big riffs across.

A big part of this guitar’s appeal for White seems to be that it’s not an easy or forgiving instrument to play. As he told Guitar Player in 2010, “I always look at playing guitar as an attack. It has to be a fight. Every song, every guitar solo, every note that’s played or written has to be a struggle… The idea behind using the Ward’s Airline in the White Stripes was to prove that you don’t need a brand-new guitar to have character, to have tone, and to be able to play what you want to play. You can do it with a piece of plastic.”

The fact that White’s playing has sent the desirabili­ty of such plastic — or fiberglass — guitars off the charts doesn’t change the principle behind the sentiment, and he deserves double credit for once again affirming that the music is in the heart, mind and fingers of the maker, and not the price tag of the instrument. — Dave Hunter HEAR IT: “Dead Leaves and the Dirty Ground,” White Blood Cells

— White Stripes

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