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August 15, 2010

Fender Musical Instruments

Fender Musical Instruments Corporation of Scottsdale, Arizona is a manufacturer of stringed instruments and amplifiers, such as solid-body electric guitars, including the Stratocaster and the Telecaster. The company, previously named the Fender Electric Instrument Manufacturing Company, was founded in Fullerton, California, by Clarence Leonidas "Leo" Fender in 1946.[1] Leo Fender also designed one of the first commercially successful solid-body electric basses, the Precision Bass (P-Bass), which has become known in rock, jazz, country, Motown, funk, and other types of music.
The company is a privately held corporation, with the controlling majority of its stock owned by a group of its own company officers and managers. William (Bill) Mendello is Chairman of the Board of Directors and Chief Executive Officer and James Broenen is Chief Financial Officer.
Fender's headquarters are in Scottsdale, Arizona with manufacturing facilities in Corona, California (USA) and Ensenada, Baja California (Mexico).
History
Fender offered the first mass-produced solid-body Spanish-style electric guitar, the Telecaster (originally named the 'Broadcaster'; 'Esquire' is a single pickup version)[2] the first mass-produced electric bass, the Precision Bass (P-Bass); and popular Stratocaster (Strat) guitar. While Fender was not the first to manufacture electric guitars, as other companies and luthiers had produced electric guitars since the late 1920s, none was as commercially successful as Fender's. Furthermore, while nearly all other electric guitars then were either hollow-body guitars or more specialized instruments such as Rickenbacker's solid-body Hawaiian guitars, Fender had created versatile solid-body electric guitars. These guitars were and still are popular for musicians in a variety of genres. Many bands, even to this day, use any type of Fender guitars. Some notable Fender players were George Harrison, Keith Richards, Bruce Springsteen, Jimi Hendrix, Hank Marvin, Eric Clapton, Mark Knopfler and others.
The company also makes and/ or distributes acoustic guitars, electric basses, mandolins, banjos, and violins, as well as guitar amplifiers, bass amplifiers, and PA (public address) equipment. Other Fender brands include Squier (entry level/budget), Guild (acoustic and electric guitars and amplifiers), SWR (bass amplification), Passport Tacoma, Jackson, Charvel, Gretsch guitars and collaborated with Eddie Van Halen to make the EVH guitars and amplifiers.
On October 28, 2007, Fender announced its intention to buy Kaman Music Corporation (owners of Hamer Guitars, Ovation Guitars, Genz Benz amplifiers, Gibraltar Hardware, along with many others, and exclusive distributor for Sabian cymbals and Takamine Guitars).
Other Fender instruments include the Mustang, Jazzmaster, Jaguar, Starcaster, Duo-sonic, Tele-Sonic, Strat-o-Sonic, Toronado and Bronco guitars; basses such as the Jazz Bass, the 'Telecaster Bass' reissue of the original 1950s Precision Bass; a line of lap steels; three models of electric violin, and the Fender Rhodes electric piano.
For a full list of products made by Fender see: Fender Musical Instrument Corporation product list
Origins


Sketch of Leo Fender's lap steel guitar from 1944 patent application
The company began as Fender's Radio Service in late 1938 in Fullerton, California, USA. As a qualified electronics technician, Leo Fender had been asked to repair not only radios, but phonograph players, home audio amplifiers, public address systems and musical instrument amplifiers. (At the time, most of these were just variations on a few simple vacuum-tube circuits.) All designs were based on research developed and released to the public domain by Western Electric in the '30s, and used vacuum tubes for amplification. The business also sidelined in carrying records for sale and the rental of self-designed-and-built PA systems. Leo became intrigued by design flaws in current musical instrument amplifiers, and he began custom-building a few amplifiers based on his own designs or modifications to designs.
By the early 1940s, he had partnered with another local electronics enthusiast named Clayton Orr "Doc" Kauffman, and together they formed a company named K & F Manufacturing Corp. to design, manufacture and sell electric instruments and amplifiers. Production began in 1945 with Hawaiian lap steel guitars (incorporating a patented pickup) and amplifiers, which were sold as sets. By the end of the year, Fender had become convinced that manufacturing was more profitable than repair, and he decided to concentrate on that business. Kauffman remained unconvinced, however, and they had amicably parted ways by early 1946. At that point Leo renamed the company the Fender Electric Instrument Company. The service shop remained open until 1951, although Leo Fender did not personally supervise it after 1947.
The first big series of amplifiers were built in 1948. These were known as tweed amps, because they were covered in the same kind of cloth used for luggage at the time. These amps varied in output from 3 watts to 75 watts. This period was one of innovation and changes; While Leo made a Tweed Princeton in 1948 for his Professional 8 string Lap Steel guitar [very short lived, as later he would focus on 6 string Student models] later the Princeton would become a push-pull class AB tube amp, in 1948 it was a single ended Class A amplifier similar to the Fender Champ, with the output transformer mounted to the speaker frame and bereft of any negative feedback. Also, in 1964, the Tweed Champ amp would be reissued in black tolex in small numbers along with the newer model with the slant front panel and controls; the stacked plywood boxes Leo used often went uninventoried. In late 1963, he found a couple hundred Tweed Champ chassis boxes in these bins. He had had them chromed and printed in 1958; being frugal, he built them in black tolex with a chrome and black Champ nameplate, as he had money tied up in them already.
Fender moved to Tolex coverings for the brownface amps in 1960, with the exception of the Champ which kept its tweed until 1964. Fender also began using Oxford, Utah and CTS speakers interchangeably with the Jensens; generally the speaker that could be supplied most economically would be used. Jensens and Oxfords remained the most common during this period. By 1963 Fender amplifiers had a black Tolex covering, silver grille cloth, and black forward-facing control panel. The tremolo was changed to a simpler circuit based on an optical coupler and requiring only one tube. The amps still spanned the spectrum from 4 watts to 85, but the difference in volume was larger, due to the improved, clean tone of the 85w Twin.
Fender owed its early success not only to its founder and talented associates such as musician/product engineer Freddie Tavares but also to the efforts of sales chief, senior partner and marketing genius Don Randall. According to The Stratocaster Chronicles (a book by Tom Wheeler; Hal Leonard Pub., Milwaukee, WI; 2004, p. 108), Mr. Randall assembled what Mr. Fender's original partner Doc Kauffman called “a sales distributorship like nobody had ever seen in the world.” Randall worked closely with the immensely talented photographer/designer Bob Perine. Their catalogs and ads — such as the inspired "You Won't Part With Yours Either" campaign, which portrayed people surfing, skiing, skydiving, and climbing into jet planes, all while holding Jazzmasters and Stratocasters — elevated once-staid guitar merchandising to an art form. In Fender guitar literature of the 1960s, attractive, guitar-toting teenagers were posed with surfboards and Perine's classic Thunderbird convertible at local beachside settings, firmly integrating Fender into the surfin’/hot rod/sports car culture of Southern California celebrated by the Beach Boys, beach movies, and surf music. (The Stratocaster Chronicles, by Tom Wheeler; Hal Leonard Pub., Milwaukee, WI; 2004, p. 108). This early success is dramatically illustrated by the growth of Fender's manufacturing capacity through the 1950's and 1960's.
Sale to CBS
In early 1965, Leo Fender sold his companies to the Columbia Broadcasting System, or CBS for $13 million.[3] This was almost two million more than they paid for The New York Yankees a year before. CBS entered the musical instruments field by acquiring the Fender companies (Fender Sales, Inc., Fender Electric Instrument Company, Inc., Fender Acoustic Instrument Company, Inc., Fender-Rhodes, Inc., Terrafen, Inc., Clef-Tronix, Inc., Randall Publishing Co., Inc., and V.C. Squier Company), as well as Electro-Music Inc. (Leslie speakers), Rogers drums, Steinway pianos, Gemeinhardt flutes, Lyon & Healy harps, Rodgers (institutional) organs, and Gulbransen home organs.
This had far-reaching implications. The sale was taken as a positive development, considering CBS's ability to bring in money and personnel who acquired a large inventory of Fender parts and unassembled guitars that were assembled and put to market. However, the sale also led to a reduction of the quality of Fender's guitars while under the management of "cost-cutting" CBS. Several cosmetic changes occurred after 1965/1966, such as a larger headstock shape on certain guitars. Bound necks with block shaped position markers were introduced in 1966. A bolder black headstock logo, as well as a brushed aluminum face plate with blue or red labels (depending the model) for the guitar and bass amplifiers became standard features, starting in 1968. These cosmetic changes were followed by a new "tailless" Fender amp decal and a sparkling orange grillcloth on certain amplifiers in the mid-1970s. Regarding guitars, in the early 1970s the usual four-bolt neck joint was changed to one using only three bolts, and a second string tree for the two middle (G and D) strings was added in late 1971. These changes were said to have been made to save money: While it suited the new 'improved' micro-tilt adjustment of the neck (previously requiring neck removal and shimming), the "Bullet" truss-rod system, and a 5-way pickup selector on most models, it also resulted in a greater propensity toward mechanical failure of the guitars.
During the CBS era, the company did introduce some new instrument and amplifier designs. The Fender Starcaster was particularly unusual because of its semi-hollow body design, still retaining the Fender bolt-on neck, and a completely different headstock. The Starcaster also incorporated a new Humbucking pickup designed by Seth Lover. This pickup also gave rise to 3 new incarnations of the classic Telecaster. Though more recent use by Jonny Greenwood of Radiohead has raised the Starcaster's profile, CBS-era instruments are generally much less coveted or collectable than the "pre-CBS" models created by Leo Fender prior to selling the Fender companies to CBS in 1965.
The culmination of the CBS "cost-cutting" may have occurred in 1983, when the Fender Stratocaster received a short-lived redesign lacking a second tone control and a bare-bones output jack, as well as redesigned single-coil pickups, active electronics, and three push-push buttons for pickup selection (Elite Series). Additionally, previous models such as the Swinger (also known as Musiclander) and Custom (also known as Maverick) were perceived by some musicians as little more than attempts to squeeze profits out of factory stock. The so-called "pre-CBS cult" refers to the popularity of Fenders made before the sale.
After selling the Fender company, Leo Fender founded Music Man in 1975, and later founded the G&L Musical Instruments company, which manufactures electric guitars and basses based on his later designs.
Fender today
In 1985, in a campaign initiated by then CBS Musical Instruments division president William Schultz (1926-2006), the Fender Electric Instrument Manufacturing Company employees purchased the company from CBS and renamed it the Fender Musical Instruments Corporation. Behind the Fender name, the Fender Musical Instruments Corporation has retained Fender's older models along with newer designs and concepts.
Fender manufactures its highest quality, most expensive guitars at its Corona factory in California and manufactures a variety of other mid-to-high quality guitars at its Ensenada factory in Baja California, Mexico. Channing Ward is the lead designer of the 2009 Stratocaster. Fender also contracts Asian guitar builders to manufacture Fender guitars and the economy priced entry-level Squier guitars. Older vintage and U.S.A. built Fender guitars are generally the most favoured, but pre-1990 Fender Japan guitars are now highly regarded as well. Fender guitars built in Ensenada, Mexico now fulfill the primary export role formerly held by Japanese made Fenders. Japanese Fenders are now manufactured specifically for the Japanese market, with only a small number marked for export.
Squier was a string manufacturer subsequently acquired by Fender. The Squier brand has been used by Fender since 1982 to market inexpensive variants of Fender guitars intended to compete with the rise of Stratocaster copies, as the Stratocaster was slowly becoming more popular. Squier guitars have been manufactured in Japan, Korea, India, Indonesia and China. The Squier name adorns many inexpensive guitars based on Fender designs but with generally cheaper hardware, bridges and electronics.
In recent years, Fender Musical Instruments Corporation has branched out into making and selling steel-string acoustic guitars, and has purchased a number of other instrument firms, including the Guild Guitar Company, the Sunn Amplifier Company, and other brands such as SWR Sound Corporation. In early 2003, Fender Musical Instruments Corporation made a deal with Gretsch and began manufacturing and distributing new Gretsch guitars. Fender also owns: Jackson, Charvel, Olympia, Orpheum, Tacoma Guitars (based in Seattle, WA), Squier and Brand X amps. The Californian guitar giant has recently purchased Kaman Music Corporation, which owns Ovation acoustic guitars, LP and Toca hand percussion products, Gibraltar Hardware, Genz Benz Amplification, Hamer Guitars and is the exclusive U.S. sales representative for Sabian Cymbals and exclusive worldwide distributor of Takamine Guitars and Gretsch Drums.
In February 2007 Fender announced that it would produce an illustrated product guide in place of its traditional annual Frontline magazine. This change was made in large part due to the costs associated with paying royalties in both print and the Internet. With the new illustrated product guide, this removed print issues. The new guide contains its entire range of instruments and amplifiers along with color pictures and basic specifications. The New Fender Frontline In-Home will be produced during the year, keeping customers up to date with new products. These will be available through guitar publications and will be directly mailed to customers who sign up to the Fender website. As well as these printed formats, Fender Frontline Live was launched at the winter NAMM show in January 2007 as a new online reference point, containing information on new products and live footage from the show.
Instruments
The core of its instrument line — the Telecaster, Stratocaster, Precision Bass and Jazz Bass — remains largely unchanged from the 1950s and 1960s originals (Roberts, Jim. 2003. American Basses:A Illustrated History). They also make acoustic guitars.
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Electric Guitar

Electric guitar is a type of guitar that uses pickups to convert some noise or vibration from the guitar strings into electric current which will be strengthened again by using a set of amplifiers and loud speakers. Electric guitar sounds generated from the vibration of guitar strings that exist in the body coil guitar, usually called "pick up". Sometimes the signal coming out of the pickup changed electronically with guitar effects as reverb or distortion.

The first electric guitar used by jazz guitarists who use hollow bodied amplifier to get a bigger voice. The first electric guitar is a hollow bodied guitar with pickups made by manufacturers of steel Rickenbacker in 1931. Electric guitar is key instrument in the development of music that emerged since 1940, including the Chicago Blues, rock and roll and blues rock in 1962.

History

The need for a strong guitar sound more real in the big band era, marked by the growing-orchestra, jazz orchestra in 1930 and 1940.

Early years

Electric guitar was originally designed by guitar maker, lover of electronics and appliances manufacturer musik.Inovator adapting Les Paul guitar with hollow bodied instruments with tungsten pickups wear, the guitar of this type began to be produced by the Electro String Instrument Corporation in 1932. Their first design was made by Harry Watson, an expert who worked at the Electro String new Company.Gitar was named "Rickenbacker" by the company and be the first of its kind. The first documentation of performance with electric guitar is the year 1932 by a guitarist and bandleader Gage Brewer. Brewew publish his new instrument in an article in the Wichita Beacon on 2 October 1932 and continued to appear in the month. The first recording with electric guitar made by players like Andy Iola Hawaiian Style in early 1933. Alvino Rey is the artist who brought this instrument to a wider audience of a large orchestral setting, and then developed with the pedal steel guitar to Gibson Ediie Durham introduced the instrument electric spanish guitar to a young man named Charlie Christian who made the instrument famous in his life journey and generally known as the first electric guitar and also brings great influence into jazz until the next decade. Spanish first electric guitar recording is in Dallas September 1939, in a session by Roy Newman and His Boys, a Western Swing band. The guitarist Jim Boyd uses electric guitar throughout the recording three songs one of them "Corinne, Corrina." Early on guitar manufacturers include: Rickenbacker in 1932, 1933 Dobro, National, Audio Vox and Volu-Ton in 1934, Vega, Epiphone, and Gibson in 1936, and more since 1936. Version of the most recognizable instrument currently is Solid Bodied Electric Guitar or berbodi solid electric guitar, made from solid wood with no air space in bodinya. Rickenbacker offers an electric guitar with an aluminum mold nicknamed The Frying Pan or The Pancake Guitar. Developed in 1931 and began production in 1932 spring season, this guitar produces a modern sound and aggressive. Audio Vox companies create and may have offered solid body guitar in the mid-1930. An other solid guitar designed by a musician and inventor Les Paul in early 1940, he worked part time in Epiphone Guitar. Log Guitarnya guitar has been patented and is often regarded as the first of its kind.

Fender

In 1946 a radio technician and assembler Clarence Leonidas Fender amplifiers better known as Leo Fender solid body guitar designed the first successful in comersial with a magnetic pickup which is named Esquire. Esquire two pickup version called the Broadcaster. Gretcsch also have a drumset marketed with names like "Broadkaster", thus renamed Fender Telecaster. In 1954 Fender introduced the Fender Stratocaster, or Start. Stratocaster look more luxurious and display a variety of improvements and innovations exceeds the Telecaster. Fender introduces an electric bass guitar called a Fender Precision Bass in 1951.


Vox

In 1962, Vox introduced the guitar hexagon "Phantom", originally made in England but later produced by Alter EKO of Italy. A year later, followed by a tear-drop shaped Mark VI, the prototype used by Brian Jones of The Rolling Stones and then Jhonny Thunders of the New York Dolls. In the year 1960 when the 12 string electric guitars became popular, Vox introduced the Panthom XII and Mark XII. Vox also produce other traditional models of the 6 string and 12 string in both England and Italy.

Construction

Electric guitar construction consists of many variations, in terms of materials used for guitar bodies, pieces of body shape and placement of neck, bridge, and pickups there are some features found in almost all types of guitars: the headstock; contains nmachine head that is used for tuning the guitar, nut ; the form of a thin piece of metal or plastic long as the support of strings before the fretboard / fingerboard, machine head; a worm gear can be rotated or driven in regulating the string tension to get the tone, fret; the form of a thin metal piece partially embedded into the fretboard, stop functioning strings when the strings pressed to the fretboard to get the desired tone. Neck and fretboard; extends from the nut to the body guitar and the neck joint, neck or dibaut glued to the guitar body, body, made of hardwood and stained divernis, but some of the guitar body is made of polycarbonate and other materials, pickups, usually in the form magnetic pickups, controls knop; form of potentiometers for volume and tone, fixed bridge on some guitars, the bridge is not fixed is used as a substitute tremolo system allows players to bend the tone and vibrato are also showing the effects on his guitar playing.


[Pickup

Typically a magnetic pickup Compared with acoustic guitar that has a hollow body, electric guitar produces a very small voice, so that an electric guitar should disambugkan with an amplifier to strengthen her voice. When the vibration of strings, plucked strings will generate very small currents in the magnetic pickup (in the form of magnet wire wound around the coil wiring. This current is then forwarded to the amplifier with a cable. The pickup consists of a single coil and double coil or Humbucker. Humbuker has two coils for reverse the polarity of the magnets and electricity. Intended to electromagnetic noise on the second coil is reversed by itself.

Tremolo Arm

Some Electric Guitar uses tremolo arm (sometimes called a whammy bar or vibrato bar and often shortened with trams), the form of a lever which is connected with the bridge is not fixed to relax the tense strings and temporally, to change the tone and produce vibrations or portamento effects. Initially the system began to doubt and menybabkan tremolo guitar out of tune easily and also has limited tone. Fender tremolo and then a better design, but Fender hold the patent, so the manufacturers, other manufacturers still use the old system. The expiration of patents Fender Stratocaster with tremolo types, various types of improvements is done internally, multi-spring tremolo system finally came out. Floyd Rose introduced one of the first changes in vibrato system in late 1970 when he began to experiment with "locking" nuts and bridges which work to keep the guitar tune even with heavy whammy bar acrobatics though.

Guitar Effects

While the acoustic guitar sound depends on the vibration body is equipped with air space, the magnitude of an electric guitar sound depends on the magnetic induction of electrical signals generated by the metal strings near the pickups. Signal was formed in the plot toward a aplifiermenggunakan set of sound effects to modify the tone and signal characteristics. Circuit formation of the most common sound is a volume control, gain and tone and pickup selector switch is found in almost all types of electric guitars. Year 1960 some guitarists began to explore a wider coverage in effect distorts penadaan with sound, by adding the gain and volume of the preamplifier that produces a faint voice (fuzzy). This effect is called "clipping" by the experts because of the sound when shown with oscilloscopes, signal waveform distortion shown truncated at its peak. This is not a recent development in the instrument, but presents a little shift in aesthetics. Year 1960 penadaan colors on the next electric guitar be modified by introducing an effects box in the signal path, built in a metal chassis with a switch on / of the foot. Looks like stomp boxes have become an important part in many musical genres. Sound effects typically include stereo chorus, fuzz, wah-wah, flanging, compression / sustain, delay, reverb and phase shift. Not all of the guitar effects elektrnik 1967, from The Yardbird Jimmy Page and Led Zepelin creating psychedelic sound effects by playing the guitar with a violin bow and hitting the strings with a bow. Years 1980 and 1990, digital effects and Sotware effect can begin replicating the analog effects. Efect digital sound generated is trying to effect analogous to that for varying degrees of quality. So much for the computer program can didownloud efect guitar for free via the Internet. Now with a computer using a soundcard can be used as a digital guitar effect. But although the digital effects and software many beneficial effects, many guitarists still use analog effects.
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Electric Bass Guitar

Electric bass guitar (usually called electric bass or bass only) is a stringed musical instrument that uses electricity to enlarge his voice. His appearance is similar to an electric guitar but he has a larger body, longer neck, and usually has four strings (electric guitar has six strings).

Additional:
The weight of the bass itself ideally heavier than regular electric guitar, because the strings are much thicker (to maintain humility tone / sound) so the cause must choose the wood that is denser and harder to balance the pressure on the neck (neck guitar).

In addition fret size (column on guitar) greater adjusted by the thickness of the string.

There are many types of bass, which was used until the present. The most widely used form of contra bass and cello, bass (which is used for opera performances), electric bass (commonly used for all types of performances, especially the band) and fretless bass, electric bass the same but no fret (column / divider on the board press / neck) is on bass. The working principle is similar to contra fretless bass / cello, bass, electric guitar it's just shaped.
[Edit] Strings and Weighted (Tuning)

* Four strings

Usually for to "GDAE", "GDAD", "GDGD", "DAEB", "DADB (usually this pattern in use for the music underground / open D)," FCGD "or" FCGC "

* Five strings

Usually for to "GDAEB" but sometimes "CGDAE".

* Six strings

Usually for to "ABCDEF" or "CGDAEB", although "EBGDAE" also likes to use.

Tuning the above sorted by number of strings (strings 1, strings 2, and so on), where string 1 is the lowest of bass guitar strings (the thinnest string).

Bass players choose to use the bass with five strings or even six-string because of more wide range of tones that can be played. Six-stringed bass rarely used than the four-stringed bass and five-stringed bass. Usually, this six-stringed bass used by many bass players homage to jazz, although not denied any player-rock there is also wear them, due to more wide range of tones that can be played
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