History of Fender Guitars
History of Fender. Find out about how these famous guitars developed over time. Interesting information about the Fender
Stratocaster and Telecaster, design, info about the founder leo Fender, Fender Squier, amps and the modern guitarists of today.
Fender
The Fender Musical Instruments Corporation, initially named the Fender Electric Instrument Manufacturing
Company, was founded by Leo Fender in 1946, and is one of
the most recognised manufacturers of electric guitars,
basses and amps.
Fender is particularly important because of its role in bringing solidbody electric guitars to the masses.
Fender offered the first mass-produced solid-body Spanish-style electric guitar, the Telecaster (originally named the
'Broadcaster', 'Esquire' is a single pickup version); the first mass-produced electric
bass, the Precision Bass (or P-Bass); and the enormously popular Stratocaster guitar (or 'Strat' for short). While other companies and luthiers had produced electric guitars since the late
1920s, nearly all were either hollow-body guitars with pickups attached,
or more specialized instruments such as Rickenbacker's solid-body
Hawaiian lap steel guitars.
Other popular and/or notable Fender instruments include the Mustang, Jazzmaster, Jaguar, Starcaster, Duosonic, and Bronco guitars; basses such as the
Jazz Bass, the 'Telecaster Bass' reissue of the original
1950s Precision Bass; a line of lap steels, and the
Fender Rhodes electric piano.
Its headquarters are in Scottsdale, Arizona, with manufacturing facilities in Corona, California, and OCONUS manufacturing facilities
in Ensenada (Mexico), Korea and Japan.
Early history
The company began as "Fender's Radio Service" in late 1938
in Fullerton,
California, USA. As a qualified electronics technician, Leo was asked to repair not only
radios, but phonograph players, home audio amplifiers, public address systems and musical instrument amplifiers. (Technical note: at the time, most of the above were
simply variations on a few simple vacuum-tube circuits). The business also sidelined in carrying records for sale and the rental of
self-designed-and-built PA systems. He 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 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.
In early 1965, Leo Fender
sold his company to the Columbia Broadcasting System, or CBS.
Fender's sale to CBS had far-reaching implications. At first, the sale was a taken as a positive development,
considering CBS' ability to bring in money and personnel. However, the sale is often now looked back upon unfavorably, due to the perception that
CBS favored numbers and profit over quality; the culmination of this occurred in 1983, when the Stratocaster received a short-lived redesign without a second tone control and a
bare-bones output jack. In addition, previous models such as the Swinger (a.k.a. Musiclander) and Custom (a.k.a. Maverick) had been 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 designed products for Music Man and later founded the G&L company which manufactures top quality electric guitars and basses designed
by Leo Fender.
Current
In 1985, initiated by a
company employee named William Schultz, the Fender Electric Instrument Manufacturing Company was bought from CBS by its own employees, and
renamed Fender Musical Instruments Corporation.
Behind the Fender name, the Fender Musical Instruments Corporation has continued to grow, and to add a wider
range of products to its catalogs, while still keeping with traditional designs from the company's early years.
The brand name, 'Squier',
(previously a string manufacturer bought up by Fender) has been used in the early 1980s to produce (in Japan) cheaper, original Fender guitars to
combat the frighteningly accurate copies from Japanese manufacturer Tokai and, later, with the production moving to Korea, for student-grade versions of Fender designs, of varying manufacture and
often wildly fluctuating quality. The name adorns many inexpensive guitars based on Fender designs but with much cheaper construction (for
instance, poplar, basswood and agathis replace ash and alder for the bodies - in those cases where the body is made of solid wood, because quite
a good deal of Squiers feature plywood bodies - and the maple necks are of a lower grade). These inexpensive models are now manufactured in China
and Indonesia.
Fender manufactures its highest quality models in the United States and Japan, but also has extensive
manufacturing facilities in China and Mexico for downmarket models, such that a new guitar with the name, 'Fender Stratocaster,' can be purchased
for roughly the same dollar amount today as in 1954. The older and American-built Strats are by far the most favoured, but Japanese Fenders are
now highly regarded as well: Fenders built in Ensenada, Mexico took over for the early Japanese guitars as the downmarket counterparts to the
American models, while more recent Japanese Fenders are now mainly for the Japanese market, as counterparts to the American-made Fenders, and
with only a small number marked for export.
Early Japanese Fender and Squier Stratocasters are well-regarded, and are now traded on the used-guitar
market as JV, this does not stand for 'Japanese Vintage', but actually equates to the prefix JV on the serial numbers of the earliest Squier
Guitars. The earliest Squiers had the Fender logo in big letters above the squier. This was later changed.
In recent years, Fender Musical Instruments Corporation has branched out into making and selling
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 bass amplifiers.
The core of its instrument line, the Tele, Strat, P-Bass, and J-Bass, remains largely unchanged from the
1950s and 1960s originals. On nearly every stage in the country, small or large, featuring blues, country and western
or rock and roll, it is common
to see a Fender guitar or bass in the hands of one or more of the musicians, amplified through a Fender amplifier. Fender guitars have been the
instrument of choice for hundreds of noted artists including Jimi Hendrix, Eric Clapton, David Gilmour, Mark
Knopfler, Stevie Ray Vaughan, Ritchie Blackmore,
Hank Marvin and Keith
Richards.
In early 2003, Fender Musical Instruments Corporation made a deal with Gretsch, and began manufacturing and distributing new Gretsch guitars. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
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