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Les Paul, guitarist/inventor/innovator, dead at 94 Thursday, August 13, 2009
NEW YORK — Les Paul, the guitarist and inventor who changed the course of music with the electric guitar and multitrack recording and had a string of hits, many with wife Mary Ford, died on Thursday. He was 94. According to Gibson Guitar, Paul died of complications from pneumonia at White Plains Hospital. His family and friends were by his side. As an inventor, Paul helped bring about the rise of rock 'n' roll and multitrack recording, which enables artists to record different instruments at different times, sing harmony with themselves, and then carefully balance the "tracks" in the finished recording. http://www.foxnews.com/st...88,00.html [Edited 8/13/09 10:30am] | |
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Les Paul, music genius, dead at 94
By Don Walker of the Journal Sentinel Posted: Aug. 13, 2009 11:18 a.m. Les Paul, the Waukesha-born genius who rose to become one of the most influential musicians in the 20th century, has died at the age of 94. A representative of Paul made the announcement in New York. Paul was best known as a pioneer in the development of the solid-body electric guitar and the originator of multi-track recording. Paul, a member of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, was also a major recording artist in the 1940s and 1950s, and performed in Manhattan late in life. With his wife Mary Ford, Paul enjoyed a series of over 25 top forty hits in the late '40s and early '50s including "Vaya Con Dios," "Hummingbird," and "How High the Moon." The couple later divorced and Mary Ford died in 1977. Paul influenced scores of musicians in the worlds of rock and jazz. One of them was Steve Miller. Back in 1948, Miller's father struck up a friendship with Paul when the guitarist was visiting Milwaukee for a date at a local club. "Les and Mary showed me my first chords," Miller told the Journal Sentinel. "He's such a great player, everytime I go to New York I go to the club and jam with Les. There's just this vibe around him. It's always a jam session and all the cats are always there." Aside from making rock-and-roll possible with his creation of the electric guitar, Paul also contributed immensely to the advance of studio recording over the years with inventions like multitrack recording, reverb, and more than a dozen others. Paul McCartney once said this of Paul: "Les was one of the greatest innovators in recording techniques," McCartney said in a statement. "The work he put into developing the guitar that was named after him made the instrument an all-time classic, and his incredible playing skills make him one of the masters of the instrument." In 1990 Capitol honored him with a boxed set "Les Paul the Legend and the Legacy." The 4 CD box contained liner notes by Paul himself and 34 never before released tracks. Born Lester William Polsfuss, Les Paul started performing at home when he was 10 years old, organizing his own little orchestra. He also became fascinated with electronics, building his own broadcasting set in his basement. A Waukesha music teacher had told Paul's mother not to waste her money on lessons for the boy because he wasn't "musically inclined." By 1928, however, Paul had a hot new stage act. At age 13, he was a local sensation: Red Hot Red, the Wizard of Waukesha. He played at Lions Club functions, speakeasies and night clubs. There were pictures of young "Red" at the Mahwah studio. Paul played at a barbecue stand near Milwaukee, he said, but remembered people in their cars complaining that they couldn't hear him. He solved the problem by creating an electric guitar out of his acoustic guitar. He simply jabbed a phonograph needle into the 1912-model instrument and wired it to his mother's radio. To make it easier for people to hear his singing, Paul said, he built a microphone, by wiring the mouthpiece part of his mother's telephone (now attached to a broomstick) to his father's radio. He then designed a recording machine using the flywheel from a Cadillac (his father owned a garage) and a belt from a dentist's drill. "Here she is," Paul said, pointing to the crude-looking but functional device in his studio. About the same time he saved money from his newspaper route and bought a Silvertone guitar, for $2.49. "I took off the sixth string because my fingers couldn't reach it," he recalled. As he practiced his new instrument and listened to jazz bands from Chicago over the radio, Paul noticed that an acoustic guitar, which got its amplification from the string ringing off the hollow body, could not compete for volume in a big band. It needed a boost, he thought. Only 13 years old at the time, he reasoned that a phonograph pickup -- the little device that takes the sound from a record and makes it loud enough to hear -- could provide the extra volume if placed under the strings and sent to a radio speaker. Thus was born a rudimentary electric guitar, using the cartridge and stylus from a phonograph, in 1927. By 1941, with his career as a country and jazz guitarist taking off, Paul came up with the idea that an electric guitar need not have a hollow body at all. The pickup did all the work, so theoretically a guitar could be fashioned from a solid piece of wood. And that is exactly what he did, using a four-by-four as the body and a more sophisticated pickup. Colleagues called it "the log." At Bing Crosby's suggestion Paul built his own recording studio and came up with more inventions like reverb. In 1953 he perfected the first multi-track recording machine, a revolutionary device that allowed musicians to lay down separate lines of music and vocals and blend them together. He married Mary Ford in 1949. He and his first wife, Virginia, whom he had married in 1937, had two sons, Gene and Russel. With Mary Ford he had a son, Robert, and adopted a girl, Colleen. We don’t mourn artists because we knew them. We mourn them because they helped us know ourselves. | |
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R,I,P. That's some good shit! | |
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Rest in peace forever. [Edited 8/13/09 9:47am] | |
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A True Innovator...I almost thought he would always be here.... Rest in Peace, Les.... ... [Edited 8/13/09 9:49am] " I've got six things on my mind --you're no longer one of them." - Paddy McAloon, Prefab Sprout | |
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paligap said: A True Innovator...I almost thought he would always be here.... Rest in Peace, Les.... ... [Edited 8/13/09 9:49am] Put it like this, how many people could say they were still active into their 90s? God called him home. | |
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Timmy84 said: Put it like this, how many people could say they were still active into their 90s? God called him home. True, he was still playing! ... [Edited 8/13/09 10:01am] " I've got six things on my mind --you're no longer one of them." - Paddy McAloon, Prefab Sprout | |
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I just heard about Les Paul's death. He'll be playing a Gold Top with God now. | |
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A truly amazing human being...
Thank you, Mr. Paul, for giving us so much. | |
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Very, very sad. But lucky Heaven to inherit such beautiful sounds! | |
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RipHer2Shreds said: Very, very sad. But lucky Heaven to inherit such beautiful sounds!
Amen. Hopefully Les and Mary can patch things up now. | |
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My dad had tickets to see him recently but the shows were canceled due to illness.
Even so it seemed like he would go on forever My Legacy
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NDRU said: My dad had tickets to see him recently but the shows were canceled due to illness.
Even so it seemed like he would go on forever He died doing what he loved. Just like JB. | |
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Timmy84 said: NDRU said: My dad had tickets to see him recently but the shows were canceled due to illness.
Even so it seemed like he would go on forever He died doing what he loved. Just like JB. indeed! it's always just confused me when people suggest that musicians should retire. Les Paul had arthritis, but his nobody's safety depended on his playing, no superbowl championship depended on his playing. So why retire? My Legacy
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NDRU said: Timmy84 said: He died doing what he loved. Just like JB. indeed! it's always just confused me when people suggest that musicians should retire. Les Paul had arthritis, but his nobody's safety depended on his playing, no superbowl championship depended on his playing. So why retire? Exactly! | |
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"The first time I saw the cover of Dirty Mind in the early 80s I thought, 'Is this some drag queen ripping on Freddie Prinze?'" - Some guy on The Gear Page | |
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RIP to a real pioneer, and a life well lived, without whom ... | |
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Hear, hear.
It's a nice thought to think he lived to see his namesake guitar achieve such a massive level of success and influence over the whole world and across so many generations. A lot of successful musical icons just don't make it long enough to see their effect, Les was lucky in that respect. RIP Mr Paul, and thank you. This is not an exit | |
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Sad. I saw him a few years ago with his jazz trio. He had arthritis but that didn't stop him. And he also had the wicked sense of humour like a 16 year old.
He contributed a lot to music and the electric guitar. I love his guitars. R.I.P. | |
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DEFINATELY a pioneer and a great guitarist. SynthiaRose said "I'm in love with blackguitaristz. Especially when he talks about Hendrix."
nammie "What BGZ says I believe. I have the biggest crush on him." http://ccoshea19.googlepa...ssanctuary http://ccoshea19.googlepages.com | |
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sad ... | |
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RIP
he lives a nice LONG life "we make our heroes in America only to destroy them" | |
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RIP Les Paul
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carlcranshaw said: We owe him a lot.
Yes indeed. ...Les Paul with his first 8-track recorder. Someone who made significant contributions to music's history via technological breakthroughs. Part of his historic legacy will at least live on (even to the unaware) via the guitar that bears his name. He invited me to one of his Iridium gigs in New York a few years ago. Unfortunately, my flight was leaving too early to take advantage of it. I was hoping to take him up on it this October. Truly regret that this won't be possible now... tA Tribal Disorder http://www.soundclick.com...dID=182431 "Ya see, we're not interested in what you know...but what you are willing to learn. C'mon y'all." | |
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