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The Birth of Loud - Leo Fender, Les Paul, and the Guitar-Pioneering Rivalry That Shaped Rock 'n' Roll (Paperback)
Loot Price: R255
Discovery Miles 2 550
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The Birth of Loud - Leo Fender, Les Paul, and the Guitar-Pioneering Rivalry That Shaped Rock 'n' Roll (Paperback)
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Loot Price R255
Discovery Miles 2 550
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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“A hot-rod joy ride through mid-20th-century American history”
(The New York Times Book Review), this one-of-a-kind narrative
masterfully recreates the rivalry between the two men who innovated
the electric guitar’s amplified sound—Leo Fender and Les
Paul—and their intense competition to convince rock stars like
the Beatles, Jimi Hendrix, and Eric Clapton to play the instruments
they built. In the years after World War II, music was evolving
from big-band jazz into rock ’n’ roll—and these louder styles
demanded revolutionary instruments. When Leo Fender’s tiny firm
marketed the first solid-body electric guitar, the Esquire,
musicians immediately saw its appeal. Not to be out-maneuvered,
Gibson, the largest guitar manufacturer, raced to build a
competitive product. The company designed an “axe” that would
make Fender’s Esquire look cheap and convinced Les Paul—whose
endorsement Leo Fender had sought—to put his name on it. Thus was
born the guitar world’s most heated rivalry: Gibson versus
Fender, Les versus Leo. While Fender was a quiet, half-blind,
self-taught radio repairman, Paul was a brilliant but headstrong
pop star and guitarist who spent years toying with new musical
technologies. Their contest turned into an arms race as the most
inventive musicians of the 1950s and 1960s—including bluesman
Muddy Waters, rocker Buddy Holly, the Beatles, Bob Dylan, and Eric
Clapton—adopted one maker’s guitar or another. By 1969 it was
clear that these new electric instruments had launched music into a
radical new age, empowering artists with a vibrancy and volume
never before attainable. In “an excellent dual portrait” (The
Wall Street Journal), Ian S. Port tells the full story in The Birth
of Loud, offering “spot-on human characterizations, and erotic
paeans to the bodies of guitars” (The Atlantic). “The story of
these instruments is the story of America in the postwar era: loud,
cocky, brash, aggressively new” (The Washington Post).
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