Rickenbacker
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- For the American WWI fighter pilot, see Eddie Rickenbacker.
Image:Paul Weller and Bruce Foxton with Rickenbackers 1024.jpg
Rickenbacker is one of the oldest brand names in the manufacture of electric guitars. The firm is headquartered in Santa Ana, California, and all of its production takes place there. Rickenbacker is the largest guitar company to manufacture all of their guitars within the United States, which is a key factor in their consistently high quality and prices.
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Founding
The company was founded as the Electro String Instrument Corporation by Adolph Rickenbacher and George Beauchamp in 1931 to sell electric "Hawaiian" guitars designed by Beauchamp. They chose the brand name Rickenbacher (shortly to be changed to Rickenbacker) for these guitars.
These instruments, nicknamed "frying pans" due to their long necks and circular bodies, are considered by some to be the first solid-bodied electric guitars, though they were not standard guitars, but a lap-steel type. They had huge pickups with a pair of horseshoe magnets that arched over the top of the strings. By the time production ceased in 1939, about 2,700 had been produced.
Early history
Rickenbacher (shortly afterwards changed to 'Rickenbacker' to avoid German connotations in light of the world wars) continued to specialize in steel guitars well into the 1950s, but with the rock and roll boom they shifted towards producing standard guitars, both acoustic and electric. In 1956, Rickenbacker introduced two instruments with the "neck through body" construction that was to become a standard feature of the company's products — the Combo 400 guitar and the model 4000 bass.
In 1959, Rickenbacker introduced its "Capri" series, including the double-cutaway semi-acoustic guitars which would become the famous 300 series. In 1964 Rickenbacker developed an electric twelve-string guitar with an innovative headstock design that enabled all twelve machine heads to be fitted onto a standard-length headstock by alternately mounting pairs of machine heads at right-angles to the other. Image:Howe.jpg
Hallmarks of Rickenbackers
Many Rickenbackers — both guitars and basses — are equipped to be compatible with a "Rick-O-Sound" unit via an extra "stereo" output socket, that allows the two pickups (or neck and middle pickup combined/bridge pickup, in the case of three pickup instruments) to be connected to different effects units or amplifiers. Another idiosyncrasy of Rickenbackers is the use of two truss rods (rather than the usual one) to correct twists, as well as curvature, in the neck.
Rickenbacker guitars are noted for their distinctive jangle and chime. They are very trebly instruments and, unlike most electric guitars used in rock and roll, are often played cleanly, without distortion. Because of their tone, the guitars are favored by jangle pop, power pop, and British Invasion-style groups. Though there are exceptions, most hard rock, metal, and punk outfits eschew Rickenbacker guitars because they are not as well suited to tougher, grittier sounds as are other guitars; Rickenbacker basses, however, are a staple of the hard rock genre (see below).
Guitars
During the 1960s, with luck on their side, Rickenbacker would go on to enjoy an incredible endorsement when a couple of Rickenbacker models became permanently intertwined with the sound and look of the most popular band of the 1960s and arguably the most influential band of the 20th century; The Beatles. In Hamburg 1960, the then-unknown John Lennon bought a 325 Capri, which he used throughout the early days of The Beatles. He went on to use several variations of the 325 model, one of which he used during The Beatles famous 1964 appearance on the Ed Sullivan show. In 1963, George Harrison had bought a 425. The second model 360/12 ever made was given as a gift to Harrison. This instrument became a key part of the Beatles' sound on A Hard Day's Night and Help! and was used by Harrison throughout his life. Though difficult to fret cleanly (the 12 strings are on a conventional width six string neck) it remains very popular because it is still the only way to get the true "12 string Rick" sound, one of rock music's most distinctive sounds since 1964. Meanwhile, Paul McCartney made use of a Rickenbacker bass model (see below).
Rickenbackers were adopted by other 1960s notables, including Roger McGuinn of The Byrds, Pete Townshend of The Who, Carl Wilson of the Beach Boys, Paul Kantner of the Jefferson Airplane and Steppenwolf but they fell out of fashion in the early '70s, though Rickenbacker basses remained in favor. The guitars experienced a renaissance in the late 1970s and '80s as many New Wave and jangle pop groups began to use them. They continue to be popular to this day. Later "Ric" players include Tom Petty and Mike Campbell of Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers, James Honeyman-Scott of the Pretenders, The Edge of U2, Paul Weller of The Jam, Peter Buck of R.E.M., Robin Zander of Cheap Trick, Johnny Marr of The Smiths, Wally Palmar, Mike Skill, and Coz Canler of The Romantics, Dave Wakeling of the English Beat, Paul Westerberg of the Replacements, Susanna Hoffs of The Bangles, Tom Gabel of Against Me!, Lloyd Cole, Dave Gregory of XTC, Thom Yorke of Radiohead, Ed O'Brien of Radiohead, Pete Doherty and Carl Barat of The Libertines, John Kay of Steppenwolf, Marty Willson-Piper of The Church, Daniel Johns of Silverchair, Sherri DuPree of Eisley, Paul Waaktaar-Savoy of a-Ha and David Ley of Lightfromadeadstar.
Basses
The 4000 series were the first Rickenbacker bass guitars. The 4000 was followed by the very popular 4001 (in 1961), the 4002 (which was introduced in 1977, but discontinued after 100 or so models were produced), the 4008 (an 8-string model introduced in the mid-'70s), the 4003 (in about 1980 and still in production in 2005), and most recently the 4004 series.
Rickenbacker basses have a distinctive tone. The 4000 bass has neck-through construction for more solid sustain due to more rigidity. The 3000 series made from the mid-1970s to mid-1980s were cheaper instruments with bolt-on necks.
Two of the earliest Rickenbacker bass users were The Beatles' Paul McCartney; perhaps the most influential bassist of the '60s playing in the most important group in the rock era, and Peter Quaife from The Kinks, who played for one of the most popular and acclaimed British Invasion groups. McCartney used a 4001S on Revolver (1966) and off-and-on afterwards.
The basses were a staple of 1970s hard rock and made a major contribution to the genre. Chris Squire from Yes, Michael Rutherford from Genesis, Geddy Lee from Rush, Lemmy Kilmister from Motörhead, Graham Gouldman from 10cc, Roger Waters from Pink Floyd, Steve Smith of the Vapors, Rick James, and Roger Glover from Deep Purple comprise just a sampling of Rickenbacker bass players in the idiom. The basses were also popular with later hard rock and metal purveyors, most notably the late Cliff Burton of Metallica, a dedicated Rickenbacker player.
The basses were not as visible among the punk/new wave explosion of the late 1970s and early 1980s, though there were two notable users. Bruce Foxton of The Jam played a Rickenbacker 4001 through the group's first two albums (both released in 1977), in part because the band strived to emulate the "mod" look and sound of the 1960s and the Rickenbacker label had the ultimate mod pedigree thanks to Pete Townshend's use of Rickenbacker guitars. Foxton would later switch to a Fender Precision Bass. (The Jam's guitarist, Paul Weller, played Rickenbacker guitars throughout the group's existence.) Paul Simonon of The Clash used a black Rickenbacker that he received as a gift from Patti Smith.
More recent Rickenbacker players include Carl Dalemo of Razorlight, Bob Hardy of Franz Ferdinand, Mike H. of the Bravery, Russ Leetch of Editors, Marty Andrews, a session bassist from Louisville, Kentucky, and Chris Ross of Wolfmother. Former Stone Roses bassist Gary "Mani" Mounfield used a Rickenbacker bass covered in Jackson Pollock-style drip paint during the band's peak period (1989–90). Tim Commerford of Rage Against the Machine and Chris Joannou of Silverchair have also been spotted using Rickenbackers.
Image:Thom yorke radiohead2.jpg
Notable models
Some of Rickenbacker's most popular models include the following:
- 325 (the guitar used by John Lennon)[1]
- 330 (semi-hollow body six-string)[2]
- 360 (deluxe version of 330, with stereo output)[3]
- 360/12 (Rickenbacker touts it as "the world's most popular twelve string electric guitar" [4]; made famous in the '60s by George Harrison, and arguably the most renowned 12-string player of all-time, Roger McGuinn)
- 1993/12 ([Less fancy British export version of 360/12] Pete Townshend) [5]
- 4001 (the bass made famous by Paul McCartney)[6]
Other guitars
External links
- Rickenbacker International Corporation
- Björn Eriksson's Rickenbacker Page
- Rickenbacker registration page
- Rickenbacker players forum
- alt.guitar.rickenbacker Frequently Asked Questions
- The Rickenbacker Pageda:Adolf Rickenbacker
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