Leo Fender's Laboratory
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- DrGreenthumb
- MF veteran
- Posts: 1249
- Joined: 31 Oct 2006, 21:42
- Location: Beograd
Leo Fender's Laboratory
Njoy!
Re: Leo Fender's Laboratory

So this is where the magic happened, super je ovaj video, šteta što ne traje duže.
- DrGreenthumb
- MF veteran
- Posts: 1249
- Joined: 31 Oct 2006, 21:42
- Location: Beograd
Re: Leo Fender's Laboratory
Jes, ali snimak je bas bas redak, pa reko' da postavim 

Re: Leo Fender's Laboratory
ee cool, na stolu je i Z coil pickups (Magnetic Field Design™)
al malo sve odishe nekom tugom ...

- Dersu Uzala
- Posts: 4949
- Joined: 27 May 2009, 10:32
Re: Leo Fender's Laboratory
Hebo ga deka, usrase ga sa tonom, i generalno. Aj' kapiram sto sve to 'stuju, 'stujem i ja. Daj onda nekog kustosa, mojne ovog debila pa tisinu. FTW is this.DrGreenthumb wrote:Jes, ali snimak je bas bas redak, pa reko' da postavim
Ja bi to bolje odradio kao reporter, a nisam, al' bi cackao mecku i saznao ono sto se da saznati o svemu tome, pitas ljude jelda, koji sad tavore negde bogtepitagde, pitas ih da kazivaju.
Fender puko ko i Gibson.
Re: Leo Fender's Laboratory
ne znam da li se vec pojavljivalo ovde na forumu... ali meni je bilo jako zanimljivo:
http://www.nymphusa.com/tele/howfender.asp
http://www.nymphusa.com/tele/howfender.asp
- DrGreenthumb
- MF veteran
- Posts: 1249
- Joined: 31 Oct 2006, 21:42
- Location: Beograd
Re: Leo Fender's Laboratory
Ziva istina, Dersu je to vec nekoliko puta pominjao but to no availNURBS wrote:ne znam da li se vec pojavljivalo ovde na forumu... ali meni je bilo jako zanimljivo:
http://www.nymphusa.com/tele/howfender.asp

Ovako je mozda preglednije:
How Fender Worked by Mike O'malley
It's important to look at Fender's origins when we're talking about finish and wood and etc.
Leo Fender never even learned how to tune a guitar. His primary interest was in amps and electronics. He worked closely with musicians, but his biggest concern for musicians was convenience and reliability as much as it was tone. He wanted to make dependable, sturdy, good sounding stuff, and he was enough of an original to think outside the box. But he was mostly motivated by practical concerns.
I've never seen ANY evidence that he picked swamp ash or alder for their tonal properties--not a scrap. As far as I can tell, he picked them because he could get a dependable supply at a good price. Then once they became popular, he stuck with them. The only reason they added rosewood fingerboards was because Leo thought the wear patterns on maple necks looked bad. It wasn't tone mojo.
He used nitro laquer because it was a widely available finish used for painting cars--CARS!! When was the last time you heard anybody raving about the tonal properties of side panels on a 52 ford? It was cheap, readily available, and there were lots of guys around who knew how to spray it and had the equipment.
Fender was never like Gibson, which never lost the old-world, craftsman mentality. Why is there a carved top on a Les Paul? It looks cool, but it adds nothing to the tone--it's a holdover from violin making and arch-top jazz boxes, signifying "class." If Leo was really concerned about finish effecting the tone, he'd of used traditional violin finishes. But Leo used what worked: he was unhindered by "tradition" and sort of contemptuous of it. He hated it when G+:L did strat copies.
Everything about Leo points to a very original, innovative, practical, forward thinking guy. He cared about the product, and he got what he intended--dependable, great sounding, affordable stuff for working musicians. That's who bought it, and in the hands of talented people the sounds fender's stuff made became THE sounds.
I'm absolutely sure that if Leo were starting fender today he'd use some kind of composite bodies and polyester finsihes. He'd use what was readily available in interesting and non-traditional ways. I don't like the guitars, but the guy who reminds me the most of Leo Fender today is Parker. Parker really tries to blend what musicians want with modern materials.
The real mojo at fender wasn't swamp ash and nitro, it was Leo's originality, dedication, his disregard for convention, and his willingness to use what worked. And that's the real mojo with great players too--not the fact that they play a 62' but the fact that they've forged their own vision.
- Dersu Uzala
- Posts: 4949
- Joined: 27 May 2009, 10:32
Re: Leo Fender's Laboratory
Ma rokenrol.
Svitara.
Zna Glava.
Svitara.
Zna Glava.
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