Solid body
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A solid body electric instrument is a string instrument such as a guitar, bass or violin built without its normal sound box and relying on its electric pickup system to directly receive the vibrations of the strings.
Solid body instruments are preferred in situations where acoustic feedback may otherwise be a problem, and are inherently both cheaper to build and more rugged than acoustic electric instruments.
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Solid body instruments include:
- Some electric guitars.
- Most bass guitars.
- Electric upright bass.
- A few electric mandolins.
- Most electric violins.
- Most electric sitars
- Electric cello.
Solid body instruments do not include:
- Semi-acoustic instruments.
- Electric pianos, even those with strings such as the electric grand piano.
- Pedal steel guitar.
Electric lap steel guitars without sounding boards are considered to be solid body instruments by some authorities, and not by others. This has a major effect on some claims of historical priority, as they predate the first models of solid body electric guitar, which may otherwise be claimed to be the first commercially successful solid body instruments. While noting this, it will be assumed that electric lap steels without sounding boards are solid body instruments for the purposes of this article.
[edit] History
[edit] Early prototypes
A solid body electric violin was proposed by Thomas Edison.
[edit] Commercial models
The first commercially successful solid body instrument was the Rickenbacker frying pan lap steel guitar, produced from from 1931 to 1939.
The first commercially successful solid body electric guitar was the Fender Telecaster (The early Telecaster models had no model name on the head stock and are now referred to as 'No Casters") in 1950. It was followed by the Gibson Les Paul in 1952.
[edit] Impact on musical styles
Solid body instruments have particularly influenced heavy rock and surf music. Without solid body guitars, neither of these genres could have developed as they did.