There is a very good documentary about Les Paul that I recently watched. If anything, the guys brilliance as an inventor eclipses his brilliance as a guitar player.
Truly a great man. I am a diehard Les Paul player(read: TRYer). They just feel and sound "right" to me. I've owned a Tele, and played several Strats, but always go back to my Les Paul Studio. He will never be forgotten...
There is a very good documentary about Les Paul that I recently watched. If anything, the guys brilliance as an inventor eclipses his brilliance as a guitar player.
What an incredible guy."
+1000. I think I saw that documentary once... hate to hear of the loss of a true legend.
What sad news . . . . I just got the word from Dave Gess and my son.
The last two times Colin and I had been to see Les perform at the Iridium we sat next to the stage . . . the guys foot was tapping on my arm as it rested on the stage.
He was an absolute legend.
Over the past couple years he's played a bit less and joked a bit more . . . he had a spectacular sense of humor.
If you haven't read anything about Les Paul I'd suggest, just for the fun of it, that you might. He was the consummate tinkerer . . . a genius ahead of him time. Guitars were but a part of his like.
He was amazing and certainly changed the world during his time here.
Wow.
Thank you to the Wizard of Waukesha for sharing an amazing life.
I sure wish I could find a synopsis of his technical achievements. I used to have an old Rolling Stone magazine that had an excellent interview with him (may still have it buried someplace). Besides the guitar models that bear his name, the things mentioned included electronic echo, overdubbing, the multi-track magnetic tape deck, multi-track recording studio, and low impedance guitar pickups.
Here's one of my favorites (even though it's very long) articles about the evolution of the Electric Guitar.
The gist of the article is that "Electrifying" the guitar was originally intended for the purpose of simply making the guitar louder to be heard over other instruments. What, in fact, evolved was essentially a new and unique instrument.
You may also thank Les Paul for things like Multi-Track recording and the famous "Les Pulverizer" . . . he was a genius.
Wow, sad news indeed. Godspeed to the man who's "name is on the guitar son" quoted from a great commercial a couple years back with the man himself showing a young wannabe rocker how to play that guitar.
There's a WHOLE lot of great stuff on youtube featuring Les. I just ran across this one, absolutely hilarious. The guy may just have invented every trick guitar lick we've ever seen: