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New York, NY...August 13, 2009...Les Paul,
acclaimed guitar player, entertainer and inventor, passed away
today from complications of severe pneumonia at White Plains
Hospital in White Plains, New York, surrounded by family and loved
ones. He had been receiving the best available treatment through
this final battle and in keeping with his persona, he showed
incredible strength, tenacity and courage. The family would like to
express their heartfelt thanks for the thoughts and prayers from
his dear friends and fans. Les Paul was 94.
One of the foremost influences on 20th century sound and
responsible for the world's most famous guitar, the Les Paul model,
Les Paul's prestigious career in music and invention spans from the
1930s to the present. Though he's indisputably one of America's
most popular, influential, and accomplished electric guitarists,
Les Paul is best known as an early innovator in the development of
the solid body guitar. His groundbreaking design would become the
template for Gibson's best-selling electric, the Les Paul model,
introduced in 1952. Today, countless musical legends still consider
Paul's iconic guitar unmatched in sound and prowess. Among Paul's
most enduring contributions are those in the technological realm,
including ingenious developments in multi-track recording, guitar
effects, and the mechanics of sound in
general.
Born Lester William Polsfuss in Waukesha, Wisconsin on June 9,
1915, Les Paul was already performing publicly as a honky-tonk
guitarist by the age of 13. So clear was his calling that Paul
dropped out of high school at 17 to play in Sunny Joe Wolverton's
Radio Band in St. Louis. As Paul's mentor, Wolverton was the one to
christen him with the stage name “Rhubarb Red," a moniker that
would follow him to Chicago in 1934. There, Paul became a bona fide
radio star, known as both hillbilly picker Rhubarb Red and Django
Reinhardt-informed jazz guitarist Les Paul. His first recordings
were done in 1936 on an acoustic—alone as Rhubarb Red, as well as
backing blues singer Georgia White. The next year he formed his
first trio, but by 1938 he'd moved to New York to begin his tenure
on national radio with one of the more popular dance orchestras in
the country, Fred Waring's Pennsylvanians.
http://www.gibson.com/Files/aaInternationalImages/TheLog1.jpgPaul----www.gibson.com" />Tinkering with electronics and guitar
amplification since his youth, Les Paul began constructing his own
electric guitar in the late '30s. Unhappy with the first generation
of commercially available hollowbodies because of their thin tone,
lack of sustain, and feedback problems, Paul opted to build an
entirely new structure. “I was interested in proving that a
vibration-free top was the way to go," he has said. “I even built a
guitar out of a railroad rail to prove it. What I wanted was to
amplify pure string vibration, without the resonance of the wood
getting involved in the sound." With the good graces of Epiphone
president Epi Stathopoulo, Paul used the Epiphone plant and
machinery in 1941 to bring his vision to fruition. He
affectionately dubbed the guitar “The Log."
Les Paul's tireless experiments sometimes proved to be
dangerous, and he nearly electrocuted himself in 1940 during a
session in the cellar of his Queens apartment. During the next two
years of rehabilitation, Les earned his living producing radio
music. Forced to put the Pennsylvanians and the rest of his career
on hold, Les Paul moved to Hollywood. During World War II, he was
drafted into the Army but permitted to stay in California, where he
became a regular player for Armed Forces Radio Service. By 1943 he
had assembled a trio that regularly performed live, on the radio,
and on V-Discs. In 1944 he entered the jazz spotlight—thanks to his
dazzling work filling in for Oscar Moore alongside Nat King Cole,
Illinois Jacquet, and other superstars —at the first of the
prestigious Jazz at the Philharmonic concerts.
By his mid-thirties, Paul had successfully combined
Reinhardt-inspired jazz playing and the western swing and twang of
his Rhubarb Red persona into one distinctive, electrifying style.
In the Les Paul Trio he translated the dizzying runs and unusual
harmonies found on Jazz at the Philharmonic into a slower, subtler,
more commercial approach. His novelty instrumentals were tighter,
brasher, and punctuated with effects. Overall, the trademark Les
Paul sound was razor-sharp, clean-shaven, and divinely smooth.
As small combos eclipsed big bands toward the end of World War
II, Les Paul Trio's popularity grew. They cut records for Decca
both alone and behind the likes of Helen Forrest, the Andrews
Sisters, the Delta Rhythm Boys, Dick Hayes, and, most notably, Bing
Crosby. Since 1945, when the crooner brought them into the studio
to back him on a few numbers, the Trio had become regular guests on
Crosby's hit radio show. The highlight of the session was Paul's
first No. 1 hit and million-seller, the gorgeous “It's Been a Long,
Long Time."
http://www.gibson.com/Files/aaInternationalImages/lespaulandwifesinging.jpgPaul----www.gibson.com" />Meanwhile, Paul began to experiment with
dubbing live tracks over recorded tracks, also altering the
playback speed. This resulted in “Lover (When You're Near Me)," his
revolutionary 1947 predecessor to multi-track recording. The hit
instrumental featured Les Paul on eight different electric guitar
parts, all playing together.
In 1948, Paul nearly lost his life to a devastating car crash
that shattered his right arm and elbow. Still, he convinced doctors
to set his broken arm in the guitar-picking and cradling position.
Laid up but undaunted, Paul acquired a first generation Ampex tape
recorder from Crosby in 1949, and began his most important
multi-tracking adventure, adding a fourth head to the recorder to
create sound-on-sound recordings. While tinkering with the machine
and its many possibilities, he also came up with tape delay. These
tricks, along with another recent Les Paul innovation—close mic-ing
vocals—were integrated for the first time on a single recording:
the 1950 No. 1 tour de force “How High the
Moon."
http://www.gibson.com/Files/aaInternationalImages/lespaulandwifepic.jpgPaul----www.gibson.com" />This historic track was performed
during a duo with future wife Mary Ford. The couple's prolific
string of hits for Capitol Records not only included some of the
most popular recordings of the early 1950s, but also wrote the book
on contemporary studio production. The dense but crystal clear
harmonic layering of guitars and vocals, along with Ford's close
mic-ed voice and Paul's guitar effects, produced distinctively
contemporary recordings with unprecedented sonic qualities. Through
hits, tours, and popular radio shows, Paul and Ford kept one foot
in the technological vanguard and the other in the cultural
mainstream.
All the while, Les Paul continued to pine for the perfect
guitar. Though The Log came close, it wasn't quite what he was
after. In the early 1950s, Gibson Guitar would cultivate a
partnership with Paul that would lead to the creation of the guitar
he'd seen only in his dreams. In 1948, Gibson elected to design its
first solidbody, and Paul, a self-described “dyed-in-the-wool
Gibson man," seemed the right man for the job. Gibson avidly
courted the guitar legend, even driving deep into the Pennsylvania
mountains to deliver the first model to newlyweds Les Paul and Mary
Ford.
“Les played it, and his eyes lighted up," then-Gibson President
Ted McCarty has recalled. The year was 1950, and Paul had just
signed on as the namesake of Gibson's first electric solidbody,
with exclusive design privileges. Working closely with Paul, Gibson
forged a relationship that would change popular culture forever.
The Gibson Les Paul model—the most powerful and respected electric
guitar in history—began with the 1952 release of the Les Paul
Goldtop. After introducing the original Les Paul Goldtop in 1952,
Gibson issued the Black Beauty, the mahogany-topped Les Paul
Custom, in 1954. The Les Paul Junior (1954) and Special (1955) were
also introduced before the canonical Les Paul Standard hit the
market in 1958. With revolutionary humbucker pickups, this sunburst
classic has remained unchanged for the half-century since it hit
the market.
http://www.gibson.com/Files/aaInternationalImages/lesandhjhug.jpgPaul----www.gibson.com" />“The world has lost a truly innovative
and exceptional human being today. I cannot imagine life without
Les Paul. He would walk into a room and put a smile on anyone's
face. His musical charm was extraordinary and his techniques
unmatched anywhere in the world," said Henry Juszkiewicz, Chairman
and CEO of Gibson Guitar. “We will dedicate ourselves to preserving
Les' legacy to insure that it lives on forever. He touched so many
lives throughout his remarkable life and his influence extends
around the globe and across every boundary. I have lost a dear,
personal friend and mentor, a man who has changed so many of our
lives for the better."
“I don't think any words can describe the man we know as Les
Paul adequately. The English language does not contain words that
can pay enough homage to someone like Les. As the “Father of the
Electric Guitar", he was not only one of the world's greatest
innovators
With the rise of the rock 'n' roll revolution of 1955, Les Paul
and Mary Ford's popularity began to wane with younger listeners,
though Paul would prove to be a massive influence on younger
generation of guitarists. Still, Paul and Ford maintained their
iconic presence with their wildly popular television show, which
ran from 1953-1960. In 1964, the couple, parents to a son and
daughter, divorced. Paul began playing in Japan, and recorded an LP
for London Records before poor health forced him to take time
off—as much as someone so inspired can take time off.
In the 1977, Paul resurfaced with a Grammy-winning Chet Atkins
collaboration, Chester and Lester.
Ever stubborn, Les recovered, and returned to live performance
in the late 1980s. Until recently Les continued to perform two
weekly New York shows with the Les Paul Trio, even releasing the
2005 double-Grammy winner Les Paul & Friends:
American Made World Played, featuring collaborations with a
veritable who's who of the electric guitar, including dozens of
illustrious fans like Keith Richards, Buddy Guy, Billy Gibbons,
Jeff Beck, Eric Clapton, and Joe Perry. In 2008, The Rock and Roll
Hall of Fame paid tribute to Les Paul in a week-long celebration of
his life which culminated with a live performance by Les himself.
http://www.gibson.com/Files/aaInternationalImages/lesandschon.jpgPaul----www.gibson.com" />Les Paul has since become the only
individual to share membership into the Grammy Hall of Fame, the
Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, the National Inventors Hall of Fame,
and the National Broadcasters Hall of Fame. Les is survived by his
three sons Lester (Rus) G.