Mike Macgirvin
Diary and Other Rantings
Beyond Silicon Valley
   
Sunday, Jul 20 2008, 10:03 am
Apr 19, 2006
Lester Polsfuss
Rock and Roll wouldn't quite be the same. That is if the top-selling electric guitar of all time was the Lester Polsfuss. Can you imagine Jimmy Page rocking out on a vintage Lester Polsfoss? In case you're not catching on, Lester Polsfoss now uses his stage name instead of his real name. His stage name is 'Les Paul'. Although for a while before he became a runaway success on the jazz circuit he was known in hillbilly circles as 'Rhubarb Red'. Now that's a guitar name.

Les Paul indeed...

 

LPMF
 

By the way, that gal holding the white SG Custom isn't really Mary Ford either. Her name is Iris Colleen Summers, aka Iris Hatfield (or Colleen Summers). They divorced in the early 60's. No doubt she got tired of living a lie. Les Paul and Mary Ford never really existed. It was all a fantasy life created by Lester Polsfuss and Iris Summers. 

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Apr 18, 2006
Guitar - An American Life

Currently reading "Guitar - An American Life" by Tim Brookes. Believe I mentioned this book several months or a year ago. It was on my must read list, so when I spotted it at Borders it was an easy sale - despite the torn cover. 

I was expecting a historical treatise of the guitar and its construction. I'm pretty big on technical books. What year was the X-brace invented? Instead what I found was a historical treatise of music in America. What happened in American music in the last four centuries which led to the guitar becoming the most widely played musical instrument ever? It was an odd mish-mash of the importation of Hawaiian culture combined with the rise of radio combined with recordings of local blues music providing unexpected income during the great depression. Who invented 'country music' and why? And how did fretted instruments completely change the composition of American music? The answers are quite interesting.

Very highly recommended.

GAML 

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There's no honorable way to kill, no gentle way to destroy. There is
nothing good in war. Except its ending.
-- Abraham Lincoln, "The Savage Curtain", stardate 5906.5