It's safe to say there would be no such thing as rock and roll without
its distinctive instrumentation. To put it another way, rock and roll
as we know it could not exist without Leo Fender, inventor of the first
solid-body electric guitar to be mass-produced: the Fender Broadcaster.
Fender's instruments - which also include the Stratocaster, the Precision
bass (the first electric bass) and some of the music world's most coveted
amplifiers - revolutionized popular music in general and rock and roll
in particular.
Leo Fender was born in 1909 near Anaheim, California, not far from
the future site of his guitar factory. He was an electronics enthusiast
and radio repairman who got involved with guitar design after guitar-playing
customers kept bringing him their external pickups for repair. Before
Fender came along, guitarists met their amplification needs by attaching
pickups to the surface of their hollow-bodied instruments. While the
question of who designed the first successful solid-body guitar is still
being debated, Fender was the first to successfully design and market
such an instrument with the introduction of the Broadcaster in 1948.
Renamed the Telecaster two years later, Fender's creation remains a
mainstay of country and rock musicians who like its clean, biting sound.
His Precision bass, introduced in 1950, brought a new sound and flexibility
to the rhythm section of bands, liberating the bassist from cumbersome
standup instruments. The bass-driven soul music of Motown and Stax would
have been inconceivable without Fender's handiwork. In 1954, Fender
introduced the Stratocaster, a flashier instrument featuring a contoured,
double-cutaway body, three (as opposed to two) single-coil pickups and
a revolutionary string-bending (tremolo) unit. Fender's Strat has been
the favored model of such virtuosic rock guitarists as Eric Clapton,
Jeff Beck, Jimi Hendrix and Stevie Ray Vaughan.