The name Les Paul is synonymous with the electric guitar.
As a player, inventor and recording artist, Paul has been an innovator
from the early years of his life. Born Lester William Polfus in 1916
in Waukesha, Wisconsin, Paul built his first crystal radio at age
nine - which was about the time he first picked up a guitar. By age
13 he was performing semi-professionally as a country-music guitarist
and working diligently on sound-related inventions. In 1941, Paul
built his first solid-body electric guitar, and he continued to make
refinements to his prototype throughout the decade. He also worked
on refining the technology of sound, developing revolutionary engineering
techniques such as close miking, echo delay and multitracking. All
the while he busied himself as a bandleader who could play both jazz
and country music.
His career as a musician nearly came to an end in 1948, when a near-fatal
car accident shattered his right arm and elbow. However, he instructed
the surgeons to set his arm at an angle that would allow him to cradle
and pick the guitar. Paul subsequently made his mark as a jazz-pop
musician extraordinaire, recording as a duo with his wife, singer
Colleen Summers (a.k.a. Mary Ford). Their biggest hits included "How
High the Moon" (1951) and "Vaya Con Dios" (1953), both
reaching #1. The recordings of Les Paul and Mary Ford are noteworthy
for Paul's pioneering use of overdubbing - i.e., layering guitar parts
one atop another, a technique also referred to as multitracking or
"sound on sound" recording. The results were bright, bubbly
and a little otherworldly - just the sort of music you might expect
from an inventor with an ear for the future.
In 1952, Les Paul introduced the first eight-track tape recorder (designed
by Paul and marketed by Ampex) and, more significantly for the future
of rock and roll, launched the solid-body electric guitar that bears
his name. Built and marketed by Gibson, with continuous advances and
refinements from Paul in such areas as low-impedance pickup technology,
the Les Paul guitar became a staple instrument among discerning rock
guitarists. This list of musicians associated with the Gibson Les
Paul include Jeff Beck, Eric Clapton, Jimmy Page, Duane Allman and
Mike Bloomfield. Over the ensuing decades, Paul himself has remained
active, cutting a Grammy-winning album of instrumental duets with
Chet Atkins, Chester and Lester in 1977, performing at New York jazz
clubs, and continuing to indulge his inventor's curiosity in a basement
workshop at his home in Mahwah, New Jersey.