Started By
Message

re: My Merrily Mirthful Melodic Melange -- Myriad Musical Miscellania

Posted on 10/11/13 at 1:41 pm to
Posted by Kafka
I am the moral conscience of TD
Member since Jul 2007
142506 posts
Posted on 10/11/13 at 1:41 pm to
Now here is a fascinating historical document -- the recording of an actual telephone call between Buddy Holly and record company exec Paul Cohen:

March 28, 1957

Holly is calling long distance (a big deal in those days, especially for a struggling musician) from Lubbock to NYC asking Decca Records (now known as MCA) to let him rerecord songs he'd cut for the company a few months earlier, so he could cut them for another label. Cohen refuses to give an inch and insists Holly can't rerecord the songs for five years.

Note how unfailingly polite Holly is. Maybe manners were different then, or maybe Buddy was just a nice guy. I would've told Cohen GFY.

FWIW, Holly would eventually get around Cohen and Decca by rerecording the songs (one of which, "That'll Be The Day", would go to #1) under the name of his band, The Crickets. :likeaboss:







:crickets:
Posted by Kafka
I am the moral conscience of TD
Member since Jul 2007
142506 posts
Posted on 10/16/13 at 11:12 am to
‘Inventing the American Guitar’ Explores 1840s Innovations (NY Times)

quote:

NAZARETH, Pa. — For guitar aficionados, a visit to the C. F. Martin & Company factory is akin to a religious experience. They talk in reverential tones about the handcrafted instruments that have been coming off the production floor here for more than 150 years, even referring to certain models in online discussion forums as “the Holy Grail” of the acoustic guitar.
Enlarge This Image

A new book due out on Tuesday, to be followed by a yearlong exhibition of Martin guitars at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, will surely add to that aura. The book, “Inventing the American Guitar,” argues that Christian Friedrich Martin, who founded the company in 1833, was not only a sublime craftsman and canny entrepreneur, but also a design and technology innovator of the first order, responsible for many features accepted today as standard on stringed instruments.

quote:

Up to now, collectors and researchers have tended to regard the period between World Wars I and II as the company’s golden era of innovation, not its first decades. Chris Martin, a great-great-great-grandson of the founder and the company’s chairman and chief executive, said in an interview here that the new book “has forced me to rethink our own history, and made me want to know more about those earliest years.”

quote:

The most important of those new influences, “Inventing the American Guitar” demonstrates, was Spanish. Most notably, Martin abandoned the Austro-German system of lateral bracing to reinforce and support the guitar soundboard in favor of Spanish-style fan bracing, which he then adapted into the X-bracing style that is the hallmark of Martin and other modern guitars.

“The most fundamental features, things that we take for granted in Martins, he wasn’t doing before he discovered Spanish guitars,” said Mr. Szego, an architect and collector. Adopting those techniques made Martin’s guitars “bigger, louder and more resonant than before that time,” in keeping with what an emerging American market wanted.


Sage entrepreneurship and exacting detail: a 10-string harp guitar by C. F. Martin from 1859-60:

first pageprev pagePage 1 of 1Next pagelast page
refresh

Back to top
logoFollow TigerDroppings for LSU Football News
Follow us on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram to get the latest updates on LSU Football and Recruiting.

FacebookTwitterInstagram