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  2. Ed Bickert - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ed_Bickert

    Although there was some precedent for using solid-body guitars in mainstream jazz, jazz guitarists prior to Bickert mostly used hollow body or semi-hollow electric guitars. Bickert was noteworthy as being one of the few mainstream jazz guitarists in the 1970s and 1980s who used a solid-body electric guitar , an instrument primarily associated ...

  3. Gibson L6-S - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gibson_L6-S

    The current L6S neck does not feature the unique "narrow at the nut and wider near the body" taper of the 1970s guitar, but a conventional Gibson shape. The chamfered body shape and 24 frets are of similar design to the 1970s classic, except that the newer version is a two-piece maple body, as opposed to a one-piece bodywork on the original.

  4. Joe Beck - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joe_Beck

    Joe Beck worked with guitar manufacturer Cort Guitars in the 1990s to create two hollow-body jazz guitar models. The first was the BECK-6 model, which was an electric, hollow-bodied archtop jazz guitar, and the second was the BECK-ALTO model, a similar instrument but designed for heavier strings and alto tuning. In 2001, the retail price of the ...

  5. Jazz guitar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jazz_guitar

    Solid body guitars, mass-produced since the early 1950s, are also used. Jazz guitar playing styles include comping with jazz chord voicings (and in some cases walking bass lines) and blowing (improvising) over jazz chord progressions with jazz-style phrasing and ornaments. Comping refers to playing chords underneath a song's melody or another ...

  6. Gibson ES-345 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gibson_ES-345

    1958 saw the introduction of Gibson's new thinline series of guitars. The ES-335, 345 and 355, all came with a semi-hollow body: the wood of the top and back was maple and there was a maple center block inside the guitars which ran the length of the body all the way to the mahogany neck, with a rosewood fingerboard.

  7. Solid body - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solid_body

    The first commercially successful solid-body instrument was the Rickenbacker frying pan lap steel guitar, produced from 1931 to 1939. The first commercially available non lap steel electric guitar was also produced by the Rickenbacker/Electro company, starting in 1931 The model was referred to as the "electric Spanish Guitar" to distinguish it from the "Hawaiian" lap steel.

  8. Billy Byrd - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Billy_Byrd

    Byrd was born in Nashville, Tennessee and learned to play the guitar at 10 and appeared on radio playing with local bands whilst still in his teens. At the age of 18 he joined the house band at Nashville's WSM Grand Ole Opry and then worked with Herold Goodman and the Tennessee Valley Boys and Wally Fowler and his Georgia Clodhoppers before and after serving in World War II.

  9. Hedley Jones - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hedley_Jones

    Hedley H. G. Jones OD (12 November 1917 [1] – 1 September 2017) [2] was a Jamaican musician, audio engineer, inventor, trade unionist and writer. He designed and played one of the first solid-bodied electric guitars, designed and built Jamaica's first sound systems and traffic lights, and in 2011 was awarded the Musgrave Gold Medal for distinguished eminence in the field of music.