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Les Paul dies at 94 Long live Rock and Roll!

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  • Les Paul dies at 94 Long live Rock and Roll!

    (CNN) -- Les Paul, whose innovations with the electric guitar and studio technology made him one of the most important figures in recorded music, has died, according to a statement from his publicists. Paul was 94.


    Les Paul, whose innovations helped give rise to modern pop music, played guitar into his 90s.

    Paul died in White Plains, New York, from complications of severe pneumonia, according to the statement.

    Paul was a guitar and electronics mastermind whose creations -- such as multitrack recording, tape delay and the solid-body guitar that bears his name, the Gibson Les Paul -- helped give rise to modern popular music, including rock 'n' roll. No slouch on the guitar himself, he continued playing at clubs into his 90s despite being hampered by arthritis.

    "If you only have two fingers [to work with], you have to think, how will you play that chord?" he told CNN.com in a 2002 phone interview. "So you think of how to replace that chord with several notes, and it gives the illusion of sounding like a chord."

    "The world has lost a truly innovative and exceptional human being today. I cannot imagine life without Les Paul," said Henry Juszkiewicz, Chairman and CEO of Gibson Guitar. "He would walk into a room and put a smile on anyone's face. His musical charm was extraordinary and his techniques unmatched anywhere in the world."

    Lester William Polfuss was born in Waukesha, Wisconsin, on June 9, 1915. Even as a child he showed an aptitude for tinkering, taking apart electric appliances to see what made them tick.

    "I had to build it, make it and perfect it," Paul said in 2002. He was nicknamed the "Wizard of Waukesha."

    In the 1930s and '40s, he played with the bandleader Fred Waring and several big band singers, including Bing Crosby, Frank Sinatra and the Andrews Sisters, as well as with his own Les Paul Trio. In the early 1950s, he had a handful of huge hits with his then-wife, Mary Ford, such as "How High the Moon" and "Vaya Con Dios."

    His guitar style, heavily influenced by jazzman Django Reinhardt, featured lightning-quick runs and double-time rhythms. In 1948, after being involved in a severe car accident, he asked the doctor to set his arm permanently in a guitar-playing position.

    Paul also credited Crosby for teaching him about timing, phrasing and preparation.

    Crosby "didn't say it, he did it -- one time only. Unless he blew the lyrics, he did one take."

    Paul never stopped tinkering with electronics, and after Crosby gave him an early audiotape recorder, Paul went to work changing it. It eventually led to multitrack recording; on Paul and Ford's hits, he plays many of the guitar parts, and Ford harmonizes with herself. Multitrack recording is now the industry standard.

    But Paul likely will be best remembered for the Gibson Les Paul, a variation on the solid-body guitar he built in the early 1940s -- "The Log" -- and offered to the guitar company.

    "For 10 years, I was a laugh," he told CNN in an interview. "[But] kept pounding at them and pounding at them saying hey, here's where it's at. Here's where tomorrow, this is it. You can drown out anybody with it. And you can make all these different sounds that you can't do with a regular guitar."

    Gibson, spurred by rival Fender, finally took Paul up on his offer and introduced the model in 1952. It has since become the go-to guitar for such performers as Eric Clapton.

    Paul is enshrined in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, the Grammy Hall of Fame, the Inventors Hall of Fame and the Songwriters Hall of Fame. He is survived by three sons, a daughter, five grandchildren and five great-grandchildren. Until recently he had a standing gig at New York's Iridium Jazz Club, where he would play with a who's-who of famed musicians.

    He admired the places guitarists and engineers took his inventions, but he said there was nothing to replace good, old-fashioned elbow grease and soul.

    "I learned a long time ago that one note can go a long way if it's the right one," he said in 2002, "and it will probably whip the guy with 20 notes."

    God Bless em, He gave the world a sound we will never forget.:(
    Fortitude.....The strength to persist...The courage to endure.

  • #2
    RIP - he will be missed
    You know JJ, Him could do it....

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    • #3
      A true master of the art....R.I.P.
      "Every government degenerates when trusted to the rulers of the people alone. The people themselves, therefore, are its only safe depositories." Thomas Jefferson

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      • #4
        RIP , i must say tho , i prefer a strat to a gibbo les paul ,just personal preference ;)

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        • #5
          Originally posted by tankie View Post
          RIP , i must say tho , i prefer a strat to a gibbo les paul ,just personal preference ;)
          Tankie, please, not with the body still warm.:)

          A truly remarkable man. Think I need to get out the Zepplin tonight - Jimmy + Gibson Les Paul = ROCK AND ROLL!!!!!
          sigpic

          Win nervously lose tragically - Reds C C

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          • #6
            Originally posted by Bigfella View Post
            Tankie, please, not with the body still warm.:)

            A truly remarkable man. Think I need to get out the Zepplin tonight - Jimmy + Gibson Les Paul = ROCK AND ROLL!!!!!
            but but but ,i liked the gibson , just not as much as the Fender ?

            however i must say i loved the sound and sustain that people like Gary Moore got from it and the Albatross thingy tune by fleetwoodmac , which i think was done on a Gibbo ;)

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            • #7
              Originally posted by tankie View Post
              but but but ,i liked the gibson , just not as much as the Fender ?

              however i must say i loved the sound and sustain that people like Gary Moore got from it and the Albatross thingy tune by fleetwoodmac , which i think was done on a Gibbo ;)
              Its OK Tankie. its like kids - just because you love one doesn't mean you can't love another just as much.:)

              I think Carlos Santana did some good work with one - a master of sustain....and if you wanted a bit of 'rough', Neil Young did some great work with his Gibson LP.
              sigpic

              Win nervously lose tragically - Reds C C

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              • #8
                Originally posted by Bigfella View Post
                Its OK Tankie. its like kids - just because you love one doesn't mean you can't love another just as much.:)

                I think Carlos Santana did some good work with one - a master of sustain....and if you wanted a bit of 'rough', Neil Young did some great work with his Gibson LP.
                Michael jackson syndrome huh

                Got to agree on Santana tho , i was brought up listening to Hank Marvin , and it kinda stayed with me , i loved his playing and the sound of a strat ,Mark Knoppfler makes it sinnnnnnnnnng as well , at the mo im semi acc , playing a crafter , lovely sounding box , for the price ,its a shame the arthritis is very restricting in my fingers now , all my electric stuff i sold on , made more than it was bought for as well , woo hoo ;)
                Last edited by tankie; 14 Aug 09,, 10:59.

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                • #9
                  Lots and lots of names to add to that list,

                  Chuck Berry
                  Dickie Bets (Almans)
                  George Thorogood

                  many many names.;)
                  Fortitude.....The strength to persist...The courage to endure.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Originally posted by tankie View Post
                    Michael jackson syndrome huh

                    Got to agree on Santana tho , i was brought up listening to Hank Marvin , and it kinda stayed with me , i loved his playing and the sound of a strat ,Mark Knoppfler makes it sinnnnnnnnnng as well , at the mo im semi acc , playing a crafter , lovely sounding box , for the price ,its a shame the arthritis is very restricting in my fingers now , all my electric stuff i sold on , made more than it was bought for as well , woo hoo ;)

                    Saw a bit if footage tonight of Les playing about 9 years ago live on stage with Keef Richards. He still had it. Hope for you yet Tankie.:))
                    sigpic

                    Win nervously lose tragically - Reds C C

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                    • #11
                      Originally posted by Bigfella View Post
                      Saw a bit if footage tonight of Les playing about 9 years ago live on stage with Keef Richards. He still had it. Hope for you yet Tankie.:))
                      OH dem bones dem bones dem dryyyyyyy bones , hope so B/F

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                      • #12
                        Heard about this driving in, RIP
                        Welcome, you step into a forum of the flash bang, chew toy hell, and shove it down your throat brutal honesty. OoE

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                        • #13
                          RIP to a legend.

                          Here he is, complemented by another legend on a Gibson.

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                          • #14
                            Sunburst 59' Les Paul

                            Dickie and Duane both played sunburst 59' Les Paul's. Neil put away his Gretsch and began wrestling with ol' black, the jet-black beast that has since howled it's way to rock n' roll glory.

                            Most of all, though, the man. Les plugged in. Just ask the folks at the Newport Folk and Jazz festival how pissed off that made them when Dylan did the same twenty something years later.

                            What a long, amazing life he had! He saw and did so much as a musician and sonic innovator. Ain't a one of us not grateful for his vision as a pioneer.:)
                            "This aggression will not stand, man!" Jeff Lebowski
                            "The only true currency in this bankrupt world is what you share with someone else when you're uncool." Lester Bangs

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                            • #15
                              Originally posted by S-2 View Post
                              Dickie and Duane both played sunburst 59' Les Paul's. Neil put away his Gretsch and began wrestling with ol' black, the jet-black beast that has since howled it's way to rock n' roll glory.

                              Most of all, though, the man. Les plugged in. Just ask the folks at the Newport Folk and Jazz festival how pissed off that made them when Dylan did the same twenty something years later.

                              What a long, amazing life he had! He saw and did so much as a musician and sonic innovator. Ain't a one of us not grateful for his vision as a pioneer.:)

                              Amen.
                              sigpic

                              Win nervously lose tragically - Reds C C

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