Also called:
Strat
Key People:
Leo Fender
Related Topics:
electric guitar

Fender Stratocaster, model of electric guitar created by American inventor and manufacturer Leo Fender and known for its elegant design and tonal versatility. The Stratocaster, or “Strat,” as it is known by guitar aficionados, is easily recognized by the two horns that highlight the guitar body’s cutaways above and below the neck. Unlike the Fender Telecaster, whose bridge is locked in place, the Stratocaster version in widest use possesses a floating bridge, which allows the player to modulate the pitch of the tone by reducing the tension on the strings. The Stratocaster is a fixture in modern Western popular music, especially in rhythm and blues and various forms of rock.

History and design

After the release of the Telecaster in 1951, Fender set out to construct a modular solid-body electric guitar that could compete with manufacturers of upscale electric guitars, including Gibson, which distributed the Les Paul. During this period, he and his staff solicited feedback from guitar players and salespeople alike about the kinds of features that were sought in a new guitar. Several prominent guitar players offered suggestions for ergonomic improvements, and Fender incorporated many into the Stratocaster’s design before the model’s initial release, in October 1954. As the Strat has evolved across the decades since then, several variants have been introduced featuring different neck profiles, pickup configurations, and colour schemes.

The Stratocaster’s basic double-cutaway body shape, which contrasts with the single-cutaway shape of the Telecaster, largely mimics that of the Fender Precision Bass guitar (released in 1951). This shape allows the player’s hands increased access to the high frets (that is, the raised metal strips on the guitar’s neck that separate individual notes on one or more strings) and reduces the instrument’s weight. Several sources credit Rex Gallion, the guitarist for the popular 1940s radio program Dude Martin and His Roundup Gang, for improvements in the body’s contouring. He remarked that the Telecaster’s squared edges pressed uncomfortably into the player’s ribs, abdomen, and picking forearm, and he suggested that smoother and more-rounded edges would make the instrument more comfortable to play.

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The Stratocaster also offered two other major improvements over the Telecaster and other guitars of the period. The first was the addition of a third contact microphone, or pickup (that is, a transducer that uses magnets to convert the mechanical energy created by plucking a string to an electric current). Although versions of the Stratocaster made between 1954 and 1976 featured a three-way switching system that allowed the player to switch between the neck, middle, and bridge pickups, units made since 1977 have featured a 5-way switch that enables the player to alternate between five different timbre settings: the neck, middle, and bridge pickups individually, along with the neck and middle pickups together and the middle and bridge pickups together.

The most significant improvement was the addition of Fender’s vibrato system, called the Synchronized Tremolo, which allows the player to flatten and sharpen the pitch of a note or chord by changing the tension of the strings on the bridge. During the early 1950s other guitar companies were using the Bigsby vibrato tailpiece, created by Paul A. Bigsby. This device allowed the player to flatten the pitch of the strings by turning a roller tailpiece, which anchored the strings, within a set bridge attached to the guitar’s surface. Pushing down on a metal arm slackened the strings by rolling them forward. Releasing the arm brought the strings back to their original level of tension. However, mid-20th-century Bigsby vibratos had a reputation for being unreliable: the strings would not always return to their original tension, and thus the guitar would go out of tune because of uneven friction between the string and the roller.

Fender’s early attempts to design a vibrato system also involved placing the strings on rollers, but he could not get the mechanism to work properly, so he developed a system that moved the bridge and tailpiece together. Like the Bigsby vibrato, the Synchronized Tremolo, completed in 1953, was activated by a tremolo arm (also called a whammy bar), but it differed from the Bigsby vibrato in that it rocked the entire bridge and tailpiece forward and backward, pivoting (or “floating”) on six screws. Pushing the tremolo arm flattened the pitch, pulling it outward sharpened the pitch, and releasing it brought the strings back to the original level of tension—all while avoiding the friction issues associated with the Bigsby system. The first run of the Stratocaster gave buyers the choice between a guitar with the Synchronized Tremolo or one with a fixed bridge and tailpiece.

Famous Stratocaster players

Still, despite the Stratocaster’s innovative design, guitar players were slow to embrace it. Fender sold fewer than 750 units between late 1954 and the end of 1955, which was attributed to most guitar players being unaware of the Stratocaster and many of those who were regarding it as a gimmick instrument. The appearance of a Stratocaster-playing Buddy Holly and his band, the Crickets, on The Ed Sullivan Show in late 1957 changed this perception. Not only did his performance reveal the Stratocaster to a wide audience, but, more importantly, it showcased the guitar to many who would become influential rock guitarists of the 1960s and beyond.

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The musical styles of several famous artists are closely tied to their use of the Fender Stratocaster. Two of the best known were blues rock players Eric Clapton and Stevie Ray Vaughan. Other Stratocaster-playing performers included rhythm-and-blues musicians Ike Turner and H.E.R.; blues guitarists Eric Gales and Robert Cray; blues, folk, and country rock musician Bonnie Raitt; rock guitarists David Gilmour, Jeff Beck, Mark Knopfler, and Ronnie Wood; and rock singer-songwriter-guitarists Jimi Hendrix and John Mayer.

John P. Rafferty

electric guitar, guitar (plucked stringed musical instrument) that uses electronic amplification in order to be heard at a louder volume, by translating the vibrations of the strings into electrical currents. These electric signals are picked up and amplified by an external amplifier or a speaker. Sounds from the instrument can also be distorted and modified. While there are many variations on the neck length, shape, number of strings, and general build of electric guitars, most of them consist of the same elements: a body, usually made of wood or plaster, which comprises the bulk of the guitar and can be shaped in a variety of ways; a headstock, into which the tuners are set; a nut which holds the strings in place; strings; a neck that connects the headstock to the body and supports the strings; frets, which maintain the desired pitch when the strings are pressed; electrical current pickups; and control knobs with which volume and tone can be adjusted. Although efforts to create an electrified fretted string instrument date to the late 19th century, the first true electric guitar was invented in the early 1930s by George Beauchamp, with the help of Adolph Rickenbacker, for the Electro String Instrument Corporation. The electric guitar would prove to be vital to the development of popular music throughout the world in the 20th century, and it continues to be one of the most commonly played instruments across cultures today.

The electric guitar was born out of a simple need for louder music. In the United States, dance music in public spaces became increasingly common during the 1920s as jazz exploded in popularity. Electronic amplification made it possible for the guitar to be heard among the other instruments in the big bands (especially the large brass sections) of the swing era of the 1930s and ’40s. In addition to swing-jazz guitarists such as Charlie Christian, the first musicians to make use of Beauchamp’s innovation played Hawaiian-style and country music. In the 1940s and ’50s, as the blues migrated northward from the rural American South, electrification made it easier for the guitar to compete with the cacophony of the patrons in crowded bars and clubs in Chicago and other cities to which musicians such as Elmore James, Muddy Waters, and Howlin’ Wolf had relocated.

The first electric guitars were, like their acoustic counterparts, hollow-bodied. The most noticeable difference was the inclusion of tungsten steel pickups. The iconic solid-body electric guitar was created by guitarist Les Paul in 1941. No longer relying on any acoustic amplification, the solid-body electric guitar could make much smoother, more sonically isolated tones. The technology for pickups—the nodes attached to the steel strings that transferred electric currents to amplifiers—also advanced quickly about the same time. Most electric guitars had begun to use smaller magnetic single- or double-coil pickups. These pickups are what supply the instrument’s signature electric hum.

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While Les Paul and the Gibson Guitar Company readied an electric guitar for mass production, Leo Fender and the Fender Electric Instruments Company beat them to the punch, marketing the first mass-produced solid-body electric guitar, the Fender Broadcaster (later renamed Telecaster), in 1948. The Les Paul Standard became available in 1952. Two years later Fender introduced the iconic Stratocaster, which featured three electric pickups (instead of two).

As rhythm and blues, rockabilly, and rock and roll began to emerge in the 1950s, the new sounds and tones that the electric guitar was capable of making were embraced by a new generation of musicians, including Chuck Berry, Bo Diddley, Carl Perkins, and Buddy Holly. These artists and their contemporaries sparked a conservative backlash against what older generations considered to be immoral, lascivious music. Beyond its sound, the electric guitar became a symbol and a talisman for the burgeoning youth culture.

In the 1960s manufacturers started equipping preamplifiers (or preamps; separate amplifiers that can adjust the tone and volume of certain sounds) with a range of effects, such as tremolo (a wavering or trembling effect), wah-wah (a fluctuating muted sound, like the covering and uncovering of the bell of a trumpet), and distortion. Guitarists used these innovations to explore new sounds and create new subgenres of rock music. Partly because of their ability to make fuller, louder sounds, electric guitars also lent themselves to use as solo instruments (sometimes used in “dueling” counterpoint) as well as rhythm instruments. Some novel techniques that electric guitars allow for include string-bending, hammering, and sliding. The instrument’s popularity and sonic possibilities also paved the way for the electrification of other acoustic instruments like the bass.

Some of the musicians (not already mentioned) who gained reputations as virtuoso electric guitarists and innovators were blues masters B.B. King, Albert King, John Lee Hooker, and Buddy Guy; gospel singer and guitarist Sister Rosetta Tharpe; influential country music makers Chet Atkins and Merle Travis; rock “guitar gods” Jimi Hendrix and Eric Clapton; and heavy metal mavens Jimmy Page (Led Zepplin), Tony Iommi (Black Sabbath), Eddie Van Halen (Van Halen), Angus Young (AC/DC), Slash (Guns N’ Roses), and James Hetfield (Metallica); along with George Harrison (the Beatles), Keith Richards (the Rolling Stones), Pete Townshend (the Who), David Gilmour (Pink Floyd), Robbie Robertson (the Band), Mark Knopfler (Dire Straits), Kurt Cobain (Nirvana), James Burton, Duane Eddy, Jeff Beck, Carlos Santana, Neil Young, John McLaughlin, and Stevie Ray Vaughan. Though most commonly associated with American and British popular music, the electric guitar has been used by musicians throughout the world—notably Nigeria’s King Sunny Adé—to build on, distort, and experiment with traditional sounds.

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