Les Paul, a Music Revolutionary

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Les Paul, A Music Revolutionary Les Paul played a key role in the innovation of modern day music. He was responsible for many inventions that are still used all around the world. His contribution to the music industry was a turning point for music. It was a leap in the right direction on the path to the current industry. The development of multi-track recording was one of Paul’s most successful projects, along with the invention of the first solid body electric guitar in 1941. Les Paul is a music icon. One of the most revolutionary artists of the 20th century. His contributions were a sudden change to the industry that will likely be around forever. In the 30s, as Les Paul was moving up as a professional musician and playing with bigger and better bands, he had an idea. His idea was to build a guitar with pick-ups in order to amplify his instruments appropriately. He tried many ways to do so. His situation was comparable to Thomas Edison’s invention of the lightbulb, in that he tried so many different ways of amplifying this guitar without it sounding like complete rubbish. In 1941, after some success, he came out with “The Log”. Even though this instrument sounded hardly acceptable with horrible tone quality, and unbearable buzzing, it was incredibly revolutionary. Then the guns went off, and the competition began to construct a more fine-tuned version of “The Log”. Leo Fender came out with the Telecaster in 1950, and Les Paul teamed up with Gibson to release the model named after the revolutionary, the Les Paul Gold Top. Fender and Gibson went head to head, similar to nowadays, in the new electric guitar market throughout the 1950s. Les Paul played his Gold Top and kept increasing his innovations with new techniques and effects. This was a quick paced time for the music industry due to Les Paul’s revolution. The Gibson “Les Paul” is arguably the most

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