By 1952 Les Paul was not
only the most popular guitar player in
Les had approached Gibson in the '40s with his ideas for a solidbody electric guitar, but Gibson was already leading
the industry with archtop electric guitars.
Furthermore, Gibson had always been very conservative when it came to aligning
with artists. In 50 years, only two players had their names on Gibson models:
Nick Lucas, an early guitar star and crooner whose
"Tip Toe Through the Tulips" was the biggest record of 1929, and Roy Smeck, a multi-instrumentalist so talented he was nicknamed
"The Wizard of the Strings."
In the early '50s, when the solidbody
guitar first became commercially viable, Gibson designed an instrument that
would change the image of the solidbody electric from
a simple plank of wood to an elegant, stylish piece of art. Such a guitar would
be a radical move for a traditional company like Gibson, but Gibson had been
founded on the radical mandolin and guitar designs of Orville Gibson back in
the 1890s. This new model would have the same carved-top contours that had set
Orville's instruments apart from all others.
With the new model almost ready for market, Gibson
approached Les Paul, the obvious choice to help launch it. Les was already
intimately familiar with the unique characteristics of a solidbody
electric guitar. And he was at the top of his career. His 1948 hit, "
The Les Paul Model, as it was originally called, has changed
little since its debut in 1952. Except for an updated bridge and humbucking pickups, the Les Paul Standard of today is still
the same guitar. The Les Paul has been the driving force behind many changes in
popular music. It powered the blues rock sound of the late '60s and the southern
rock of the late '70s. By the '90s the Les Paul was providing signature sounds
for every genre of rock, from alternative to metal.