Sunday, September 30, 2007

even though

Janice has gone on a trip to Hunan Province, so I am going to spend my vacation getting some of my writing done, cleaning up my place, and brushing up on my guitar technique.

Saturday, September 29, 2007

False Alarm

Janice and I were able to work everything out last night, she is back to her normal happy self. I am at the beggining of a 5 day national holiday, trying to enjoy it.

Friday, September 28, 2007

He giveth and He taketh away

The snag turned into a full blown rip earlier tonight. Went out to dinner as planned, but things just didn't work out well at all. She was unable to give me an answer and was unresponsive all night. The evening ended with me throwing some Taxi money on the table for her and saying "I don't want to see you again until you can tell me what the problem is so I can make it right." I don't want to get into the details, but I suppose for right now I no longer have a girlfriend. The situation may be remedied at some point, but I have gotten to be pretty good at reading certain things from people. For right now i don't think she will ever contact me again, time to move on I guess.

Snags

Janice and I have run into the first few snags in our relationship, after being through a few relationships myself i have come to expect this after the first few months. It's a natural part of the whole process, things aren't new anymore and not as exciting. She leaves many decisions up to me, but the fact is I don't know this town very well. It's really difficult for me to think of interesting things to do that we haven't already done plenty of times, or that she hasn't done plenty of times in her life. I can tell she isn't as excited about kissing me it's just not the same anymore, but these are things every couple goes through at some point. Better now than later I say, besides this is a good time to establish where we stand in this relationship and our feelings about it. I'll admit our fun having has tappered off a bit, perhaps it's sad that I am happy spending very little money and doing stuff at home. We are going out to dinner over the next couple of nights and will most likely work everything out.
One big problem is that she doesn't really like American movies or music, I enjoy Chinese tv to some extent, but there is only so much of it I can watch, and I don't like Chinese pop music at all. We have little in common in the realm of entertainment, chinese music is all about singers, the music itself is just shitty, nothing special, i am nto a very good musician but I could prolly write this stuff. Anyway, it's time for me to get to work all. I will try and write more into this post over the next few hours/couple days. Have a 5 day national vacation coming up, i will be off from sunday to thursday, will have a lot of stuff to talk about on the blog then. You know the one constant about having a job is that there is always something you dislike about it no matter how much you like the overall work, I like teaching, it's satisfying and most of the time I can enjoy myself doing it. However, there are still plenty of things that I would want to be different. BTW Linda I hear your not working anymore, please explain this to me, details please.
Not getting along with one of my co workers at all, Stoerm has met this guy and agrees that he is a total TWAT. He is the type of person that you can't ask nicely to do anything because he won't do it, eventually you have to demand things of him, last week he really lost his cool and started screaming at me at work. All of the students could hear him and everything like that, he was making a huge scene. All I asked him to do was stop changing the name plates on our rooms because it confuses everyone, the teachers, the students, it just throws us all off. At one point he was yelling at me an inch away from my face spitting on me and calling me a "Bitch" with one of our bosses standing right next to me. I remained calm (Normally i would have been all over his ass, restraint is something that I have had to learn over the last year), then I am doing an english corner and he is screaming at the top of his lungs and disrupting everything. From what I understand many parents had to come to the school later and get an appology from him. The next day we had a teachers meeting and proceeded to call me a "Jerk Off" and a "Pretty Boy" in front of both of our bosses. and went on to claim that it was my girlfriend who was runing his career at our school and began to try and place blame on me for that. Now I don't really hate anyone, but I hate this guy. However, I would never try and get him fired, that's just wrong. My girlfriend has her own mind and her own opinions, it's not like we sit around at my apartment and talk about how much she should dislike this guy. She doesn't like him because he is a California Bay Area Prick who thinks he is better than everyone else and likes to laugh at other peoples misfortunes. Frankly i had no idea what he was talking about during the metting so that night I finally talked to Janice about some of the things that had gone on between her and this guy. Some of the things she had told me were almost disturbing, instances of locking her out of the classroom and laughing at her histarically when he let her back in, Shouting at her friend for no reason, and even failing her for her last class just because. I looked at her book and he did indeed give her all 1's, the highest grade being 5. he also sits in the corner of our office and mumbles to himself, now I have been around a crazy person all my life, I am noticing some very disturbing things about this guy.

Monday, September 24, 2007

New Vids

A whole slew of new vids on you tube of my Fenghuang trip, just search for goemonronin and you will find them, look at anything with Fenghuang in the title

Friday, September 21, 2007

photo from my trip


Sunday, September 16, 2007

New vid

Friday, September 14, 2007

Saving money

You guys have no idea how badly I want to save money, I really do, but the fact is I can;t for a little while. My teeth are still killing me, I haven't done anything about them, they need to be fixed somehow. Not to mention I would like to come home for a few weeks at some point, it will prolly be a couple more months before I can put anything away. The good news is I will be getting a bonus at the end of my contract in Feb, it's not going to be huge, but it will go right into my savings account. I am also going to attempt to organize some part time work as well, perhaps in the mornings on my day off or before my normal job. Honestly though I am putting in about 30-40 hours a week as it is, at odd times of day, i just get wipped out so easily. long story short, around december I should be able to save money. I gotta run i have stayed up way to late I have an early day.

Wednesday, September 05, 2007

Care free days

I only wish my days here in the sprawling city of Wuhan were care free. I came here with the intention of improving my life, yet near the end of the month my bank account is always empty and I am borrowing money. I know that if I go back to the US full time it's going to be another dead end min wage tech support job that will make me want to down a bottle of pills. Here I am almost on my feet, and out of the hole on my debts. As mentioned I do have plans for business but I am working almost 40 hours a week, so I don't have time to "Sit on my ass" so much as I have been accused of. Plenty of people come here just to get drunk, be irresponsible, and put their penis in things. Personally, I can hardly stand to be around those blokes. It seems like such a waste of time, I also enjoy writing quite a bit, but with all the reports and such I have to do I barely have time. I am still in the process of finishing my English certification, and I am looking for a cheap accredited online school where I can get a degree in creative writing. Not to mention it would be nice to have at least one kid by the time I'm 35, but perhaps I am getting a little ahead of myself. Within the next year I plan to be at least in college somewhere working on my degree, and hopefully with a little hep and a few investors, starting my business.
Work sucks right now, they are enforcing a dress code. Shirts, ties, and at least khakis. They are one of the lower paying institutes in Wuhan, they ask for the most hours, and pay the least. It seems like the only one they get angry with for not following it is me for some reason, I dunno. I hate rules, in many ways they are the most stupid things on the planet and should be broken as often if possible. Three more guitars with this post.


The Fender Stratocaster




"The Fender Stratocaster, (often referred to as a Strat), is a model of electric guitar designed by Leo Fender and Freddie Tavares in the early 1950s, and manufactured continuously to the present. The Stratocaster has been used by many leading guitarists, and thus can be heard on many historic recordings. Along with the Gibson Les Paul, Gibson SG, and the Fender Telecaster, it is one of the most enduring and common models of electric guitar in the world. The Stratocaster has been widely copied; as a result "Stratocaster" or "Strat" is often used when referring to any guitar that has the same general features as the original, regardless of manufacturer.The Fender Electric Instrument Manufacturing Company (now known as Fender Musical Instruments Corporation) developed the first commercial solid-body 'Spanish' (as opposed to 'Hawaiian,' or lap steel) electric guitar in the Telecaster, a simple design whose earliest models were offered under various names like Broadcaster or its single pickup conterpart the Esquire, beginning in 1950. While the Telecaster and its variants were successful, many guitar players of the day used a Bigsby unit, a spring-loaded vibrato device that players use to bend notes up and down with their pick hand. Instead of adding a Bigsby, Fender decided to produce a new, more expensively-made ash or alder line of guitars with his own design of Tremolo (see tremolo arm for more on the evolution of such mechanisms). His decision was also influenced by guitarists Rex Gallion and Bill Carson, who requested a contoured body to temper the harsh edges of the slab-built Telecaster; the new ash body design was based on that of the 1951 Precision Bass. The name, 'Stratocaster,' was intended to evoke images of new jet-aircraft technology (such as the Boeing B-52 Stratofortress), and to express Fender's modernistic design philosophy. In designing the Stratocaster's body, a significant area of the back of the guitar, and the area where the strumming arm rests, were beveled to accommodate the player's chest and arm. The upper bouts featured two cutaways, for easier access to the higher frets. The new 'Custom Contour Body' and 'Synchronized Tremolo' bridge made the Stratocaster a revolutionary design. The headstock shape of the Stratocaster is patented by Fender.[1]The guitar also featured more complex electronics than the Telecaster: three single coil pickups, each with staggered magnetic poles; a three-way selector switch (five-way since 1977); one volume knob, and two tone controls. A three single-coil pickup design was an innovation already in use by Gibson in their ES-5 model since 1949. However, Fender's pickups were much more compact. Patents were applied for all these new designs, and production line Stratocasters reached the market in early 1954 for US$249.50 (approximately US$1,850 in 2007 currency[2]). The basic production model had a two-tone nitrocellulose 'sunburst' finish, one-piece maple neck, ash body, chrome hardware, and Bakelite-like thermoplastic parts. Other manufacturers began imitating these innovations immediately. An early-model Stratocaster was a key component of Buddy Holly's signature look, along with his black-rimmed glasses, and he was among the first players to popularize the Stratocaster in rock music. Both his gravestone and his walk-of-fame statue in Lubbock, Texas feature a Stratocaster. Much of the popularity of the Stratocaster can be attributed to its versatility. The neck, middle, and bridge (termed "rhythm", "normal tone" and "lead", respectively) pickups provide a wide range of tones. The standard single-coil pickups often found in Stratocasters produce a trebly sound with a high top end and bell-like harmonics. The Fender synchronized tremolo tremolo arm mechanism, introduced with the Stratocaster, has become the most copied design of all, eclipsing all other designs including the later floating bridge designs by Leo Fender himself. The Telecaster also remained in production, and both the Stratocaster and the Telecaster flourished into diverse families of guitars, with many variants. Each continues to enjoy its own following among guitarists. (Info Courtesy Wikipedia)"

This is by far my favorite guitar of all time. It's versatile, easy to work on as all the electronics are on a plastic plate you can remove, thus no cramped routed cavity to work in. I have owned and sold many of these, in fact if dad were to browse my collection he would find 2 or 3 of these. This is usually every ones first guitar as the strat copies can be had for as little as 100 bucks, I specialize in taking cheap strat copies and turning them into stage playable pieces. My guitar here in China is a strat, if anyone wants a good versatile electric consider one of these by almost any maker, just make sure the neck is comfy for your hands, they vary a great deal.

The Gibson Flying V




"Gibson first manufactured prototypes of the guitar in 1957. They were made of korina wood, a trademarked name for limba, a wood similar to but lighter than mahogany. (Korina, originally spelled 'Korena', is the name that has been given to certain types of African Mahogany.) This Flying V, along with the Futura (Explorer) and, initially, the Moderne, made up a line of modernist guitars designed by Gibson's then-president Ted McCarty. These designs were meant to add a more futuristic aspect to Gibson's image, but they didn't sell well. After the initial launch in 1958, the line was discontinued by 1959. In the mid-1960s, guitarists such as Albert King, Lonnie Mack, Dave Davies and Jimi Hendrix, in search of a distinctive looking guitar with a powerful sound, started using Flying V's. The renewed interest created a demand for Gibson to reissue the model. Gibson reissued the guitar in 1967, updating its design with a bigger, more stylish pickguard, and ditching the original bridge, which had the strings inserted through the back, in favor of the stopbar tail piece more commonly associated with Gibson models. Some models were shipped with a short Vibrola Maestro Tremolo. This 1967 model is now the standard for the Flying V or, as Gibson now calls it, "V Factor". A fully functional, playable highly enlarged replica of Gibson Flying V, sizing over 43 feet (13 m), was built in June 2000 by Scott Rippetoe and his team from The Academy of Science and Technology (Texas). This world record is registered in Guinness World Records. Many other guitar companies have copied the Flying V design, most adding several "personal touches" to avoid legal entanglements with Gibson. Among these other V's is the Jackson Rhoads model, custom built for Randy Rhoads in 1981 (It was originally to be called the Concorde, but after Rhoads death it was named as tribute). As the very first Jackson guitar and colloquially known as the "Shark Fin", it featured an asymmetrical cut among other differences from Gibson's. Following the Rhoads model, Jackson produced another V variation for Ratt guitarist Robbin Crosby and marketed it as the King V. Another popular V shaped guitar is the B.C. Rich Kerry King V, Jr. V, and Draco Models. Dean Flying V's or Dean Vs are often referred to as "the best deal in V guitars". A famous user of the Gibson Flying V, Michael Schenker actually switched to Dean Guitars, preferring the Dean over the Gibson. Other manufacturers, such as Cort, Antares, and Ibanez, produced clones so close to the original Gibson design that they reportedly incurred the wrath of Gibson's legal team. (Info Courtesy Wikipedia)"

Escentially a Les Paul with a funny shape, Same electronics set up and all. I have always wanted one but have only had the pleasure of holding a cheaper epiphone version at a pawn shop with no strings. These sound like hundreds of other guitars, but boy would you look cool playing it. If i ever build my own guitar from scratch it'll be a V. I have heard it can be a real bitch to play one of these sitting down though.

Gibson Explorer





"The Gibson Explorer (now marketed as X-plorer and Explorer Pro) is a type of electric guitar. The Explorer made its debut in 1958 under the name Futura. It offered a radical, "futuristic" body design, much like its sibling, the Flying V. Its initial run was unsuccessful and it was discontinued in 1959. In 1975, Gibson began reissuing the Explorer after other guitar companies had success selling similar designs. Gibson produced fewer than 100 Explorers during the 1958 run of the original Korina wood model. The low availability of this guitar has increased its value significantly and made them prized collectibles. There have been several variants produced by Gibson, including several smaller, more "user friendly" versions such as the Studio Explorer and the Matthias Jabs designed Explorer 90 (named so because it was 90% the body of a regular Explorer). An explorer was also produced in Gibson's "Goth" line, which feature some of Gibson's most renowned guitars including the Explorer, Flying V, SG, and Les Paul in Matte Black Finishes. Several variants are also produced by Epiphone, Gibson's lower cost, offshore operation. These include a model produced in Korina Wood and Epiphone's own "Goth" model. The Hamer Guitar company created a tribute to the Explorer in 1974 called the Hamer "Standard" . Gaining popularity with the more progressive rock musicians of the day, Hamer's success led the way for other reissues, including those from Gibson. The Jackson guitar company (now a subsidiary of Fender) was once sued by Gibson for their line of Kelly guitars, which are very similar to the X-plorer, although more lightweight. The Kelly was sleeker and lighter, but was otherwise identical. The most famous user of this line is Marty Friedman of Megadeth fame. High-end guitar company Alembic Inc produced a few custom made bass guitars for the late John Entwistle of the Who. These basses had the body shape of the Explorer. After his death, Alembic released a limited number of the bass guitars based on John's custom basses. Warwick also produces the Stryker basses, based on the custom basses. Other companies that have produced Explorer-esque guitars are: ESP, Dean Guitars, Ibanez, Jackson, Yamaha, Kramer and Peavey. In 2007, the Xbox 360 video game Guitar Hero II was released with a controller shaped like the Explorer, as well as being one of the featured playable guitars in the game. (the first game, Guitar Hero, had a controller shaped like a Gibson SG). A 3rd-party controller for both of the Guitar Hero games on the PlayStation 2 was made by Nyko, which also featured the Explorer design. (Info Courtesy Wikipedia)

Another glorified Les Paul, I hate this guitar, and as many of them as I have seen in pawn shops I have never been tempted to buy one, not even once. I don;t care if James Hetfield did play one for a long time.












Tuesday, September 04, 2007

Excuse me?

I would consider it uncool to treat me like an idiot in comments, I have no idea who you are but I would think you have little idea of who I am and my situation. Don't think I don't have plans. I am just finishing a few things up right now, like my contract with work. Please don't waste my time with this stuff, BTW I only have like one or two beers a week, if that. I am hardly philandering, and right now I am more concerned wiht my girlfriends English than my manderin.

Monday, September 03, 2007

one year

Well guys, today marks one year in China for my brother and I. I am spending it much the way I came into China. I have been very ill for the past several days, in fact I am staying home from work tomorrow. Otherwise it was a fine day, Tom and I got together and went to a 4 star restaurant, he ate fish, and seemed to enjoy it. Imagine going to a nice place to eat and the waiter stands at the table the whole time and watches you eat. Not only that but every now and then they insist on fiddling with the arrangement of things on the table, moving them around and such, constantly filling your glasses. You may think it sounds nice and all but after a while you just wish they would go away.
It seems that both of us have decided to stay for at least 6 more months. I however find it doubtful that I will live in the US full time ever again. It's just not all it's cracked up to be there, of course there are things I hate about China but they are far easier to overlook when you can afford things and live like you want. Now that I have a girlfriend things are even better, things with her could move a little faster in my opinion, but I guess that's the problem with an older guy being with a traditional young virgin. I want the cake and I am damn sure going to eat it to, I am enjoying her presence more and more. You know ladies you hate your period, and you know what we hate it to :)
A few months after coming here I decided I was going to start watching star trek again, not just watching some episodes here and there but watch all of it. I quickly downloaded the last6 series "Enterprise" which is actually the first series, 80 years or so before Kirk. I watched several episodes a night and in a month or so I was finished. I was quite impressed with the holes they filled in and the questions they had answered. Like why did the Klingons in Kirk's time look different to the Klingons in Picard's time, what were the Vulcan's like 80 years before Spock? So while I was on the last season of Enterprise (Season 4) I downloaded the first season of the original series and started in on it right after I was done with Enterprise. I was concerned about how it would transition, but even though there was a 25 year gap between the shows, the transition was good. I finished the original series much the same way I did Enterprise. I watched some of the kirk crew movies that I hadn't seen in a while, and then dove into Next Generation. I did skip about 7 episodes out of 8 seasons on next gen as I had seen them recently on TV or remembered hating them. I also watched the movies "Generations" and "First Contact". I figured I could skip insurrection and nemesis as i own them both and had seen them recently. To make a long story short I am now in Season 5 of Deep Space 9, so that's 2 seasons of DS9 to go, and then all of voyager, not to mention an online series as well. Out of all the star trek I have watched and will watch the original series is still my favorite, it had bad special effects and only half the episodes were really good. But, the camera work was excellent and in all fairness William Shatner was bad ass as Kirk. I would have to say though that one of my favorite characters is Quark from DS9. I will update more on this later.
You guys know I have been playing guitar for a long time, so I have decided to teach you guys a few things about electric guitars and the like. Feel free to skip this if you have no interest, but I am going to try and make it as informative as possible, in this first post about the subject I am going to cover some different types of electric guitars.

The Gibson Les Paul


"The Gibson Les Paul is one of the most recognizable solid-body electric guitar designs in the world.[citation needed] Developed in the early 1950s, the guitar has become one of the most enduring and popular musical instrument models ever produced. Its design has been left virtually untouched for over 50 years. The Les Paul model represented a design collaboration between Gibson Guitar Corporation and pop star, electronics inventor, and accomplished jazz guitarist Les Paul. In 1950, after the introduction of the Fender Telecaster to the musical market, electric guitars became a public craze. In reaction, Gibson Guitar president Ted McCarty brought guitarist Les Paul into the company as a consultant. Les Paul was a respected innovator who had been experimenting with guitar design for years to benefit his own music. The significance of Les Paul's contributions to his Gibson guitar design remain controversial. The book "50 Years of the Gibson Les Paul" limits Paul's contributions to two: advice on the trapeze tailpiece, and a preference for color (stating that Paul preferred gold as "it looks expensive," and a second choice of black because "it makes your fingers appear to move faster on the fretboard", and "looks classy -like a tuxedo)." The Les Paul guitar line was originally conceived to include two models: the regular model (nicknamed the "Goldtop"), and the Custom model, which offered upgraded hardware and a more formal black finish. However, advancements in pickup, body, and hardware designs allowed the Les Paul to become a long-term series of electric solid-body guitars that targeted every price-point and market level except for the complete novice guitarist. This beginner guitar market was filled by the Melody Maker model, and although the inexpensive Melody Maker did not bear the Les Paul name, its body consistently followed the design of true Les Pauls throughout each era. Beyond shaping and body design, there are a number of characteristics that distinguish the Gibson Les Paul line from other electrics. For example, in a fashion similar to Gibson's hollow-body instruments, the strings of Les Paul guitars are always mounted on the top of the guitar body, rather than through the guitar body, as seen in competitor Fender's designs. The Gibson also features a variety of colors, such as Wine Red, Ebony, Classic White, Fire Burst, and Alpine White. In addition, the Les Paul models offered a variety of finishes and decorative levels, a diversity of hardware options, and an innovative array of electric pick-up options, some of which significantly impacted the sound of electric music. For instance, in 1957, Gibson introduced the "humbucking pickup" which revolutionized the sound of the electric guitar, and eliminated the 60-cycle noise (hum) which had previously plagued amplified guitars." (Information Courtesy of Wikipedia).
I have owned a Les Paul or two, and they are a fine instrument, although they aren't really the instrument for me. They are very heavy and thick, and they don't feature the same cutaways that the fender models do. I am not a very good guitarist in some ways and I really need to see what I am doing. With my pronounced belly it's almost impossible to see the guitar while I am playing and that is a disadvantage. Humbuckers are nice because they don't make to much noise, but to me they always sound like a wet towel over the amp and really with only two pickups you can be very limited tonally, i much prefer some of the thinner and lighter Les Paul copies, and with a little rewiring the pickup problems I have with them can be remidied to a certain extent. I also find the necks on most Gibson style guitars to be a little large for me, my hands are getting a little arthritic and the reach doesn't work for me. Many people love how they feel, and at one point so did I, but these days Les Paul's just make it hard for me to play, it's important to note that they make a double cutaway version as well with the two horns instead of the one.

The Gibson SG


"In 1960, Gibson Les Paul sales were significantly lower than they had been in previous years, so in 1961 the model was given a completely new body style that was thinner and had 2 sharp cutaway horns that made the upper frets more accessible. The neck was slightly heavy, which made it tilt downwards. The neck joint was also moved up about 3 frets. It was felt the new design could compete with the popular Fender Stratocaster, another benefit being lower production costs than that of the previous model. The guitar was advertised as having the "fastest neck in the world", due to its slender neck profile and virtually non-existent heel. The newly designed Les Paul was popular but Les Paul, whose namesake was carried over from the previous version, did not like the new design and asked to have his name removed from it. His reasons were simple: He thought the new neck joint was not as stable as the previous models, and didn't want his name on something that could break. Gibson renamed the model the "SG" which was short for "solid guitar". Even though Les Paul's name was officially removed from the model in 1961, the plastic Les Paul nameplates (positioned between the rhythm pickup and fingerboard) were in abundance in the Gibson factory and SG models having these nameplates were built and sold by Gibson up to the end of 1963." (Information Courtesy Wikipedia)
Over my guitar playing lifetime I have owned one very rare SG, it was a 1962 model I got from my cousin James. It was the model that had the pickguard and Single coils, but still very similar to the one in the picture. I was carrying it and a bunch of other things up to my room one night and dropped it down a few steps, the neck snapped right off at the joint, it was literally beyond repair, so I suppose Les Paul was right about that one. It was sad to because my father and I had worked so hard to refinish it. Other than the new shape the guitar has almost the same electronics as a Les Paul, but it is thinner, lighter, and has cutaways. For me it's a much more playable instrument. If i were going to buy another Gibson style instrument again it would be an SG. I do however think this is kinda an ugly instrument. But, it is one of the only ones in the Gibson line I would own.

The Fender Telecaster


"The Fender Telecaster, also known as a Tele, is a typically dual-pickup, solid-body electric guitar made by Fender. Its simple yet effective design and revolutionary sound broke ground and set trends in electric guitar manufacture and popular music. Introduced for national distribution as the Broadcaster in the fall of 1950, it was the first guitar of its kind to be produced on a substantial scale. Its commercial production can be traced as far back as the spring of 1950, when the single- and dual-pickup Esquire models were first sold. From that time to the present, the Telecaster has been in continuous production in one form or another, making it the world's senior solid-body electric guitar (Duchossoir, 1991, 11-15). The Fender Telecaster was developed by Leo Fender in Fullerton, California in the 1940s. Prior to its creation, the solid-body electric guitar had been created independently by several craftsman and companies, in the period roughly between 1932-1949, but none of these guitars had made a significant impact on the market. Leo Fender's Telecaster was the design that finally put the solid-body guitar on the map. The initial production model appeared in 1950, and was called the Esquire. Fewer than fifty guitars were originally produced under that name, and most were replaced under warranty because of early manufacturing problems. In particular, the Esquire necks had no truss rod and many were replaced due to bent necks. Later in 1950, this single-pickup model was discontinued, and a two-pickup model was renamed the Broadcaster. From this point onwards all Fender necks incorporated truss rods. The Gretsch company, itself a manufacturer of hollowbody electric guitars, claimed that "Broadcaster" violated the trademark for its Broadkaster line of drums, and as a newcomer to the industry, Fender decided to bend and changed the name to Telecaster, after the newly popular medium of television. (The guitars manufactured in the interim bore no name, and are now popularly called 'Nocasters.') The Esquire was reintroduced as a one-pickup Telecaster, at a lower price. Leo Fender's simple and modular design was geared to mass production, and made servicing broken guitars easier. Guitars were not constructed individually, as in traditional luthiery. Rather, components were produced quickly and inexpensively in quantity and assembled into a guitar on an assembly line. The bodies were band-sawed and routed from slabs, rather than hand-carved individually, as with other guitars made at the time, such as Gibsons. Fender did not use the traditional glued-in neck, but rather a bolt-on. This not only made production easier, but allowed the neck to be quickly removed and serviced, or replaced entirely. In its classic form, the guitar is extremely simply constructed, with the neck and fingerboard comprising a single piece of maple, bolted to an ash or alder body inexpensively jigged with flat surfaces on the front and back. The hardware includes two single coil pickups controlled by a three-way selector switch, and one each of volume and tone controls. The pickguard is Bakelite (later plastic), screwed directly onto the body with five (later eight) screws. The bridge has three adjustable saddles, with strings doubled up on each. The guitar quickly gained a following, and soon other, more established guitar companies (such as Gibson, whose Les Paul model was introduced in 1952; and later Gretsch, Rickenbacker, and others) began working on wooden solid-body production models of their own. The Telecaster was important in the evolution of country, electric blues, rock and roll and other forms of popular music, because its solid construction allowed the guitar to be played loudly as a lead instrument, with long sustain if desired, and with less of the whistling 'hard' feedback (known in sound reinforcement circles as 'microphonic feedback') that hollowbodied instruments tend to produce at volume (a different kind to the controllable feedback later exploited by Jimi Hendrix and countless other players). Even though the Telecaster is more than half a century old, and more sophisticated designs have been coming out since the early 1950s (including Fender's own Stratocaster), the Telecaster has remained in constant production. There have been numerous variations and modifications, but a model with something close to the original features has always been available." (Information Courtesy Wikipedia)
I Have never had the priviledge of owning a full fledged Tele, but I did own a copy called a lindel with one pickup. The tele is still a great guitar, very simple, very easy to play, work on, and there are tons of pickup options for them now. Notice also it is very similar in shape in some ways to the Les Paul. This would be a great first guitar for anyone and the "Squier" versiosn can be had for under 150 bucks. This really was the first solid body electric to be available to the masses. Leo Fender was a smart guy.
Well I hoep you found the info helpful, will post again soon.