1930s , inventor of the modern bass guitar, outside his music store in Seattle, Washington In the 1930s, musician and inventor
Paul Tutmarc of
Seattle, Washington, developed the first electric bass guitar in its modern form, a
fretted four-string instrument designed to be played horizontally in a position similar to a standard guitar. The 1935 sales catalog for Tutmarc's company Audiovox featured the "Model 736 Bass Fiddle", a solid body electric bass guitar with four strings, a scale length, and a single
pickup. Around 100 were made during this period. Audiovox also sold their "Model 236" bass amplifier.
1950s In the 1950s,
Leo Fender and
George Fullerton developed the first mass-produced electric bass guitar. The
Fender Electric Instrument Manufacturing Company began producing the
Precision Bass, or P-Bass, in October 1951. The design featured a simple uncontoured "slab" body design (with no edge contours) and a
single coil pickup, both features similar to a
Telecaster. By 1957, the Precision Bass began to resemble the
Fender Stratocaster with the body edges beveled for comfort and the pickup changed to a separate halves
split coil design. The Fender Bass was a revolutionary instrument for working musicians. In comparison to the
upright bass, the bass guitar could be easily transported. When amplified, the bass guitar was also much less prone than acoustic basses to
audio feedback. The addition of
frets enabled bassists to play in tune more easily than on
upright basses (the "precision" of the Fender model) and allowed guitarists to more easily adapt to the new instrument. In 1953,
Monk Montgomery became the first bassist to tour with the Fender bass, in
Lionel Hampton's postwar
big band. Montgomery was also possibly the first to record with the electric bass, in a session on July 2, 1953, with
the Art Farmer Septet. Roy Johnson (with Lionel Hampton), and
Shifty Henry (with
Louis Jordan and His
Tympany Five), were other early Fender bass pioneers.
Bill Black, who played with
Elvis Presley and
James Jamerson switched from upright bass to the Fender Precision Bass around 1957. The bass guitar was intended to appeal to guitarists as well as upright bass players, and many early pioneers of the instrument, such as
Joe Osborn, and
Paul McCartney were originally guitarists. Also in 1953,
Gibson released the first short-scale
violin-shaped electric bass, the EB-1, with an extendable end pin so a bassist could play it upright or horizontally. In 1958, Gibson released the maple arched-top
EB-2 described in the Gibson catalog as a "hollow-body electric bass that features a Bass/Baritone pushbutton for two different tonal characteristics". In 1959, these were followed by the more conventional-looking
EB-0 Bass. The EB-0 was very similar to a
Gibson SG in appearance (although the earliest examples have a slab-sided body shape closer to that of the double-cutaway
Les Paul Special). The Fender and Gibson versions used
bolt-on and
set necks. Several other companies also began manufacturing bass guitars during the 1950s.
Kay Musical Instrument Company began production of the K162 in 1952. Also in 1956, at the German trade fair "Musikmesse Frankfurt", the distinctive
Höfner 500/1 viola-shaped bass first appeared, constructed using violin techniques by Walter
Höfner, a second-generation violin luthier. Due to its use by
Paul McCartney, it became known as the "Beatle bass". In 1957,
Rickenbacker introduced the model 4000, the first bass to feature a
neck-through-body design in which the neck is part of the body wood. The
Burns London Supersound was introduced in 1958.
1960s With the explosion in popularity of
rock music in the 1960s, many more manufacturers began making electric basses, including
Yamaha,
Teisco and
Guyatone. Introduced in 1960, the
Fender Jazz Bass, initially known as the "Deluxe Bass", used a body design known as an offset waist which was first seen on the
Jazzmaster guitar in an effort to improve comfort while playing seated. The Jazz bass, or J-Bass, features two single-coil pickups. Providing a more "Gibson-scale" instrument, rather than the Jazz and Precision, Fender produced the
Mustang Bass, a scale-length instrument. The
Fender VI, a 6-string bass, was tuned one octave lower than standard guitar tuning. It was released in 1961, and was briefly favored by
Jack Bruce of
Cream. Gibson introduced its short-scale
EB-3 in 1961, also used by Bruce. The EB-3 had a "mini-humbucker" at the bridge position. Gibson basses tended to be instruments with a shorter 30.5"
scale length than the Precision. Gibson did not produce a -scale bass until 1963 with the release of the
Thunderbird. The first commercial fretless bass guitar was the Ampeg AUB-1, introduced in 1966. In the late 1960s, eight-string basses, with four octave paired
courses (similar to a 12 string guitar), were introduced, such as the
Hagström H8.
1970s In 1972,
Alembic established what became known as "boutique" or "high-end" electric bass guitars. These expensive, custom-tailored instruments, as used by
Phil Lesh,
Jack Casady, and
Stanley Clarke, featured unique designs, premium hand-finished wood bodies, and innovative construction techniques such as multi-laminate
neck-through-body construction and
graphite necks. Alembic also pioneered the use of onboard electronics for pre-amplification and equalization. Active electronics increase the output of the instrument, and allow more options for controlling tonal flexibility, giving the player the ability to amplify as well as to attenuate certain frequency ranges while improving the overall frequency response (including more low-register and high-register sounds). 1976 saw the UK company
Wal begin production of their own range of active basses. In 1974
Music Man Instruments, founded by Tom Walker,
Forrest White and
Leo Fender, introduced the
StingRay, the first widely produced bass with active (powered) electronics built into the instrument. Basses with active electronics can include a
preamplifier and
knobs for boosting and cutting the low and high frequencies. In the mid-1970s, five-string basses, with a very low "B" string, were introduced. In 1975, bassist
Anthony Jackson commissioned luthier
Carl Thompson to build a six-string bass tuned (low to high) B0, E1, A1, D2, G2, C3, adding a low B string and a high C string. == See also ==