to
David Gilmour of
Pink Floyd, at which point it already had a
Fender Stratocaster pickup in the neck position. Seen displayed at the
Pink Floyd: Their Mortal Remains exhibition. The use of the Fender Esquire by several country musicians is popularly credited for the creation of one of the most distinctive and recognized sounds in American music history.
Jimmy Wyble with
Spade Cooley was the first Esquire endorser for Don Randall's advertisements. George and Leo took a new Broadcaster out to show
Jimmy Bryant at the Rancho Reveler soon afterward. He first played it on the edge of the stage with an admiring crowd up close. In 1954,
Luther Perkins played a slightly modified Esquire, recording the first
Johnny Cash songs "
Wide Open Road" and "
Hey Porter". This guitar can also be heard on all records before "
I Walk The Line", on which Perkins played an Esquire. Throughout his career Perkins used various Esquires. With this guitar, Perkins created the legendary "Boom Chicka Boom Sound" that identified Johnny Cash's music.
Steve Cropper with
Booker T played his fifties Esquire through a Fender Harvard amplifier for tunes such as
Green Onions and
Dock of the Bay with
Otis Redding.
Bruce Springsteen has used a 1953 Fender Esquire as his main touring and recording guitar throughout his career. He can be seen holding the guitar on the cover of his albums
Born to Run (1975),
Live 1975–85 (1986),
Human Touch (1992),
Greatest Hits (1995), and
Wrecking Ball (2012). Springsteen's guitar is a combination of an Esquire neck and Telecaster body. He bought the guitar in 1971 in
Belmar, New Jersey, for 185 dollars. David Hekhouse of
the Tearaways tours with a 1959 Esquire. In 1966,
Paul McCartney purchased a 1964 Fender Esquire model with a sunburst finish and
rosewood fretboard. Though the guitar was a right-handed model, McCartney restrung it for left-handed playing. McCartney would use it on "
Good Morning, Good Morning" for
the Beatles' album ''
Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band, and on "Helter Skelter" for The Beatles'' double album.
Jeff Beck used a 1954 Esquire with
the Yardbirds to create the famous guitar parts on "
Over Under Sideways Down", "
Shapes of Things", "
I'm a Man," and "
Heart Full of Soul". Beck bought it from
the Walker Brothers guitarist
John Maus while on tour with them. Maus had hand-shaved the body to be contoured like a Stratocaster. This guitar has significant wear and now belongs to pickup designer
Seymour Duncan; Beck gave him the guitar as a return favor after Duncan built his famous Tele-Gib guitar for him.
Syd Barrett, the original leader of
Pink Floyd, was another prominent Esquire player. His successor
David Gilmour used an Esquire with an added pickup on several songs, including "
Dogs," "
Run Like Hell" and his work on
Paul McCartney's album
Run Devil Run. Gilmour also uses an Esquire on his 2015 solo album,
Rattle That Lock, notably on many of the album's guitar solos. On the single "
Born to Be Wild" by
Steppenwolf, guitarist
Michael Monarch played an Esquire.
Roger Taylor, drummer with the rock band
Queen, played a 1967 Esquire on the track "
Sheer Heart Attack".
Brian May played the same guitar on "
Crazy Little Thing Called Love"; having been unable to find a Telecaster sound reminiscent of 1950s era-
James Burton with his primary guitar the
Red Special, producer
Reinhold Mack suggested he "just use a Telecaster". ==See also==