Semi-hollow and hollow body electric guitars In the
United States, the jazz guitarist
George Van Eps had a seven-string guitar built for him by
Epiphone Guitars in the late 1930s and a signature
Gretsch seven-string in the late 60s and early 70s. The Van Eps signature guitar may be the first regular-production seven-string electric guitar. Van Eps tuned his 7th string to A. Several others began using seven-string guitars after Van Eps, including
Bucky Pizzarelli,
Howard Alden,
Ron Escheté, Chance Russell, and
John Pizzarelli, son of Bucky Pizzarelli.
Lenny Breau also used seven string instruments, but whereas the other players all used instruments with an added bass string, Breau had at least one instrument in which the seventh string was an added
treble string, tuned to the 'A' above the high 'E' string (A4). At the time he began using the high A string, no commercially manufactured string could withstand being tuned that high, so Breau substituted a piece of
monofilament fishing line of appropriate gauge. A year later, advances in materials science allowed the La Bella company to begin manufacturing a custom string for Breau's high A. Seven-string
semi-acoustic archtop guitars were used by jazz-guitarist
Ralph Patt after he began exploring
major-thirds tuning in 1964. Patt's tuning is a
regular tuning, in the sense that all of the
intervals between its successive
open strings are
major thirds; in contrast, the
standard guitar-tuning has one major-third amid four
fourths. Major-thirds tuning has a smaller scope than standard guitar-tuning, and so Patt started using seven-string guitars, which enabled major-thirds tuning to have the E-e' range of the standard tuning. He first experimented with a wide-neck Mango guitar from the 1920s, which he modified to have seven strings in 1963. In 1967 he purchased a seven-string by José Rubio. In 1987,
Fender signed an agreement with Alex Gregory to produce a
Stratocaster-style guitar that featured a high A-string. A small number of prototypes were made. However the unit was never put into production. He has made numerous false claims in regards to the 7 string guitar and is not considered a reliable source of information, even regarding his own 7 string signature series which was produced in limited numbers by Fender. He frequently embellishes the events that took place in all facets of its production. The first mass-produced seven-string was the
Ibanez UV7, a signature model for
Steve Vai. It was also used by
John Petrucci,
Reb Beach, and
Korn guitarists
Brian Welch and
James Shaffer, amongst others. Vai was drawn to the idea for much of the same reasons seven-string classical and jazz players were—the extended range the additional string offered. After initial experimentation with a high A, a low B was added as the high A proved to be too prone to breaking. (Kirk Sand and Lenny Breau solved the breaking high A string problem by shortening the
scale length to 22.75", Vai's Ibanez is 25.5".) Vai began touring with
Whitesnake with a seven-string prototype, and then used the guitars for his 1990 release
Passion and Warfare. The seven-string guitar became prominent when the band
Korn featured Ibanez Universe guitars on their 1994
debut album. During the 1990s, manufacturers of 7-strings included
Fender's subsidiary
Squier and
Gibson's subsidiary
Epiphone. In this time many guitarists were introduced to the extended range offered by a seven-string guitar. This was somewhat offset by a growing stigma that a seven-string guitar was a "
nu metal" instrument, fit only for heavy riffing. This was ironic as Korn guitarists
Munky and
Head remember being told in their early days that the seven-string guitar could not be used for riffing, as it was a guitar for technical guitar players. In the 1990s, several other heavy metal guitarists began using seven-string instruments (notably
John Petrucci,
Trey Azagthoth, and
Erik Rutan), seeing the possibility for detuned riffing while preserving the full upper range of the guitar for solos. However, the seven-string guitar failed to really catch on at this phase in its development, and the Universe model was discontinued briefly in 1995. Historically,
Matt Bellamy from
Muse had used a custom red Manson seven-string to play just one song, "Citizen Erased", with a AADDGBE tuning (the song was originally recorded on a detuned six-string). However, he later started using new Manson custom seven-strings to play new songs "Supremacy", "Survival" and "Liquid State" on Muse's 2012
The 2nd Law album tour.
Dino Cazares uses custom seven-string Ibanez guitars;
Christian Olde Wolbers has his own signature
Jackson seven-string guitar,
Jeff Loomis has a signature model made by
Schecter and
Stephen Carpenter has several of his own models released by
ESP. == Hybrid designs ==