Electric Guitar in 1890!

The Shadows, their music, their members and Shadows-related activity by former members of this community

Re: Electric Guitar in 1890!

Postby Didier » 29 Nov 2013, 09:30

The was no electronic amplifiction yet at this times, so I guess that this system only brought sustain.

Didier
User avatar
Didier
 
Posts: 1934
Joined: 15 Sep 2009, 10:57
Location: West suburb of Paris, France

Re: Electric Guitar in 1890!

Postby ecca » 29 Nov 2013, 09:46

Interesting.
Where did the electrical drive come from ?
ecca
 

Re: Electric Guitar in 1890!

Postby jimuc » 29 Nov 2013, 10:08

ecca wrote:Interesting.
Where did the electrical drive come from ?


An electric eel ?? or for Shads stuff a Stingray :lol: :lol: :lol:
jimuc
 

Re: Electric Guitar in 1890!

Postby JimN » 29 Nov 2013, 11:10

The description is interesting.

Strictly, what we usually call "electric guitar" is misnamed. The correct term would be "electronic guitar".

The Victorian invention really does merit the term "electric", in the same way as "electric motor" or "electric light".
User avatar
JimN
 
Posts: 4559
Joined: 17 Sep 2009, 23:39

Re: Electric Guitar in 1890!

Postby JetBlack » 29 Nov 2013, 18:51

Very interesting concept. A man way ahead of his time.

I couldn't resist looking at the "related topic" of air guitarists and was amazed to read the following:-

Women air guitarists appropriate and disrupt rock culture’s consensus, undermining and subverting its gendered performance. This gender bending emphasizes women’s critique of rock culture’s masculinist attitude while asserting female power through the nonthreatening manipulation of an imaginary phallic symbol.

I shall pretend I understand what all that drivel means, lol
JetBlack
 

Re: Electric Guitar in 1890!

Postby ecca » 29 Nov 2013, 19:10

So... was this an AC electromagnet driving the strings ?
I can't seem to make much sense out of the description.
ecca
 

Re: Electric Guitar in 1890!

Postby RayL » 30 Nov 2013, 09:52

JimN wrote:Strictly, what we usually call "electric guitar" is misnamed. The correct term would be "electronic guitar". The Victorian invention really does merit the term "electric", in the same way as "electric motor" or "electric light".


Hmmm. Discussing definitions is often tricky. An electric motor works by converting electricity into movement. A dynamo works by converting movement into electricity - which is what a standard guitar pickup does. What we call an 'electric guitar' can be as simple as a pickup (a coil around a magnet) under metal strings - no 'electronics' are needed in the guitar itself.

Obviously, electronics are needed to convert the tiny electrical signals from the pickup into electrical signals big enough to drive a loudspeaker, which converts electricity back into movement (to push air around)

So I'm suggesting that an amplifier would certainly be classed as 'electronic', but the guitar would still be 'electric' - it is in the same category as a dynamo.

Ray
User avatar
RayL
 
Posts: 1247
Joined: 16 Sep 2009, 16:25
Location: Carshalton, Surrey

Re: Electric Guitar in 1890!

Postby ecca » 30 Nov 2013, 09:58

Not in 1890 it wasn't.
ecca
 

Re: Electric Guitar in 1890!

Postby ecca » 30 Nov 2013, 10:27

How ingenious !
in looking at the patent the AC drive to the magnets is made by dragging a platinum point along a rough cut file thus making and breaking a crude circuit.
It must have sparked like buggery !
Here's the patent.... http://www.google.com/patents?id=7ZhdAAAAEBAJ&pg=PA1&dq=Breed+guitar&source=gbs_selected_pages&cad=0_1#v=onepage&q=Breed%20guitar&f=false
ecca
 

Next

Return to The Main Board

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 34 guests

Ads by Google
These advertisements are selected and placed by Google to assist with the cost of site maintenance.
ShadowMusic is not responsible for the content of external advertisements.