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Benchtalk #5: The Gibson ES335
Benchtalk #5: The Gibson ES335

Benchtalk #5: The Gibson ES335

July 30, 2024

The 1950’s were a tumultuous period when it comes to electric guitars. The release of the Fender Broadcaster at the beginning of the decade was a bombshell that blew up the market and introduced guitar players to a whole new world of possibilities. Gibson wanted to to get their share as well and released the Les Paul in 1952. While players loved the smaller solid body guitars, there was also a hunkering for the bigger and warmer sounding hollow body guitars that Gibson was known for at the time. The common problem with amplifying hollow body guitars was the feedback they would get on stage. This is were Ted McCarty comes in.

Ted McCarthy's New Design

Ted McCarty was the president of Gibson during the “golden age” of electric guitar manufacturing, from 1950 to 1966. Like Leo Fender, Ted McCarty couldn’t play the guitar but instead he spoke to as many guitarists as he could to find out what guitar players were looking for at the time.

This is how he came up with the design of the semi-hollow body guitar. He combined the bigger, warmer sound of the hollow body guitar with the convenience of the solid body guitar. By having a center block inside the hollow body, there was a big decrease in feedback on stage and it gave the semi-hollow guitar enormous flexibility.

“The idea for the 335 was primarily one I came up with to make a solidbody guitar in sound, but looking like a regular acoustic guitar. And we never patented that. I patented some [Moderne, Flying V, Explorer] because I knew what Leo would do. So if I had a patent, he wouldn’t dare. A lot of the others, I never bothered with patenting. It costs money to patent a guitar shape or whatnot.”

- Ted McCarthy

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