Electric mandolin
The electric mandolin is an instrument tuned and played as the mandolin and amplified in similar fashion to an electric guitar. As with electric guitars, electric mandolins take many forms:
- Most common is a carved-top eight-string instrument fitted with an electric pickup in similar fashion to many arch top guitars.
- Solid body mandolins are common in 4-, 5-, and 8-string forms.
- Acoustic electric and semi-acoustic mandolins also exist in many forms.
History
Electric mandolins were built in the United States as early as the late 1920s. Among the first companies to produce them were Stromberg-Voisinet, Electro (which later became Rickenbacker), Vivi-Tone, and National. Gibson and Vega introduced their electric mandolins in 1936.
In the United States, luthier/inventor Paul Bigsby began building solid-body electric mandolins (technically, they consisted of a solid wood core housing the electronics, with hollow wings forming the body) in 1949. His first one had ten strings and was built for Al Giddings. Bigsby's most famous mandolin, built in 1952, was owned and played by Western swing musician Tiny Moore. This instrument had five single courses rather than the more common four double courses, and was patterned after a similar instrument built by Jim Harvey of La Jolla, California, for a player named Scotty Broyles. Gibson and Rickenbacker introduced solid-body eight-string mandolins in the 1950s,[1] while Fender followed the single-course idea with its four-string version.
A related instrument, the Bahian guitar, was developed in Brazil beginning in the 1940s. Bahian guitars typically have a solid body and four or five strings tuned in fifths, but are considered to be electric versions of the cavaquinho rather than the mandolin which is why it's sometimes called electric cavaquinho(or Cavaquinho elétrico) but because it's tuned in fifths it is called Bandolim elétrico.
Solid-body electric mandolins
Both four-string single-course and eight-string double-course solid body mandolins have been produced by several makers, as well as five-string models combining the tonal ranges of the mandola and mandolin.
From 1956 to 1976, Fender produced a four-string version, the Fender Electric Mandolin, with a body shape was based loosely on the Stratocaster, and popularly nicknamed the "Mandocaster." More recently, Fender produced an eight-string semi-acoustic electric mandolin with a very similar body shape, and reissued as the Mando-Strat in both four- and eight-string models.
Gibson manufactured the EM-200 solid-body electric mandolin from 1954 to 1971. They recently produced a solid-body mandolin known as the Mandobird, based on the Gibson Firebird body and sold under the Epiphone label, in both four- and eight-string versions.
Eastwood Guitars manufactured a solid-body eight-string electric mandolin as the "Mandocaster" with a Telecaster-style body and two single-coil pickups. (Eastwood also offered the "Mandocaster 12," actually a short-scale six-course twelve-string electric guitar, tuned an octave higher than a standard guitar making it a so called 12 String Electric Soprano Guitar.).
Players
While the electric mandolin has increased in popularity along with its acoustic cousin, there are still relatively few recordings featuring it as a lead instrument on more than a song or two. The following artists have issued full-length recordings prominently featuring an electric mandolin throughout:
- Tiny Moore (Western swing)
- Yank Rachell (blues)[2]
- John Kruth (eclectic instrumental folk/rock/jazz)
- Mark Heard (singer-songwriter/Americana)
- Michael Kang/String Cheese Incident (jam band)
- Uppalapu Srinivas (South Indian Classical)
- Warren Ellis (alternative rock/folk)
- Nash the Slash (rock/electronica)
- Kevin Jonas (rock/pop)
- Ben Mink (rock/pop)
- Charles O'Connor of Horslips (celtic rock)
- Sierra Hull (Americana/Bluegrass)
References
- Rickenbacker 5002V58
- "Blues mandolin man: the life and music of Yank Rachell" by Richard Congress year=2001 |publisher=University Press Mississippi |language=English |isbn= ISBN 1578063345 | ISBN 978-1578063345 |pages=80-81 |chapter=21 |quote="When electric come in, that was something new to me, so I played that. I plugged my mandolin up into it. It sound good, so I went to playing electric all the time, you know"
External links
- Emando.com
- Mandobird 4 at the Epiphone website.
- Fender Electric Mandolin collector's site.
- Mando-Strat at the Fender website.
- Mandocaster at the Eastwood Guitars website