Univox

Univox was a musical instrument brand of Unicord Corporation from the early 1960s, when they purchased the Amplifier Corporation of America of Westbury, New York and began to market a line of guitar amplifiers. Univox also distributed guitars by Matsumoku, effects units by Shin-Ei Companion, and synthesizers by Crumar and Korg.

Univox
Private
IndustryMusical instruments
Founded1960 (1960)
FounderThomas Walter Jennings
Defunct1987 (1987)
Headquarters,
Area served
Global
ProductsElectric & acoustic guitars
Bass guitars
Amplifiers
Electronic Keyboards
Effects units
ParentKorg
WebsiteVintageUnivox.com (archive site)

In 1985, Unicord Corporation was purchased by Korg, and the Univox brand was phased out.

History

In the early 1960s the Unicord Corporation, a manufacturer of electric transformers, purchased the Amplifier Corporation of America and began marketing a line of amplifiers under the name of "Univox". The company was purchased by Gulf+Western in 1967.

Univox-branded fretted instruments (electric and acoustic guitars and electric basses) began being imported from Japanese contract manufacturer Matsumoku in 1975, where they continued until 1982, after which instruments were made in Korea under the "Westbury" brand. The Unicord Corporation was purchased by Korg in 1985, effectively ending the line.

Univox was best known for its copies of instruments from better-known companies such as Fender, Gibson, Rickenbacker, Ampeg/Dan Armstrong, Epiphone and others. The Univox Hi-Flier was based loosely on the distinctive Mosrite "reverse swept" shape; it was popularized in the early 1990s by Kurt Cobain, almost two decades after original production had ceased.

Change to "Stage" amplifiers

The Univox name developed a market reputation as "cheap", because Unicord had copied amplifier designs from companies such as Shure and Electro-Voice instead of doing major original research and development. Univox used time-proven electronic circuits and quality components, but to avoid the negative market perception Unicord introduced the Stage brand; the only difference between the Univox and Stage equipment was the nameplate, attached prior to shipping.

Relationship to Korg and Marshall

Unicord was also the U.S. distributor for both Marshall amplifiers and Korg synthesizers.

The Marshalls used EL34 output tubes, but as they could barely reach the rated output wattage Unicord replaced them with KT88 tubes before shipping to U.S. vendors.

Unicord had begun as a manufacturer of electrical transformers. When the original Marshalls came to the U.S., Unicord's engineers were concerned that the output transformers could not reliably handle the full output. Unicord redesigned the output transformers and told Marshall to use the Unicord design in all units shipped to the U.S., and Marshall could use the design outside the U.S. if they wanted to. Marshall did adopt the Unicord design for all their tube amps.

Tony Frank, the design engineer at Unicord, created the dual-volume-control two-stage pre-amp that Marshall introduced with their 4140 and 2150 amplifiers, which allowed a "super-dirty" fuzz even at extremely low volumes.

Products

Univox amplifiers

A Univox U45-B tube combo amplifier from the mid-1960s.
A Univox "B-Group" amp head from the early 1970s. Model: U-1011

A number of tube and solid-state amplifiers were produced by Univox over the years. These ranged from small practice combo amps to powerful heads with separate cabinets. Some models had built-in spring reverb and tremolo effects. In 1971 Univox introduced the "B Group" amplifiers, covered in two-toned blue or gray Tolex with distinctive ovalesque cosmetics.[1] The C-Group (UX) line of amps were used by The Jeff Beck Group and Led Zeppelin.[2]

Univox guitars

In about 1967 Unicord merged with Merson, an importer of various headstock-brand guitars such as Tempo, Giannini and Hagström. This new company was called "Merson Musical Products, A Division of Unicord Incorporated, A Gulf + Western Systems Company." Around 1968 they started producing Univox-brand guitars. Unicord and Merson split in 1975, but Unicord continued to make Univox guitars until about 1978, even adding some newer models.[3]

Electric guitars

Univox Hi Flier Phase 3 guitar
Univox Gimme guitar, natural finish
  • Badazz
  • Coily
  • Custom
  • Custom 335 (6 and 12 string versions)[4]
  • Deluxe
  • eEagle
  • Effie (6 and 12-string versions)[4]
  • Gimmie
  • HR-2
  • Hi-Flier
  • Limited Edition Series (Double cur Les Paul Junior copy)
  • Lucy
  • Mother/Rhythm and Blues
  • Pro (Jazzbix)
  • Ripper
  • UC-2
  • UC-3
  • Westbury Performer

Bass guitars

  • Badazz
  • Coily
  • Hi-Flier
  • Naked
  • Precisely
  • Professional
  • Stereo
  • UB-1
  • 'Lectra

Acoustic guitars

  • Auditorium
  • Artist Series
  • Dove
  • 'Grass

Univox keyboards

Univox K4 (1976, Korg PE-1000)
  • Univox K4
  • Univox MaxiKorg K3
  • Univox MiniKorg K1/K2
  • Univox Stringman (see "link". Archived from the original on 2010-12-19.)

Univox effects

Uni-Vibe (ca.1968) formerly owned by Jimi Hendrix

Univox had many effects units, generally made by Shin-Ei, but perhaps their most well known was the Super-Fuzz Pedal, used by Pete Townshend.[3] Univox also produced the Uni-Vibe, a chorus/vibrato that attempted to emulate a Leslie speaker effect popularized by Jimi Hendrix.

gollark: Seems impractical.
gollark: But then you can't monitor *everything*.
gollark: I mean, you can do that with fewer by just running triangulation with 4 modems on the 128 most recent channels.
gollark: Actually, if you have 2048 modems, you can monitor and accurately triangulate all signals.
gollark: It's *also* for division!

References

  1. "Univox Amplifiers". VintageUnivox.com.
  2. "Whole Lotta Led".
  3. "The Univox Page". VintageUnivox.com.
  4. Wright, Michael. "Univox Guitars – Merson/Unicord Part 1". Vintage Guitar magazine (February 1998).
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