Bo was playing this weird looking guitar and
singing his trademark song, “Hey Bo Diddley.”
He had a very attractive woman who was also playing a similar guitar.
In an interview done before his death, he
confessed that despite his admirers and historians attributing the rhythm to
old African-American Hambone jive, he actually copped it from a Gene Autry song
called, “I’ve Got Spurs That Jingle,Jangle, Jingle.”
Much of Bo’s rhythm could be due to his use of a
loud Fender Dual Showman amplifier with the tremolo cranked up. His guitar was often tuned to open E (E, B, E, G#, B,
E, low to high), and capoed to change key. In the early years these guitars were run through one of the
first effects boxes – the DeArmond Model 60 Tremolo Control.
It is rumored that Diddley rebuilt guitar amplifiers,
constructed a tremolo unit out of a clock spring and automobile parts to
achieve his guitar sound. He also enhanced the rhythm by adding maracas and additional
drums.
As a boy a young Elias Bates fashioned a crude instrument called a diddley bow out of an old cigar box.
Not only did Elias Bates take his musical name from the diddley bow, he also used his cigar box instrument as inspiration for his personal guitar.
As his fame as a musician grew, Gretsch guitars was all too happy to oblige him with a custom instrument that he dubbed The Twang Machine. It was made in 1958.
Gretsch made him at least two more guitars which
were based on the Cadillac fins. For
all you young’uns out there, there was a time, back when most all cars were
made in America .
In the late 1950's America
was entering the race to space and to help it along cars had to have
fins.
Gretsch now produces a reproduction of Bo’s famous instrument square guitar.
They also produce a Bo Diddley Guitar under their Electromatic Brand. This one is not quite as fancy. It has a stop tail piece, a bolt on neck and chome hardware.
Bo rules! So do his guitars. Got a rectangular one and one of the more recent Billy-Bo's.
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