Nathan Daniel |
Daniels was gifted with a real desire to learn, so it was during his high school years that he experimented with electricity by building crystal radio sets. He became fascinated by radio and its inner workings.
Nathan (Nat) Daniel |
In the 1930,’s he dropped out of college and made a living building amplifier of his own design. At first, he built these, in the bedroom of his parents’ apartment.
1940's Epiphone Amp |
His first customer was the Epiphone Musical Instrument Company.
During WWII, Daniels worked as a civilian designer for the US Army and devised a way to equip the radio receiver/transmitter in military vehicles with a system that made them unaffected by engine noise.
Danelectro's First Factory |
After the war, he set up shop in Redbank, New Jersey using the name Danelectro. He went back to work building amplifiers for the Epiphone Guitar Company.
1954 Silvertone 1375 |
His big break was when he became associated with Sears and Roebuck, and Montgomery Wards when he was contracted to build amplifiers to be sold under each stores brand names. Respectively the brand names used were Silvertone and Airline.
Danelectro Silvertone 1954 |
It was in 1954, the Sears Company asked if he could build an affordable guitar. Although he was not a luthier, he said yes he could build it What he came up with is the Danelectro/Silvertone instrument that for some of us, may be the first guitar we owned.
The guitar sold for $38.95 and the amplifier was offered at $39.
Danelectro Build |
Though it appeared to be a solid body instrument, the Danelectro guitar was ingeniously designed. It was built on a poplar wood frame. A neck block ran through much of the body, which allowed the bridge to be attached, be it fixed or vibrato. The body struts and the block were stapled together. In later years, the neck block was shortened, and a wood block was glued to the inner side of the guitars back. This anchored the bridge.
What made Danelectro guitars unique was the material used for the body. Both the top and bottom of the guitar was made of Masonite, with a Formica covering. The neck, which was made of aged poplar, was topped with a rosewood fretboard and a metal nut.
Danelectro Neck |
The tuners he used were inexpensive, but sturdy. Employing rods in the neck, allowed the neck more slender than other guitars of the day, providing ease of playing, which was especially good for younger players.
Tolex tape On Danelectro sides |
Lipstick Tube Pickups |
His pickups were unique and housed in lipstick tubes provided great shielding. The slight gap between the two ends prevented loss of high frequency response. The housing for the pickups were originally built with surplus lipstick tubes, that probably came from the Max Factor Cosmetics Company. The pickup’s coil wraps around an Alnico 6 bar magnet, which in turn is wrapped in tape—usually cellophane tape on vintage units—and inserted into the metal tube casing.
Photo by Doug TurrelPhoto by Doug Turrel |
Silvertone '57 1323 - 1321 |
First Silvertone |
The very first Daniel Silvertone electric guitar, model 1375. was offered in 1954. It did not have the lipstick tube pickups, although the inner workings were similar. The pickups on these first models were routed into the wood.
Silvertone Model 1357 |
This was followed in 1955 with the model 1357, which had one lipstick pickup, and model 1359, which had two pickups.
In subsequent years, Danelectro purchased lipstick casings from a cosmetics manufacturer, then sent to another business for chrome plating. The knobs and switches were outsourced from another manufacturer.
Danelectro Vibrato Bridge |
Most Danelectro guitars utilized an interesting, fixed tailpiece. This was a trapezoidal metal unit attached to the wood block in the body by three screws. The saddle was just a thin strip of rosewood.
The vibrato unit on a few Danelectro/Silvertone guitars was similar, except the metal plate moved on it self, in the same manner as Gibson’s vibrola unit.
$229.50 vs $38.95 |
The biggest reason Sears and Wards preferred Daniel’s product was its low cost and high quality. For most working families it made sense to buy junior a $40 Silvertone guitar, instead of a new Fender Stratocaster, which cost $229.50 in 1954.
The shapes of the guitars and basses were well thought out and somewhat mimicked the Gibson styles with one or two cutaways.
60's Longhorn |
The exception was the Longhorn guitar and bass. I always thought the body looked like a lyre-harp, with its twin horns and large soundboard. Around 1966 or 1967, there was an American TV show called Shindig.
Shindig! Getty images Larry Knectel on bass |
I was fascinated by the bass player’s instrument. It was a Danelectro longhorn bass. It had a short scale and an antiqued finish. The body was an off-white colour with a gilded perimeter.
Danelectro Guitarlin |
Daniel also came up with a unique 31-fret mando-guitar in the Longhorn style, which could be capoed to achieve mandolin sounds.
Various Danelectro Headstocks |
Danelectro guitars and basses had several headstock styles. Many Sears/Silvertones' came with the “dolphin” style six-on-a-side (or four-on-a-side for bass) headstock.
The other style came to be known as “the Coke bottle” headstock, due to the appearance being similar to the shape of a 6 ½-ounce Coca-Cola bottle.
Danelectro/Silvertone |
Danelectro labeled guitars had DANELECTRO written in white lettering on the headstock, while the Silvertone guitars came with a silvered plastic emblem that spelled SILVERTONE, which was glued to the headstock.
During the 1950's through the mid 1960's, 90% of Daniel’s guitars and amplifiers sold through Sears or Montgomery Wards. Though most guitarists knew who Leo Fender was, but few were aware of Nathan Daniel, because his name was not on the products.
I am not sure if Nathan Daniel was tired of the business or saw the end of the 1960’s guitar craze, but in 1966 he sold to MCA, which was a talent agency and record conglomerate, that thought they could make a go in the guitar business.
This company's business strategy was to forgo the successful business as jobbers and deal directly with music stores. As part of the sale, Nathan Daniel retained the rights to the guitar designs, however MCA acquired the Danelectro name, logo and patents for the stacked potentiometers. Because of this MCA needed a new product line.
Vinnie Bell with Coral Sitar |
1964 Coral Hornet |
Bell also designed The Coral Hornet, which had a body shape similar to a Fender Jaguar or Jazzmaster. The bodies of Coral guitars were made in Japan then imported to the United States to be fitted with necks and electronics.
Danelectro Factory Neptune NJ |
From the companies start, Mr. Daniel had recognized his product was not the same as Fender or Gibson and avoided dealing directly with retailers. So MCA’s plan to eliminate the jobbing business was a failure. By 1969, they shut the door on Danelectro.
A fellow named William Herring purchased the assets of Danelectro for $20,000. He turned to Ampeg as a way to unload some of his existing stock. Ironically, another Daniel, Dan Armstrong, was involved with Ampeg at the time, marketing his Lucite clear guitar, or at least making an attempt. Ampeg was having some production problems with the instrument. Armstrong states Ampeg purchased 650 to 700 single cutaway Danelectro Masonite guitars.
Dan Armstrong Danelectro |
Unimusic, the company that now owned Ampeg, was in financial trouble and was unable to pay William Herring for the inventory he sold to them. Herring filed a lawsuit. It was later determined much of the existing MCA surplus was stored away in chicken coups and destroyed by the elements.
Jerry Jones 12 string |
Jerry Jones Dano-style guitars became extremely popular, especially with local studio players, that added them to their collection.
Ad from Anthony Marc |
Subway Guitars |
Subway Guitars of Berkley California purchased much a Mark’s stock and assembled guitars for sale at their music store. Many of these creations were modified.
Steve Ridinger - Danelectro |
These newer versions of old designs updated the bridge and saddle to a modern style adjustable unit..
Jerry Jones was still building Danelectro style guitars, with his name on the headstock. Evets filed a lawsuit against Jones. The suit was dismissed, since Evets did not have any rights from the Daniels Estate, this allowed Jones continued to build Danelectro style guitars up until his recent retirement, although they were slightly modified from his original design.
Danelectro Hodad |
The Evets Corporation began by offering quite a line-up, including some models, such as the Ho-Dad, that was in no way similar to a Danelectro, except for the lipstick tube pickups. This came with two double pickups, in humbucker fashion, three pickups, or as a bass or baritone guitar.
New Danelectro Ad |
For a long time the company’s present strategy was to build only one style of guitar and bass per year and offer it for sale, although lately it appears they are offering all of their products.
The Evets Corporation has adhered to Mr. Daniels philosophy, that they are not Fender or Gibson, but filling a niche market for inexpensive, but quality guitars.
Current Danelectro Instruments |
Evets offers a variety of guitar related products, including practice amplifiers, their unique brand of tone-shaping pedals and an inexpensive, adjustable-voltage power transformer.
The original Silvertone and Danelectro guitars and basses remain available .Like vintage cars, they are available, but sometimes need attention. And they are expensive.
The Everts corporation acquired the brand name and was building guitars, effects, and amps in China, but the quality wasn't there. They are presently manufactured in Korea..
Nathan (Nat) Daniel |
• the first six-string electric bass (1956)
• the first 12-string electric guitar (1961 – the “Bellzouki,” developed in collaboration with Vinnie Bell and inspired by Greek bouzouki music from the film classic “Never on Sunday”)
• a 31-fret “Guitarlin” (1958) with a deeply cut-away “longhorn” body that enabled a guitarist to play an extra 10 frets into the mandolin range
• an amplifier and speaker built into a guitar carrying case (this was done for Sears, which sold the Silvertone “amp-in-case” and guitar for under $50 as a set for novice players)
• a “convertible” guitar that could be bought, inexpensively, for beginning students, as an acoustic, and later, with the purchase of a pickup kit, turned into a semi-hollow-body electric
• total shielding of guitar and amplifier circuits to protect against hum from neon signs, motors or other sources of electrical interference (he introduced this at a National Association of Music Merchants – NAMM – show, with Vinnie Bell demonstrating Danelectro guitars and amps while sitting right next to a glowing neon sign; the Danelectro products sounded crystal clear, while a specially assembled “Brand X” guitar, lacking the shielding, hummed noisily every time Vinnie plugged it in)
• guitar necks that never warped because they were reinforced with twin steel I-beams • the use of inexpensive, yet strong and stable composite materials in both amplifier cabinets (Homasote, particle board) and guitar bodies (Masonite, Formica)
• a guitar neck-tilt adjustment system “nearly identical [as Washburn and Soest wrote in Guitar World] to the one Fender used – except that Danelectro did it a decade earlier and didn’t bother to patent it.
• a “master-slave” amp system with 300-plus watts of distortion-free power (back in 1956)
• a "hexaphonic" guitar, with each string having its own separate pickup, amplifier and speaker (1958 - but never manufactured)
• a capacitance pickup for classical guitar with a tube pre-amplifier built into the body; etching the nylon strings and coating them with graphite made it possible to pick up the signal (1959 - but never manufactured )
• a hybrid vacuum tube/solid-state amplifier (1968)
• A vibrato/tremolo system that he dubbed the Vibravox and a reverb system.
• A loudspeaker cabinet with inclined baffles that were designed to boost bass response by lengthening the sound wave path from the back to the front of the speaker. He called this the Acoustic Case.
When you look at this list it is amazing how many of these inventions were far ahead of their time and picked up by other guitar and amplifier manufacturers through the years.
Vintage Danelectro Convertible |
Although I've heard people refer to all-poplar builds)with Masonite top and back.
Interior of modern Danelectro |
The modern ones have a routed out plywood frame and the top and back material looks more like medium density fiberboard (MDF).
The manufacturer's specs state they are made of spruce hardboard.
The original guitars/basses look really rough on the inside but they've held up remarkably well: the fact a 50-60 year old Dano is still a very playable, roadworthy instrument says a lot about how well they were designed.
1959 Danelectro Neck |
'59 current model |
The modern Danelectro line up necks have an adjustable truss rod and a pao ferro fretboard.
Like vintage models, the current Danelectro instrument sport aluminum nuts.
The Evets company only offers one model with the vintage style bridge. It features a pao ferro saddle.
Current Bridges |
Due to the higher output of current Danelectro pickups, the modern ones seem a bit chunkier with a Tele-like snap to the bridge pickup and have a higher output. The original pickups are lower output and generally sound very full and sweet in the neck position compared to a reissue.
Manufactured Lipstick Tubes |
These custom-made covers allow them to be manufactured in many different sizes and fit the most popular pickup routes like Strat pickups.
Inside the pickup, the improvements continue. The copper wire coil is now wound around a custom-sized plastic bobbin that features an Alnico bar magnet right down the center while the vintage ones were wound around just a bar magnet.
Vintage on top Modern on bottom |
My friend Doug with Sears bass |
All of these modern updates have done nothing to quell demand for lipstick pickups, new and old. In fact, modern guitarists still use Danelectros quite often. However the 1964 Danelectro bass, model 1444, my best friend bought through the Sears catalog for $99 with the case.
Silvertone Bass 1444 |
This instrument has a current price of $1100 USD.
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5 comments:
I like that little tweed Silvertone 1357 amp. Never saw one before.
I recently took a deep dive into the history of Danelectro guitars and was absolutely fascinated by Nathan Daniel's story and innovations! From his humble beginnings building amplifiers in his parents' apartment to creating affordable guitars for Sears and Montgomery Wards, his journey is truly inspiring. The ingenious design of Danelectro guitars, with their unique use of materials like Masonite and aluminum rods for neck reinforcement, showcases Daniel’s brilliance and creativity. It's amazing how his affordable instruments made music accessible to so many, especially young players. Learning about the legacy of Danelectro has given me a newfound appreciation for these iconic guitars!
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