"The [Fender] Stratocaster was the 'lone hot rod' - a pinup model among musical instruments. For the teenagers watching Buddy Holly [on the Ed Sullivan Show] at home, its lascivious shape was a tell that this singer - for all his nice neckties, for all the adult tolerance he might receive next to the likes of Elvis Presley - wanted to get it on just as much as they did." -- the author, on page 150
Author / music critic Ian Port's The Birth of Loud is a happy marriage of some of my favorite topics - American history, pop culture, and rock 'n roll music. It traces the birth of some of the early electric guitar models, the people behind the production and/or developments, and ultimately the lasting impact on popular music in the days after WWII up to the legendary Woodstock concert in 1969. (Or, to put it succinctly, if you're listening to a well-known rock or R&B song from the 50's, 60's or 70's, it is very likely the 'axe' being plucked bears the imprint of either 'Fender' or 'Paul' on its body.)
As noted in the subtitle, two men receive much of the focus. Les Paul was a successful / respected jazz and pop music guitarist in the late 40's / early 50's who, although not a technician, lent his name to be used on a line of Gibson guitars. Paul's career took a severe hit with the arrival of rock, but his namesake instruments would live on in the hands of the Beatles, Led Zeppelin, and Eric Clapton.
The other man is Leo Fender. Fender was not a musician (and, like Les Paul, not really a fan of rock music) but was an unassuming, self-taught electrician. First working as a sound tech guy for county & western swing bands in the 30's, his interest and self-tinkering for developing better and louder-sounding instrumentation resulted in a line of guitars, basses, and amplifiers that are still used today. Among the artists known for using Fenders are Jimi Hendrix, the Rolling Stones, and Dick Dale.
What was especially enjoyable about this book was the many cameo-type appearances by the above-named rock stars in the narrative. Besides centering on how guitars would forever after be linked to the names Paul or Fender, it is also sort of a story of how rock music exploded in America circa 1955, fell by the wayside (courtesy of Elvis' military service and scandals involving Chuck Berry, Jerry Lee Lewis, etc.) for a few years, but then had a monster rebirth courtesy of the British Invasion in 1964. I'm a fan of books 'making history come alive,' and The Birth of Loud hit all of the right notes.