Solution for: The history of the guitar

Answer Table

1. spelling and pronunciation 8. five thousand
2. five hundred years 9. visual depictions
3. exact date 10. the lute
4. shape and dimensions 11. authenticity
5. patent 12. luthiers
6. jazz 13. solid-body
7. fans

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The history of the guitar

The word 'guitar' was brought into English as an adaptation of the Spanish word 'guitarra', which was, in turn, derived from the Greek 'kithara'. Tracing the roots of the word further back into linguistic history, it seems to have been a combination of the Indo-European stem 'guit-', meaning music, and the root ’-tar’, meaning chord or string. The root '-tar' is actually common to a number of languages, and can also be found in the word ’sitar', also a stringed musical instrument. Although the spelling and pronunciation differ between languages, these key elements have been present in most words for 'guitar' throughout history.

While the guitar may have gained most of its popularity as a musical instrument during the modern era, guitar-like instruments have been in existence in numerous cultures throughout the world for more than 5,000 years. The earliest instruments that the modern eye and ear would recognise as a 'normal' acoustic guitar date from about 500 years ago. Prior to this time, stringed instruments were in use throughout the world, but these early instruments are known primarily from visual depictions, not from the continued existence of music written for them. The majority of these depictions show simple stringed instruments, often lacking some of the parts that define a modern guitar. A number of these instruments have more in common with the lute than the guitar.

There is some uncertainty about the exact date of the earliest six-string guitar. The oldest one still in existence, which was made by Gaetano Vinaccia, is dated 1779. However, the authenticity of six-string guitars alleged to have been made prior to 1790 is often suspect, as many fakes have been discovered dating to this era. The early nineteenth century is generally accepted as the time period during which six-string guitars began taking on their modern shape and dimensions. Thus for nearly two hundred years, luthiers, or guitar makers, have been producing versions of the modern acoustic guitar.

The first electric guitar was not developed until the early twentieth century. George Beauchamp received the first patent for an electric guitar in 1936, and Beauchamp went on to co-found Rickenbacker, originally known as the Electro String Instrument Company. Although Rickenbacker began producing electric guitars in the late 1930s, this brand received most of its fame in the 1960s, when John Lennon used a Rickenbacker guitar for the Beatles' debut performance on the Ed Sullivan show in 1964. George Harrison later bought a Rickenbacker guitar of his own, and the company later gave him one of their earliest 12-string electric guitars. Paul McCartney also used a Rickenbacker bass guitar for recording. The Beatles continued to use Rickenbacker guitars throughout their career, and made the instruments highly popular among other musicians of the era.

The Fender Musical Instruments Company and the Gibson Guitar Corporation were two other early electric guitar pioneers, both developing models in the early 1950s. Fender began with the Telecaster in 1950 and 1951, and the Fender Stratocaster debuted in 1954. Gibson began selling the Gibson Les Paul, based partially on assistance from jazz musician and guitar innovator Les Paul, in 1952. The majority of present day solid-body electric guitars are still based largely on these three early electric guitar designs.

Throughout the history of the guitar, an enormous number of individuals have made their mark on the way in which the instrument was built, played and perceived. Though some of these individuals are particularly well known, like the Beatles or Les Paul, the majority of these people are virtually invisible to most modern guitar fans. By looking at the entire history of the guitar, rather than just recent developments, largely confined to electric guitars, it is possible to see more of the contributions of earlier generations.

Questions 1-7

Choose  NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS from  the passage for each answer.

1      Despite  differences in 1 , ‘guit-‘  and ‘
Answer: spelling and pronunciation

2        Instruments   that we would  call acoustic  guitars  have been made  and played for approximately  2
Answer: five hundred years

3      No one knows the  3   when  the first six-string  guitar  was made.
Answer: exact date

4      The  4  of acoustic  guitars  have not changed  much in 200 years.
Answer: shape and dimensions

5      A 5 for an electric guitar  was issued in the mid-1930s.
Answer: patent

6       Les Paul, the well-known  6  guitarist,  was involved in the development   of the electric guitar.
Answer: jazz

7      Most 7 of the guitar know little about its rich history.
Answer: fans

Questions 8–13

Complete  the summary.

Choose NO MORTHAN TWO WORDS from the passage for each answer.

Instruments   similar  to the guitar  have been played by musicians  for over 8
Answer: five thousand years. What  we know about  many of these instruments   comes from 9
Answer: visual depictions  rather  than actual physical examples  or music played on them.  In some ways, these early stringed  instruments   were closer to 10
Answer: the lute than  the guitar as we know it today. We do have examples  of six-string  guitars  that  are 200 years old. However, the  11
Answer: authenticity  of six -string  guitars  made by guitar  makers  (who are also known  as 12
Answer: luthiers) before the final decade  of the eighteenth  century  is often open to question.

Although  the electric guitar  was invented  in the  1930s, it took several decades  for electric guitars  to develop, with the company  Rickenbacker  playing a major  part  in this development. Most  13
Answer: solid-body  electric  guitars  in use today are similar  in design to guitars produced  by the Fender  Musical Instruments   Company  and the Gibson  Guitar  Corporation in the 1950s.

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