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十二弦吉他/Twelve-string guitar/简介
作者:admin  文章来源:厦门吉他网  添加时间:2008-7-26  点击次数:9827

      十二弦吉他的琴体结构和六弦吉他类似,共鸣箱较大。琴体内增加了承受琴弦拉力的结构成分。指板较六弦吉他宽,琴头较六弦吉他大,有十二只弦钮。

 
      十二弦吉他的琴弦实际是由六组复弦组成的,每组两根琴弦,所用琴弦也和六弦吉他一样。各组琴弦的定音(由低到高)分别为:  6弦3弦、5弦2弦、4弦1弦、3弦3弦、2弦2弦、1弦1弦。其定弦方法和六弦吉他类似,其中前三组的3弦、2弦、1弦的空弦音分别比6弦E、5弦A、4弦d高八度,而后三组每组的两根琴弦的空弦音都是同度,分别为:g、b、e1。
 
      十二弦吉他的演奏方法与普通六弦吉他并无二致,只是每个手指要同时按下两根琴弦。通常所见的十二弦吉他多为钢丝弦,音量较大,和声效果较好,比较适合做节奏吉他,也可以独奏。
 
      十二弦吉他主要用于演奏country、contemporary folk,调弦方法往往很少是standard调弦,更多的是open和drop调弦法。其每组复弦的调弦法其实也不是固定的常见的6-3弦的相邻两弦为8度、2-1弦为同度调弦,这样的调弦法没有完全挖掘出十二弦吉他的表现力,仅仅是起到丰满音响的效果。8度音程是最和谐的,缺少一般协和、较协和等音程产生的矛盾冲突的丰富音乐形象的效果,因此挖掘十二弦吉他表现力的调弦法是,除了使用open、drop调弦法,其每组的复弦,尤其第一组和第二组调弦法不用同度音程,而用5度、3度、4度或其他不协和音程。
 
 
      十二弦吉他的调弦方法是什么?
 
      十二弦吉他,即十二条弦的吉他,演奏法与六弦吉他大同小异,音弦数较多,琴颈的宽度也会变宽,必须同时按两条弦,其魅力在於能够演奏六弦吉他无法弹奏的宽广音域十二弦的调法是1弦2弦与其相对应的副弦音高一样,3456弦与其相对应的副弦是低一个八度,弹法与6弦木吉他是一样的,由于十二弦琴的每根主弦都有一根副弦,所以,弹出来的效果很好听,比6弦要有深度,但是,本人自身觉得,弹和弦比较好3456的副弦比主弦高一个八度,怕你看不明白,调错了,嘿嘿,兄弟,十二弦很好的,好好玩哦。而且你在弹完十二弦之后,再弹6弦就会觉得无比好按,因为,十二弦比6弦的琴颈宽,挺好的,声音也比6弦牛比。 有一个BLUES大师的教学VIDEO上面就有十二弦的调弦方法,但是那套教材是别人的,而且我现在和那哥们也不好了,要不就发上来让兄弟你看看了,但是除了告诉你调弦方法以外,别的弹发和6弦的一样,包括扫弦阿什么的,十二弦比较适合BLUES的,或者当2琴也是不错的选择,兄弟你也不用找十二弦具体怎么弹,和6弦一样,但是不和弦的话,不太适合,因为有时候不能保证指弹或拨片弹的时候主弦和副弦都弹得着,我就经常这样,所以,还是用它弹和弦吧,本人自身感觉,十二弦表现和弦要比6弦要有深度的多,比较适合这个,别的就差点了。
 

 
 
Twelve-string guitar
(12 弦吉他英文详解)
 
      Design
      The strings are placed in courses of two strings each that are usually played together. The two strings in each bass course are normally tuned an octave apart, while each pair of strings in the treble courses is tuned in unison. The tuning of the second string in the third course (G) varies: some players use a unison string which is less prone to breakage, others prefer the distinctive high-pitched, bell-like quality an octave string makes in this position. Some players, either in search of distinctive tone or for ease of playing, will remove some of the doubled strings. For example, removing the higher octave from the three bass courses simplifies playing running bass lines, but keeps the extra treble strings for the full strums.The tension placed on the instrument by the strings is great, and because of this, 12 string guitars have a reputation for warping after a few years of use. Some twelve-string guitars have non-traditional structural supports to prevent or postpone such a fate, at the expense of appearance and tone. Until recently, twelve-string guitars were nearly universally tuned lower than the traditional EADGBE, to reduce the stresses on the instrument. Lead Belly may have used a low C-tuning{See Julius Lester/Pete Seeger The 12-String Guitar as Played by Leadbelly, Oak Publications, New York, 1965, 6}}.Some performers prefer the richness of an open tuning due to its near-orchestral sound. For a very complex plucked-string sound, the 12-string can be set to standard tuning (or possibly an octave lower), then the top one and low two string pairs can be tuned to whole-tone intervals. The usual gamut of guitar tunings are also available. Many performers who play the twelve-string guitar use an ordinary six-string guitar as their primary instrument, switching to the twelve-string guitar for certain songs that seem to call for a brighter sound.Because it is substantially more difficult to pluck individual strings on the twelve-string guitar, and almost impossible to bend notes tunefully, the instrument is rarely used for lead musical parts. 12-string guitar is however primarily suited to a rhythm or accompaniment role and is often used in folk songs and some popular music. Some hard rock and progressive rock musicians use double-necked guitars, which have both six-string and twelve-string components, allowing the guitarist easy transition between different sounds.The greater number of strings complicates playing, particularly for the plucking (or picking) hand. The gap between the dual-string courses is usually narrower than that between the single-string courses of a conventional six-string guitar, so more precision is required with pick or fingertip when not simply strumming chords. The pairing of thin, easily broken octave strings with larger, stiffer bass strings presents difficulties to the player also, and only a very skilled player can reliably pluck single strings from within a course at any speed (notably the very high octave G string, which is the highest-pitched string on the instrument). Nevertheless, with practice, the twelve-string guitar is not unduly difficult to play. It is, however, generally used in a fairly restricted role which emphasises its strengths: rich ringing, full-bodied chords, and fast, rippling single plucked notes on the twinned strings. Twelve-string guitars are made in both acoustic and electric form. However, it is the acoustic type that is most common.
 
      Chorus effect
      The double ranks of strings of the 12-string guitar produce a shimmering chorus effect. To produce this effect individual sounds with roughly the same timbre and nearly (but never exactly) the same pitch converge and are perceived as one. When the effect is produced successfully, none of the constituent sounds is perceived as being out of tune. Rather, this amalgam of sounds has a rich, shimmering quality which would be absent if the sound came from a single source. The effect is more apparent when listening to sounds that sustain for longer periods of time, such as a long guitar chord.
 
      Usage
      Use of twelve-string electric guitar almost appears to be cyclical: beginning with Blind Willie McTell in the '20s and '30s, Lead Belly in the '40s, and continuing with Bob Gibson in the '50s and early '60s, performers and Gibson acolytes such as Mike Pender of The Searchers and Roger McGuinn of The Byrds, brought it to the fore for a decade, until it fell out of favor and was largely limited to niche use by progressive rockers in the 1970s. The instrument was revived in the 1980s by alternative rockers such as Peter Buck of R.E.M., Marty Willson-Piper of The Church, and Johnny Marr of The Smiths. During the 1990s, its popularity waned again, although it plays a key part in the sound of indie rock acts such as Low and The Decemberists. During the 2000's Les Fradkin made many albums with the Rickenbacker 360/12 12-string guitar and once again, popularized the sound on Apple iTunes. Recently its use has also been growing once more, with the rise of psych folk and freak folk and anti-folk spearheads Television Personalities as current styles which make good use of the instrument's bright, drone-y qualities. The most popular electric twelve-string model since the 1960s has been the Rickenbacker 360/12, first popularized by George Harrison. Many double-neck guitars have a twelve-string neck, in order for guitarists to switch between tones during live performances, for example, when playing Stairway to Heaven, Hotel California or Xanadu.
 
      Notable performers
      This article does not cite any references or sources.
      Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources.
      Unverifiable material may be challenged and removed. (October 2007)
 
      Two electric 12 strings, a Shergold Modulator 12 (top) and a Maton Magnetone TB36/12 (bottom); the latter is a copy of the Rickenbacker 360/12Performers who use acoustic 12-string guitars span a range of genres, from folk (Arlo Guthrie) and traditional blues (Lead Belly) to folk rock (Paul Simon) (Neil Young) and rock bands (George Harrison of The Beatles and Pete Townshend of The Who) [1]. Some musicians, notably Leo Kottke and John Butler, use it as their main instrument. Electric Rickenbacker 12-string users include a range of jangle pop guitarists, ranging from Jim/Roger McGuinn (The Byrds) to Peter Buck (R.E.M.). The Gibson EDS-1275 electric 12-string was used by blues rock/early heavy metal guitarist Jimmy Page (Led Zeppelin), Guns and Roses guitarist Slash, Tom Morello of Rage Against the Machine System Of A Down & Scars On Broadway guitarist Daron Malakian. For a longer list, see the List of 12-string guitar players article.
 

History of the 12-string

 

      This article first appeared in Acoustic Guitar Magazine, November 1997. It is reprinted here along with its accompanying photographs by permission.
 
The origins of Twelve String Power by Michael Simmons
 
Acoustic Guitar, Nov. 1977
 
      It’s difficult to imagine what popular music would sound like without the 12-string guitar. Some of the most pervasive music of the last 60 years owes its power to the distinctive sound that Pete Seeger described as “the clanging of the bells.” Songs like “Goodnight, Irene,” Rock Island Line,” “Walk Right In,” Stairway to Heaven,” “Turn! Turn! Turn!” and “Hotel California” show what an important color the 12-string is in the sonic palette of 20th-century guitarists. Musicians as varied in style as Melissa Etheridge, Pete Seeger Leo Kottke, Leadbelly, Roger McGuinn, George Harrison, and Willie McTell have all made the 12-string an integral part of their music. In this article I’ll trace the development of the modern 12-string up through the players and makers who are guiding the instrument through the ‘90s.
 
      Origin of the Species
 
      The modern 12-string guitar made its first appearance in America just before the turn of the century. The name of the first luthier to double the strings of a standard six-string guitar is unknown. There are two theories about his background.
 
      The first is that the 12-string guitar was developed by Italian luthiers laboring in the guitar workshops of companies like Oscar Schmidt, Harmony, and Regal in New York and Chicago. Italian music has a long history of wire-string, double course instruments like the mandolin and because many of the builders were of Italian descent, it would be a natural experiment to double the strings of a standard six-string guitar. One of the most famous 12-strings in the world has a strong Italian connection. According to family legend, Leadbelly custom-ordered his famous Stella 12-string from Fulvio Pardini, Who worked for the Oscar Schmidt company in New Jersey.
 
       The other theory is that the 12-string arrived in the U. S. from Mexico. Latin America has a long history of double-course variants of the standard six-string guitar. These include instruments like the tiple, the charango, and the cuatro. Mexico has a particularly large number of guitar variations ranging from the diminutive guitarra de golpe to the massive guitarron.
 
 
       Mexican mariachi band
 
       IN the U. S., the Idea that the 12-string is a Mexican instrument is an old one. A Lyon and Healy catalog published circa 1905 lists three models of “11- and 12-string guitars (Mexican style).” The Mexican designation was used to distinguish the double-course guitar from the “12-string bass guitar,” which was a form of harp guitar. It is curious that the catalog mentions two models of 11-string guitar but only one 12-string. From the description, it appears that the 11-string guitar was based on a seven string guitar with four doubled basses and three single trebles.
 
       To further muddy the already murky waters of early 12-string history, there was a company in New Orleans called Grunewald that made a double-course guitar in 1904. Its catalog pictures a 12-string guitar described as “The Grunewald Harp-Guitar: A New Invention!” which has “Twice the Tone of any Guitar.”
 
 
Grunewald Ad
 
 
Regardless of who invented the 12-string guitar, it was considered something of a novelty instrument if it was considered at all. Except for a very occasional custom order, the more prestigious makers like Martin and Gibson left the 12-string market to the low-end builders. This is a strong indication that the buyers of 12-string were at the poorer end of the social scale. Indeed, many, if not most, of the early recordings of 12-string guitarists are of blues musicians in Georgia and Mexican tejano musicians in Texas. It appears that the first musicians to take up the 12-string were street performers. They were probably drawn to the extra volume the double strings added. Because the doubled strings had such a full, rich sound, a busker could work without other musicians and keep all of the proceeds.
 
Willie McTell’s Blues
 
One of the best early players to exploit the power of the 12-string was Atlanta guitarist Blind Willie McTell. Atlanta was the center for the Piedmont blues, a ragtime-based guitar style noted for its complex fingerpicking and driving bass. McTell was one of the most accomplished guitarists in a company that included players like Blind Boy Fuller, Blind Blake, Reverend Gary Davis, and fellow 12-string guitarist Barbecue Bob.
 
McTell was born blind in 1898 in Thompson, Georgia, but he never let his lack of sight slow him down. He traveled extensively throughout America, almost always by himself. He was able to navigate New York’s subway system, thread a needle, and sew, and read Braille. McTell came from a musical family and he quickly took to the guitar and was soon playing at jukes, restaurants, and local parties. Sometime around 1922 he stopped playing guitar and started attending Georgia’s school for the blind. Apparently the calluses from playing guitar impeded his ability to learn to read Braille. In 1927, he took up the guitar again, this time choosing the 12-string for which he became famous.
 
 
Blind Willie McTell
 
From that time on, McTell supported himself and his wife by playing music. He started making records, many under pseudonyms like Georgia Bill, Hot Shot Willie, Barrel House Sammy, and Pig ‘n’ Whistle Red. He was able to fully exploit the range of the 12-string and bring out new tonal colors. He could emulate the syncopated rhythms of a ragtime piano on a tune like “Georgia Rag” and recreate a rail journey on “Travelin’ Blues,” complete with bottleneck train whistles.
 
Although only a few photos of McTell survive, it appears he played guitars made by Stella. Stellas were made in New Jersey and sold through catalogs under a variety of names. They were favored by early 12-string players because although they were inexpensive, they were well made and stood up to the extra tension quite well.
 
 
Lydia Mendoza
 
In Texas the 12-string was one of the instruments being used by Mexican-Americans as they began to create a musical identity in their new country. One of the early stars in this new style that came to be called tejano music was Lydia Mendoza.
 
Mendoza was born in 1916. Her parents were refugees from the violence of the Mexican Revolution and worked in America as wandering musicians. By the time she was seven years old, Mendoza was proficient on guitar and mandolin. When she was twelve, the family went to San Antonio to answer a newspaper ad looking for singers. Lydia Mendoza made her first appearance on record in 1928, singing and playing mandolin with her family. They were paid $140 for 20 songs. They used the money to move north to work in the sugar beet fields of Michigan, but the family soon returned south to San Antonio.
 
Lydia Mendoza
 
The Mendozas found work playing in the huge open-air produce market. By this time the teenaged Lydia had started playing 12-string guitar. The family discovered that Lydia, with her powerful voice and striking good looks, was making more money when she sang solo than when she performed with the family. Word of the young singer reached Manuel Cortez, who ran a Spanish language radio show, and as her popularity grew she was asked to record again, this time as a solo singer.
 
Mendoza’s first solo record (and first hit) was “Mal Hombre,” a powerful song about an evil-hearted man who leads a poor girl astray. She learned the lyrics from a chewing gum wrapper. Her records of hard times and broken hearts quickly became popular throughout the Southwest and Mexico. She never forgot her roots, and she would often sing for the poorest farm workers, thus earning her the name La Cancionista del los Pobres (the Poor People’s Songstress). Lydia withdrew from performing in the late ‘30s to raise a family. She returned in the early ‘50s, and her career continued to prosper as if she had never left. She continued to perform until her retirement in the ‘80s.
 
 
King of the 12-string
 
Mexican-Americans were not the only guitarists in Texas attracted to the 12-string. Sometime around 1912, a young Huddie (“Leadbelly” Ledbetter, who was traveling with an even younger Blind Lemon Jefferson, purchased a used Stella 12-string in a Dallas pawnshop after hearing one played by a musician in a medicine show. The young guitarist took his new instrument to a party that very night. His description of his entrance at that party was also his challenge to the world: “ I put my foot on the doorstep and my finger on the strings and said, ‘Here’s Leadbelly.’”
 
It is very rare that the music of one musician so defines an instrument. It is not an unreasonable statement to say that without Leadbelly the 12-string guitar would have faded into obscurity. The rural style of the early blues player like Blind Willie McTell was being replaced by newer urban sounds. In Mexican-American music, guitars and mandolins were being replaced by accordions and brass band instruments. Without Leadbelly championing the 12-string in the ‘30s and ‘40s, it probably would have passed into the historical curiosity category along with harp guitars and bass mandolins.
 
The outline of Leadbelly’s life is familiar, with many parts reaching the status of legend. He was born in Louisiana in 1888 on a small farm. As he grew up he learned to work hard and also play hard, getting into the first of many run-ins with the law while still a teenager. He supported himself as a farmworker, cotton picker, and cowboy. Along the way he learned to play the piano, concertina (which he called a “windjammer”), mandolin, and guitar.
 
 
Leadbelly
 
In 1917, Leadbelly was convicted of murder and sentenced to thirty years in the Shaw State Prison Farm in Texas. With his ability to work hard and make music he became a popular prisoner with guards and convicts alike. In 1923 the governor of Texas, Pat Neff, heard Leadbelly perform on a tour of the work farm. Leadbelly wrote a song asking for a pardon, and in 1924, in one of his last acts before leaving office, Neff pardoned Leadbelly.
 
Although he was now free, Leadbelly couldn’t manage to stay clear of trouble, and in 1930 he was back in jail, this time on assault charges. He was sentenced to ten years of hard labor at the infamous Angola Penitentiary in Louisiana. Life in Angola was brutal, and after a failed escape attempt Leadbelly cast about for a legal way to get out. He applied to the parole board to commute his sentence.
 
At the same time a folklorist named John Lomax was looking for musicians who knew old-time folk songs. Lomax thought that the prisons, where convicts would be less affected by the changes in the outside world, would be the best place to look. He contacted the warden at Angola, who introduced him to Leadbelly, and the lives of both men were changed forever.
 
In Leadbelly, Lomax found the repository of folk song he songs looking for and more. Leadbelly seemed to be able to remember almost every song, field holler, and dance tune he ever heard, and he was a powerful and charismatic performer. Leadbelly hooked up with Lomax in what turned out to be a complex and controversial relationship.
 
At first Leadbelly and Lomax got along fine. Leadbelly worked as a driver, assistant, and liaison between Lomax and local African-American communities on Lomax’s song collecting trips in the South. They later went north, where Lomax gave lectures and Leadbelly played his songs. These lecture/concerts were for the most part given in academic settings like colleges or scholarly conferences. Then they hit New York.
 
The story of the convict who sang his way out of prison was too good for the newspapers to pass up. They jumped on the story, and overnight Leadbelly was the subject of sensational headlines like “Sweet Singer of the Swamplands Here to do a Few Tunes Between Homicides” and “Murderous Minstrel.” Concert and movie offers poured in, but Lomax and Leadbelly were unprepared for the notoriety and soon had a falling-out over money.
 
Leadbelly tried playing for black audiences, but there was very little interest. A big show was set up at the Apollo, but it was a disaster. The sophisticated urban crowds were just not interested in hearing old-fashioned rural blues and folk songs. Although he couldn’t succeed in Harlem, Leadbelly found a new and unexpected audience in Greenwich Village. The work of John Lomax and his son Alan had sparked an interest in folk song among the leftist intellectuals, and Leadbelly was lauded as a living treasure. Leadbelly became a star of the prewar folk scene. His songs were recorded by the Library of Congress and by Moe Asch, who later started Folkways Records. Songs like “Fannin Street,” “Midnight Special,” and “Rock Island Line,” were studied and performed by aspiring folksingers. In May of 1949, Leadbelly was diagnosed with Lou Gehrig’s disease, and six months later he was dead. A year later his song, “Goodnight, Irene,” sung by the Weavers, was the most popular song in America.
 
Like many of the first 12-string players, Leadbelly played a Stella 12-string, which he tuned down to C. The lower pitch gave the guitar a rich, booming tone. Stellas were larger than the other 12-strings being made at the time, measuring 16 inches across the lower bout. The larger body also produced the louder volume that was so important in the pre-electric guitar world.
 
The ‘60s Revival
 
After Leadbelly’s passing, nobody immediately appeared to carry on the 12-string tradition. It was as if musicians refrained from playing it as a sign of mourning. Only a few guitarists, like Dick Rosmini, Fred Gerlach, and Pete Seeger, kept the 12-string tradition alive. Seeger played it with he Weavers and from college to college in what he called the “frightened ‘50s.” In an unpublished interview with Andrew DeLory, Seeger said he considers his role in spreading the 12-string as “one of the most important jobs I ever did.”
 
Pete Seeger
 
In the late ‘50s Pete Seeger’s invention, the long-neck five string banjo, was the emblematic instrument of the folk scene. Popular groups like the Kingston Trio and the Limeliters reinforced the perception that if it didn’t have a banjo it wasn’t folk. But in 1963 two records came out that knocked the banjo off its throne. Ironically the first record was Pete Seeger’s “We Shall Overcome,” which was recorded live at Carnegie Hall on June 8, 1963. Seeger used the 12-string’s power and novelty to draw people to him like the buskers and medicine show hawkers did in the instrument’s infancy. But rather than snake oil, Seeger was selling songs of justice and freedom. The extra volume and full sound of the 12-string guitar made it perfect for leading the sing-alongs that were an important part of the civil rights movement.
 
The other record to bring the 12-string to greater prominence was “Walk Right In,” by the Rooftop Singers, a trio that featured the right and left handed Gibson J12-45s of Eric Darling and Bill Svanoe. This old Gus Cannon song went right to the top of the charts, and the 12-string boom was on.
 
Soon the 12-string was everywhere. The Chad Mitchell Trio featured a young musician named James McGuinn was working up arrangements for a Judy Collins record when he got the idea to play what he called a “Bach-sounding riff” on the Pete Seeger song, “Turn! Turn! Turn!” A couple of years later he would remember this and use it in his new rock band, the Byrds.
 
Record companies rushed out quickie albums made by groups with names like the Folkswingers and the Folkniks. While these groups included guitarists like Howard Roberts, Glen Campbell, and Tommy Tedesco, they could hardly be called fold groups. And mainstream acts started going “folk” as well. Bobby Darin added a folk section to his Vegas act with the prolific McGuinn handling the 12-string duties. Even venerable singers like Marlene Dietrich got into the act, recording songs like, “Sag Mir wo die Blumen Sind (Where Have the Flowers Gone)” and “Paff der Zauberdrache (Puff the Magic Dragon).”
During this boom time, companies like Gibson and Martin that had ignored the 12-string in its infancy jumped up to cash in on its adolescence. Gibson introduced the J12-45 and B12-25, and Martin brought out the D12-20 and D12-35. Guild, a small company struggling to find a niche, found that it’s slightly heavier models like the F-212 could be tuned up to standard pitch, and these instruments began turning up in the hands of musicians like Paul Simon and John Denver.
 
But before too long media saturation had rendered the acoustic 12-string a cliché. As the unplugged version faded from view, the new electric version, invented by Rickenbacker, took its place. George Harrison, the first musician to use the innovative instrument, started a run on Rickenbackers. Jim McGuinn changed his name to Roger and transferred the lessens he learned as an acoustic folkie to the electric 12-string and invented folk-rock. Songs like “Mr. Tambourine Man,” and Turn! Turn! Turn!” introduced a new sound whose permutations are still being explored. Led Zeppelin learned the lesson of mixing the melodicism of folk with the power of rock and came up with “Stairway to Heaven.” Tom Petty owes much of his style to the music the Byrds made in the “jingle jangle morning” of the ‘60s.
 
Kottke Steps In
 
Although the acoustic 12-string guitar disappeared from the charts, it didn’t die. It retreated back to small clubs and coffee houses where players like Peter Lang, Robbie Basho, and Leo Kottke began to explore the sonic possibilities of 12-strings.
 
Kottke in particular is seen as the great 12-string innovator after Leadbelly. With a prodigious technique, he blended an unlikely mixture of blues, folk, classical, and jazz into a completely personal style. Throughout the ‘70s, Kottke kept the solo 12-string alive in an era that was more interested in disco dancing, stadium rocking, and punk sneering. He played a number of different 12-string guitars over the years, including instruments made by Gibson, Bozo, and Martin.
 
 
Leo Kottke
 
In the late ‘70s hand troubles forced Kottke to give up the 12-string and for ten years he didn’t play one in concert. He began experimenting with different hand positions and picking techniques, and in the late ‘80s, he started playing a Taylor 55 mahogany 12-string. bob Taylor looks back on this event with pride, “Leo called me one day to say that he had stayed up until 4:30 in the morning playing my guitar, and starting with the show that night he was playing the 12-string in concert again. It was my guitar that got the 12-string king to play 12-string again!”
 
Over the years, the luthier and the musician worked together to create a guitar that would meet Kottke’s demands, and in 1990 the Leo Kottke Signature Model was introduced. Bucking the trend for 12-string that could be tuned to E, the Kottke model was designed to be tuned down to C#, in effect making it a modern version of the old Stellas. It is also unique in being the first artist designed and endorsed 12-string guitar.
 
Kottke’s success opened the door for other players. Two guitarists to take advantage of the new opportunities were Harvey Reid and Paul Geremia. Reid grew up listening to folk recording by musicians like the Kingston Trio and Pete Seeger. When he went out to buy his first guitar, he chose a 12-string Hoyer. Over the years Reid has honed his technique to the point where he is able to pick only one string of the paired strings, allowing him a much wider tonal range. On occasion he also plays the 12-string guitar banjo, an instrument made by the Deering Banjo Company and invented by West Coast musician Barry Hunn.
 
 
Paul Geremia
 
Paul Geremia was born in what he calls the Providence River Delta of Rhode Island. HE developed an interest I blues at an early age, particularly the work of Blind Willie McTell. Hew was able to see many of the great rediscovered blues musicians, like Son House, Skip James, Fred McDowell, and Pink Anderson, at various folk and blues festivals in the early ‘60s. Geremia has developed a style over the years that is based on the early acoustic blues of players like Robert Johnson and Charley Patton, but is still wholly his own. His main 12-string guitar is a Tonk Brothers model made by Stella, similar to the one that Willie McTell played. Geremia has been hailed by critics as one of the most accomplished guitarists working in the acoustic blues tradition.
 
Into the MTV Era
 
Players like Kottke, Geremia, and Reid, who started playing in the ‘60s and ‘70s are becoming the grand old men of the 12-string. But to survive, the instrument needs new blood. The 12-string guitar is nowhere near as ubiquitous as it was in the ‘60s, but the instrument and its traditions do crop up here and there in the playing of younger musicians. Melissa Etheridge is perhaps the most visible artist currently playing a 12-string. Her powerful rhythmic attack on her Adamas guitar belies the image of the singer-songwriter as a purveyor of wispy, introspective ballads. Guy Davis is a young performer from New York who is reviving the 12-string style of Blind Willie Johnson and other prewar blues musicians. He’s a strong guitarist and singer who likes to integrate his music into stage productions. In 1993 he performed off Broadway in the title role of the play, Robert Johnson: Trick the Devil.
 
In Nirvana’s 1993 MTV Unplugged special, Kurt Cobain closed the show with a haunting version of Leadbelly’s “Where Did You Sleep Last Night? In a New York Times article written after Cobain’s suicide, Eric Weisbard describes Cobain and his friend Mark Lanegan listening to old Leadbelly 78s as kids. In 1990 Cobain and Lanegan recorded an unreleased EP of Leadbelly songs. Cobain didn’t record his version with a 12-string, choosing instead to use a Martin D-18E, but his delivery of the song sometimes know as “In the Pines” owes much of its brooding quality to Leadbelly. Perhaps a young guitarist will trace the Cobain version back to Leadbelly’s acoustic 12-string take, and will be inspired to integrate the old instrument with a modern sensibility and carry the tradition into the 21st century.
 
 
 
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