by stephen » 15 Jan 2015, 11:27
It may (or may not!) be of interest to note that Leo Fender, 'the father of the modern electric guitar' used pine (!) as his material of choice for the body of his first solid body, the single & twin pickup versions of the Esquire. The reason? It was plentiful, cheap & was available in planks of a guitar-friendly width. Now Leo did care passionately about the sound of his electric instruments, but felt that it was the pickups & electronics that contributed the most, hence what he devoted most of his R&D time and efforts to. The body wood was just a platform upon which to mount these. Make it pleasing to the eye and have marketable aesthetics, but that was as far as it went.
After the first production run and Leo changed the body wood over to ash, was it due to suddenly realising that a proper 'tonewood' was required? Nope, it was decided after experiencing some returns due to the resinous nature of pine, bleeding through the solid lacquer finishes. This wasn't helped by the fact that in order to help cash flow & get more instruments out of the factory doors through the early business, Leo was using pine stock that hadn't properly dried out. Additionally, the knotty nature of pine dictated that only a solid colour (predominately black or white) could be used in order to disguise it. There was a current vogue for wooden furniture with a see-through light (blonde) finish and Leo thought that if he was able to do something similar with the Esquire it would be more 'contemporary' and possibly boost sales. The inherent, attractive grain of ash, absence of knots & relative abundance of this wood, although more expensive & in narrower planks than pine, were the main deciding factors.
Some time later when body material shifted in the main to alder, this was also for practical reasons. Tone didn't come into it. The grain of ash, although often spectacularly attractive, needs grain filling/sanding to ensure that the finish does not 'sink'. This was a fairly labour intensive process and if it could be eliminated, not only would it benefit the bottom line, but more importantly, more instruments could make it out of the door & keep Don Randall of Fender Sales off Leo's back. Ash also tended to vary quite considerably in weight & heavier guitars weren't particularly good sellers. As alder didn't require the grain filling process and therefore more readily accepted the range of solid colours that Fender was promoting, the general switch from ash was made.
Stephen.