Gibson L-4 Explained

Gibson L-4 refers to several archtop guitars produced by the Gibson Guitar Corporation.

The L-4 was first introduced in 1911 as an acoustic rhythm guitar with an oval sound hole and 12 frets to the neck;[1] it was used by Eddie Lang, who also played an L-5.

In 1928, Gibson redesigned the guitar, swapping out the oval soundhole for a round one, extending the neck to 14 frets and cantilevering the end of the fretboard over the top, just as they did on the L-5. These changes greatly improved the sound of new L-4, which now had more volume, a brighter, clearer tone while still maintaining its warmth. In 1935 Gibson redesigned the guitar yet again, this time dropping the round soundhole in favor of f-holes.[2]

In 1949, Gibson released the ES-175, which was essentially an electric version of the L-4 with a laminated (as opposed to carved) top and a florentine cutaway.

Electric versions of the L-4 (known as L-4 CES) with a carved top and a florentine cutaway, were released in limited runs throughout the 1950s.

In the late 1980s, Gibson reintroduced the L-4 CES, which has been in production ever since.

The current version features two humbucking pickups, a solid carved spruce top, and solid mahogany back and sides.[3] Other differences with the ES-175 include gold hardware, a fancier tailpiece, a different pickguard, and the rhythm pickup mounted closer to the neck.

Notes and References

  1. Book: Wheeler, Tom . 1992 . American Guitars: an illustrated history . New York . HarperCollins . 107 . 978-0062731548.
  2. 1935 Gibson L-4 . Fretboard Journal . Michael John . Simmons . May 2014.
  3. Web site: L-4 CES Mahogany . Gibson.com . 2010-08-23 . https://web.archive.org/web/20100908073555/http://www2.gibson.com/Products/Electric-Guitars/Archtop/Gibson-Custom/L-4-CES-Mahogany/Features.aspx . 2010-09-08 . dead .