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Bo Diddley Guitar
Gretsch Electric Guitar Formerly Owned by Bo Diddley
Bo Diddley Guitar
Bo Diddley Guitar

Gretsch Electric Guitar Formerly Owned by Bo Diddley

Manufacturer Gretsch
Datec. 1960
Mediummaple; mahogany; ebony; chrome; plastic; mother of pearl
DimensionsOverall (HWD) (overall): 7 7/8 × 40 1/8 × 24 3/8 in. (20.066 × 101.875 × 61.976 cm)
Credit LineMoPOP permanent collection
Object number1998.858.3
Text Entries

Bo Diddley, born Elias McDaniels (1928-2008), played this rectangular, semi-hollowbody “Twang Machine” electric guitar—one of four custom-made by Gretsch Guitars for Diddley between 1958 and 1962. Diddley and Gretsch collaborated on the design, which was based on a homemade cigar box guitar Diddley built himself in 1945 as a teenager at Chicago's Foster Vocational School, where he was studying to become a carpenter and mechanic. 

 

When he was younger, Diddley played trombone and violin but after seeing Blues guitarist John Lee Hooker, he immediately switched to guitar. He tuned his instrument to open chords, fretting with one finger and driving his distinctive percussive beat with his strumming hand while he gyrated around the stage. Author of iconic songs such as the eponymous “Bo Diddley,” “I'm a Man,” and “Who Do You Love?,” Bo Diddley was instrumental in the transition of popular music from Blues to Rock’n’Roll in the 1950s. Enormously influential, his “Bo Diddley Beat”—three beats, a rest, then two more beats—is revered in the popular music canon, incorporated into songs, and sampled by countless artists across the musical spectrum.  

Electric guitar with a rectangular body, finished in black on the back and red on the front, with black pick guard, chromed hardware, and semicircular mother-of-pearl fret markers on the fingerboard. Bo Diddley’s signature, which appears to have been removed at some point in the past, is still visible on the body in raking light, a lighting technique that helps to reveal surface textures.
CopyrightThe organization that has made the Item available reasonably believes that the Item is not restricted by copyright or related rights, but a conclusive determination could not be made. For more information, see http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/NKC/1.0/
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