Photo by John Peden, courtesy of the Country Music        Hall of Fame.
 During the 1930s, inventive individuals experimented with guitar                 bodies made from a solid piece of wood rather than soundboards                 over a hollow chamber—partly for ease of fabrication, partly                 to prevent feedback. 
One of the most prominent innovators was Les Paul. He made this                 guitar by taking a 4x4-inch solid block of pine, fitting it with                 two homemade electronic pickups, and then gluing on the halves                 of a hollow-body guitar to make it look slightly more conventional. 
 Around 1946, Paul took his "log" idea to Gibson.                 Although the company did not use his design as a prototype, it                 did work with him and use his name to promote its first line                 of solid-body guitars in the 1950s
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