Sir- my parents are both in the video. My father is cutting guitar necks and my mother working on a lap steel in the film. I remember my dad telling me he had been on television once while working at Fender, but I think that was a different film from this because he did not mention mom being filmed. They told me some interesting stories about Leo and their times there at the Fender factory.
Yeah? So what was interesting? You said "They told me some interesting stories about Leo and their times there at the Fender factory." If they were so interesting why didn't you share them?
You ought to buy the book by Forrest White who was probably your fathers supervisor. The Fender Inside Story by Forrest White. Page 98 discusses how a TV show came to Fender. That is probably what he referred to.
Wow! My mother in law, Linda Ohana, is in this video at 14:30, with the soldering iron, a decade before my husband was born. Thank you very much for posting this precious footage.
Awesome that you are able to see her here! I was thrilled to see may parents in this film when I discovered it online after looking for years for it to be posted. I am glad you have posted her name here and hope you can tell us more about her.
As a pro musician I have owned quite a few of the Fender Tweed covered amps made during this period of 1950 to 1960 and quite a few in the 1957 to 1959 years. When the ladies like your mother-in-law would finish wiring/soldering they would sign their name to a small piece of masking tape, with a pencil, and place there inside the back on the lower right side, on the bottom of the inside but facing up so you could see who wired it. The main names I have seen in my amplifiers and others from the period were "Lily" (my favorite/best amps have been by Lily), and Lupe....as the main two I have seen. I believe I have seen a "Rachel" also. Sometimes the little piece of tape is gone but it's been amazing how often that little tape has stayed intact even some 50 plus years later. I just sold an amp, 1959 Fender Bassman, dated April of 1959, just last year and it was a "Lily" amp.
@@gabrieln3613 That is very cool. To think of their names living on that way inside these amps. I wonder if Lily, like my MIL, is still with us. But we know her work is, and that it's much appreciated. :)
was she the one who did the neck calculations for where to put the frets?, there's videos talking about a really smart lady in the office doing that, Bill Carson said it, but they never name her
Incredible !!! no words can describe how much I enjoyed this video! I'm the proud owner of a 56 CS "Mary Kaye" Strat. Ill watch this over & over!!! Every guitar is slightly different and plays/sounds different which is a good thing. My Dad graduated in 57 from high school. Fender defined the sound of electric guitars!!!
I always wanted to go back in time to this era. I’d give my eyeteeth to have a guitar from back then. They all probably raced home to watch Perry Mason. Man those must have been the days to live.
Wow! It's hard to believe that my 1958 Strat was probably built and painted by some of these same people! Thank you so much for sharing this incredible piece of music history.
The lady winding pickups was still at Fender customer shop a few years ago. From memory she was employee #3. She appeared to be in her 80's now and still working.
I worked at the Fender Compound in the early 70s just after CBS bought it. Safety wasnt a high priority in those days . They paid 3+ $ and 4 + After a couple pay grades. Fullerton was rural and pleasant.
So primitive!!!! I luv this!!!! This is the definition of True American Craftsmanship!!!!! Virgin timber makes all the difference. That along with the copper that was being quarried from the mines for the pickups in conjunction with the windings (Abigail). It is the difference between a reissue and a $200,000 vintage. Find a virgin alder & maple tree in the back 40 and build one! Long live Fender. American Pride!!!! 🤘🎸
I think I remember reading where Leo said that the ladies had more patience for wiring amps and winding pickups. That's a '55 or '56 FORD station wagon ... perhaps a '54. Boy, simpler times.My very first guitar was a 1954 Stratocaster that I got for Christmas of 1963 -- it was well worn out. But I loved it!
My great aunt worked winding pickups for the telephone company her whole life. It’s pretty much the same process as guitar pickups. It really took a toll on her hands. Winding hair thin wire all day everyday.
This is great. The original Fender Factory is now a parking garage near The Fullerton Train Station. There is a plaque on the wall outside the parking garage.
The reason some vintage guitars sound different than others is the "mistakes" workers made when being built. A few extra puffs on a cigarette meant extra wire wraps on pickups ect. Have a 94, 66 and a pair of 55 Strats. None sound the same, although they all sound good. One 55 is slighter hotter than all of the others and I attribute it to construction i.e. wire windings.
Real hand made for sure....note shaping body of that strat....3 pc body...so even then they used everything...Leo was frugal...used all his available parts...the reason a lot of the old strats sound so good...seasoned wood dried out..pickups degaussing over years....you can’t fake time.....like the relic stuff attempts to do
there's so much truth to this statement. I agree 100%. however I must add that I kinda enjoy some of the reliced creations as long as it's up front that they are indeed recreations, and that is in relation to those guitars being a visual artistic thing moreso than an absolute attempt to make them seem like you wouldn't be able to tell the difference, because that's impossible
Trying to see if I recognize my grandmother in there somewhere. She lived in Fullerton and worked at the factory. Her job was dropping the dot inlays into the neck.
NOW THIS, IS A GEM. For any of us Fender FREAKS, (Especially Strat Freaks) this basic home video is So Cool to get into, we could watch this 100 times easy. Sweet.🥇👊 👏👏👏👏👏 😎 🎸
Fantastic video, so much of how things were done then not known to most of us still around today. It was great to see Alvino Rey in this vid, I was good friends with him in the 80's when he was in our amateur radio club which is how I knew him, not through music although I am a bassist of another generation. Thank you so much for this piece of amazing history. Cheers
Thanks so much for this video - its so interesting to me as Fender has been such a huge part of my life and lets face it - what they were doing in this little factory back then would change the world. It was so cool to watch how quickly old man Fullerton could whip out a guitar body on the band saw....wow...well thanks again :-)
I have several vintage Fender amps from the late 40's and 50's. Most of the electronics were installed by women, mostly hispanic. They would write their names on freezer tape and stick it to the inside the chassis. I always thought was so cool. I still have them and will not remove the tape. Part of history.
Yes! I have owned about 9 original Fender Bassmans from 1957 to 1960, as well as several Pro's, Deluxe's, etc. The most common ones I have seen on the little masking tape they signed was "Lily" (my best amps have been by Lily) and "Lupe" and I believe I have see a few "Rachel" too.
@@anthonyrichard461 Unfortunately due to economics I had to sell my original Fender tweed Amps. Right now I use a replica, built with new & vintage parts, of the 5F6-A Tweed Bassman and done in 2 days will be a replica (new & vintage parts) of the 5E& 3 x 10" Tweed Bandmaster....it has 1959 Triad Choke and 3 1959 original blue Jensen P10R & Q speakers along with NOS PIO caps, etc. and hoping it will sound as good as the replica Bassman.
@@gabrieln3613 I have no original Tweed Bassmans but I have a hand built 59 Bassman 5F6? circuit from probably the best local amp tech. It's amazing. Has the eminence alnico speakers. I also have a custom built 5E3 Deluxe and an original 59/60 5E3 Tweed. Not so sure the new doesn't sound better? Have a 57/58 Harvard, 59/60 Tremolux, 53 Pro with Original Jensen 15" a 59 Super 2/10 and the four deluxes, 2 each 49/50 TV fronts, 53 wide panel and the 5E3. I'm a lucky man.
That was when Fenders were made the best. Today they are mass produced with no care. Back then fewer were made because markets were smaller and Fender was new and striving for success. This is what gives vintage Fenders so much charm!
I just finished reading Richard's excellent coffee-table book "Fender--The Sound Heard 'Round the World." This rare video by Forrest White (no audio) just adds to the book. Great job Richard!
I have a Fender lap steel. Underneath the knob cover is a small piece of paper that reads..."Inspected by Gloria, November 13, 1954". I can't help but wonder if "Gloria" is in the video?
Two days out of the week, I do security at Fenders factory in Corona. That clock that read 5;15 on it was pribably 5;15 AM. Hundreds of people start showing up for work around 4;30 AM there
Last time i was there the buildings were still there. I still kick myself for not getting up early on Saturday when they had their scratch n dent sales. My buddy has every model they made at that time. A Coronado and jaguar included.
This is a great video and also incredibly insightful. It contains almost everything I would hope to see from that era. The machines and templates used and a bonus of the People of Fender. I just wish there was one from '74 so I could see how my #1 Axe was made.
Interesting. I wonder if the original film still exists. It would be nice to get it digitized at a higher resolution than it is here. Also, it would great to see the original full 4:3 aspect ratio. Here it’s been cropped to 16:9 so a lot of heads are being chopped off. Still, great to see!
I'm not Richard, This DVD comes with the Fender The Sound Heard Around the World book that Richard put together, There's much more info in the book, I highly recommend every Fender fan get it, The book was originally only sent to Fender Dealers as a reference for them, but was released to the public a few years ago
If you're wondering where most of these amps are (the survivors),... there at Joe's house in his Nerdsville museum of guitars and amps! (Joe Bonamasa for the uninitiated),.... He's an avid collector and respectful custodian of these musical works of art! I grew up in Fullerton, my Dad's business was on Commonwealth and Harbor, very close to the factory. I got my first guitar through a neighbor who was in a semi-famous Surf band... he sold me his Strat and Blonde 60w tremolux amp with the external reverb tank! Wish I hadn't traded these away for more modern versions - but what can you say,... I was a rocker and needed more distortion! (this was 1970)
When men and women worked in their speed dedicated making great tools and tools for making the tools. I like it a lot. None complaining what they not got. Making the best of what they had. Not complaining about safety. Just taking care for themselves and work responsible. Sure there was reason to improve. And so they did. But where we’ve gone since is beyond any sense.
The G&L factory is still right down the street on Fender Ave, they still make them the old fashioned way but with modern machines. I went by there and told them I have two G&L guitars and the plant manager gave me a tour and showed me Leo's old workshop.
You can look at thousands of hours of old footage from the 1940's through the 1960's and you will see very few people who a are obese or in poor physical condition. It's due to all the crappy fast food and sugar loaded processed foods we eat today.
I've never heard a valid reason why Bill Schultz and the company now known as FMIC didn't buy the Fullerton factory from CBS when the sale went down. Saying it was a "financial decision" makes no sense because the cost of building the Corona factory vs the cost buying the Fullerton factory couldn't have been that different could it? Great footage & narration. These "factory workers" were bonafide artists.
I loved how the people worked shirtless and looked very proud of their craftsmanship. It must have been difficult breathing in the toxic paint fumes and sawdust all of the time..
It's a spray booth with a DeVillbiss explosion-proof motor, too much air volume passing at 3000+ cfm and impossible to be ignited, or giving to a "standing-cloud" condition. They still had it in 1988 but fitted with a 20X20 grid of replacement filters, unlike the old style using fabric roll strips filter pinned over the screens. That whole row of industrial units on Fender Ave. become ovens from May to October often clearing 100* degrees. So it made some sense then to initially have buffing and assembly close to the spray booth. Until you find bugs and junk in the clear topcoats.
I work at Fenders in Corona wed and thurs nights in security. I have to go check the paint rooms every half hour. Meaning I gotta put on a dust free bunny suit to do it.
@@siggyretburns7523 do you have to put on and takeoff the suit every half an hour?! What a drag! Then again, I guess everything depends on the attitude you bring to it.
The world in general might've been less toxic overall at that time, though, because my mother-in-law (shown in this video) is in her 90s and in absolutely splendid & active perfect health. I feel like she's healthier than me, and I'm in my 50s. Our food has changed so much, chemicals are persistent everywhere, and plastic is ubiquitous. And the actual complexity of life, thanks to globalization and digital media, seems to result in much higher stress levels, in turn affecting physical health. Makes me think of certain elderly people who've smoked their whole lives and lived to their 90s, maybe because of the absence of other bad habits and toxins.
The building is still there in fact, if you go to the corner where it used to say shipping and receiving if you look in the video, there’s a pipe coming out of the building going into the ground at the very bottom that’s still there.
Thanks for sharing this very important and fascinating document of what I consider the greatest and most Iconic instrument of all decades I have one I acquired in Gainesville FL is a store that is in front of a school it has problems with the potentiometers but it was nothing I couldn't fix myself is the model strat z1***** believe 2001 with roller ege on side of fret board and I very proud of my fender strat very jealous I don't let no one to put their hands on it , well sorry I just got carried on. Thanks again
PS. The guitar was in the Mexican fender rack inside of the store and it was mark for $600 us dollars so I ask the man in charge if that guitar is for $600 and he told me;yes so I told him I want to try it and when I start to play he came and told me let me run the serial number throu the computer and quick came running to me and said; that guitar is not for $600, is for $1,299 and I told him; that's why I ask you so he talk to the manager and he told ok but I will bill you the taxes and I said ok so I paid $676.56 cents I paid for it and I told him that the guitar need some potentiometers replacement so I purchased the Emerson CTS from eBay store and .033 mf filters and this guitar sounds so professional when it's play throu a great amplified very loud or low volume and it's very chimering notes I'm so pleased,thanks
Or that Yngwie J. Dbag bought up '57 Strats everywhere then scalloped the fretboards while disconnecting the middle pickup "because I don't like sound." Yeah, he couldn't play without hitting it
Does anybody else just feel like this has a sense of purity to it. Watching them work you realize it's just a guitar but they were all pretty much handmade instead of on an assembly line. Everything you see in the video is over $10,000 to try to get one today and back then it wasn't enough to keep everyone on staff for the year
@@TempleGuitars you look on reverb no one is really asking that's kind of price. Some high five digits for a 54 Stratocaster. To get over a hundred thousand you need a famous signature
It just amazes me how these people just painted, sanded and sawed without protecting themselves. I hope (though with difficulty) this did not affected them in the long run.
@@granvillefriel1877 , there's a word for people who took basic precautions to protect themselves against needless exposure to toxic substances: *healthy*.
The lady doing the books was cute...wonder how old she would be today, if she is still alive? Sad to think that probably 50% or more of the people in this video are gone now....beginning of a legendary company and they had no idea!
If i could time travel and go anywhere it would be here to this place and i would chain smoke and test old fenders and amps all day with my shirt off lol. DREAM
Leo promised Forrest a small piece of ownership in the company, and never followed through. When he sold to CBS, Forrest got zero, other than to keep his job, but was then fired, ( retired ) by CBS in less than 2 years. Freddy Tavares fared better, keeping his job at Fender until he voluntarily retired. If there ever was an another person who deserved a percent or two of the company it was Freddy.. Fortunately he had side gigs on the radio, such as with Wade Ray live from Cowtown, and with the movie studios. I know that Leo tried to make it up to Forrest later, just as he did with George, but the efforts were basically in vain. Funny thing about Boggs... he was always worried about the music thing drying up, so he invested in an auto parts store, Boggs and McBurney. Eventually he retired and sold out his interest.. I actually went there a few times oh so long ago, at the time not knowing it was the musician Boggs that was part owner. Ling gone now, Google sat. view shows a scraped off lot, but it might in reality be built over by now. It is so fantastic that this film survives...
This is cropped video, anyone know if the full frame version is on youtube? Mainly the top visual is cut right off. Great video and thanks for posting and clear narration, good job.
I was wondering the same thing. There appear to be several versions posted in full frame of various lengths. The longest goes for 24 minutes and it’s called “Fender Factory Fullerton ca. 1950s.” No narration, however. Unfortunately, it’s also low resolution like this one. It would fantastic if whoever has the original film (Fender?) would have it digitized in high definition. That would be a revelation.
Water wash spray booths. Fans pulled air into a water curtain that acted as a filter. As long as you're on the "up-wind" side of the spray gun, there is no atomized lacquer to breathe.
DICKY PHILLIPS at 17:08. That's a Blonde '54 with a Gold Guard. Dickie had a lung removed and was weak, so he played sitting down...Thumbs Carlisle style but he held the guitar LEFTY. That guitar may be on display soon.
Wow, thanks for the info, I've watched this many times , always pick up some subtleties in the factory shots, not familiar with most of the people in the footage so your insight is cool. thanks for sharing
Sir- my parents are both in the video. My father is cutting guitar necks and my mother working on a lap steel in the film. I remember my dad telling me he had been on television once while working at Fender, but I think that was a different film from this because he did not mention mom being filmed. They told me some interesting stories about Leo and their times there at the Fender factory.
Yeah? So what was interesting? You said "They told me some interesting stories about Leo and their times there at the Fender factory." If they were so interesting why didn't you share them?
You ought to buy the book by Forrest White who was probably your fathers supervisor. The Fender Inside Story by Forrest White. Page 98 discusses how a TV show came to Fender. That is probably what he referred to.
coenfilm cool to know. I will check it out! Thanks.
Cuz he’s writing a “comment”, not a book.
Really cool....they both worked there at the inception of the Giant it became👍
Wow! My mother in law, Linda Ohana, is in this video at 14:30, with the soldering iron, a decade before my husband was born. Thank you very much for posting this precious footage.
Wow...that would be cool ....she is lovely
Awesome that you are able to see her here! I was thrilled to see may parents in this film when I discovered it online after looking for years for it to be posted. I am glad you have posted her name here and hope you can tell us more about her.
What a nice piece of history..
As a pro musician I have owned quite a few of the Fender Tweed covered amps made during this period of 1950 to 1960 and quite a few in the 1957 to 1959 years. When the ladies like your mother-in-law would finish wiring/soldering they would sign their name to a small piece of masking tape, with a pencil, and place there inside the back on the lower right side, on the bottom of the inside but facing up so you could see who wired it. The main names I have seen in my amplifiers and others from the period were "Lily" (my favorite/best amps have been by Lily), and Lupe....as the main two I have seen. I believe I have seen a "Rachel" also. Sometimes the little piece of tape is gone but it's been amazing how often that little tape has stayed intact even some 50 plus years later. I just sold an amp, 1959 Fender Bassman, dated April of 1959, just last year and it was a "Lily" amp.
@@gabrieln3613 That is very cool. To think of their names living on that way inside these amps. I wonder if Lily, like my MIL, is still with us. But we know her work is, and that it's much appreciated. :)
My mother (Ione Lambert) was Leo Fender's secretary back in those days. My step father to be (Russ Green) also worked there.
was she the one who did the neck calculations for where to put the frets?, there's videos talking about a really smart lady in the office doing that, Bill Carson said it, but they never name her
Incredible !!! no words can describe how much I enjoyed this video! I'm the proud owner of a 56 CS "Mary Kaye" Strat. Ill watch this over & over!!! Every guitar is slightly different and plays/sounds different which is a good thing. My Dad graduated in 57 from high school. Fender defined the sound of electric guitars!!!
Just people doing their job day in and day out. Little did they know the obsession/history they were creating. Great video!
The variety of different complicated gear they made at that one factory is truly amazing.
In the 50’s American manufacturing was a juggernaut
I always wanted to go back in time to this era. I’d give my eyeteeth to have a guitar from back then. They all probably raced home to watch Perry Mason. Man those must have been the days to live.
Wow! It's hard to believe that my 1958 Strat was probably built and painted by some of these same people! Thank you so much for sharing this incredible piece of music history.
The lady winding pickups was still at Fender customer shop a few years ago. From memory she was employee #3. She appeared to be in her 80's now and still working.
It's like some of the most legendary 20th century music pre 70s . The beautiful inconsistancies that bring serendipitous magic
I worked at the Fender Compound in the early 70s just after CBS bought it. Safety wasnt a high priority in those days . They paid 3+ $ and 4 + After a couple pay grades. Fullerton was rural and pleasant.
This film was made sometime between 1954 and 1956. Based on decal placement on the headstock- which ended in 1956:)
I think that it's 1956 based on a calendar at around 2:33.
So primitive!!!! I luv this!!!! This is the definition of True American Craftsmanship!!!!! Virgin timber makes all the difference. That along with the copper that was being quarried from the mines for the pickups in conjunction with the windings (Abigail). It is the difference between a reissue and a $200,000 vintage. Find a virgin alder & maple tree in the back 40 and build one! Long live Fender. American Pride!!!!
🤘🎸
I think I remember reading where Leo said that the ladies had more patience for wiring amps and winding pickups. That's a '55 or '56 FORD station wagon ... perhaps a '54. Boy, simpler times.My very first guitar was a 1954 Stratocaster that I got for Christmas of 1963 -- it was well worn out. But I loved it!
WOW! Do you still play the 54 stratocaster?! I couldn't imagine.
My great aunt worked winding pickups for the telephone company her whole life. It’s pretty much the same process as guitar pickups. It really took a toll on her hands. Winding hair thin wire all day everyday.
This is one of the best things I’ve ever seen!
This is great. The original Fender Factory is now a parking garage near The Fullerton Train Station. There is a plaque on the wall outside the parking garage.
Hey Richard, great narration, really adds a lot to this classic 8mm movie.
I agree, I loved your little comments and your knowledge of the product line.
The reason some vintage guitars sound different than others is the "mistakes" workers made when being built. A few extra puffs on a cigarette meant extra wire wraps on pickups ect. Have a 94, 66 and a pair of 55 Strats. None sound the same, although they all sound good. One 55 is slighter hotter than all of the others and I attribute it to construction i.e. wire windings.
This is why I don’t understand why people say hand made items are better than machine made?
Mistakes and variations don’t sound that good to me.
@@kylethedalek You're a perfect candidate for a made in China, CNC made, bamboo p.o.s. Go away now, and leave us vintage enthusiasts alone .
You know your stuff. Thanks for sharing.
So awesome! That’s why I love vintage instruments! They all did a great job, all by hand!
photography is the greatest invention of all time
This is great! Fender Guitar factory in Fullerton, Ca - circa 1957
Real hand made for sure....note shaping body of that strat....3 pc body...so even then they used everything...Leo was frugal...used all his available parts...the reason a lot of the old strats sound so good...seasoned wood dried out..pickups degaussing over years....you can’t fake time.....like the relic stuff attempts to do
there's so much truth to this statement. I agree 100%. however I must add that I kinda enjoy some of the reliced creations as long as it's up front that they are indeed recreations, and that is in relation to those guitars being a visual artistic thing moreso than an absolute attempt to make them seem like you wouldn't be able to tell the difference, because that's impossible
Glenn Evans you have any old maybe broadcaster that you don’t need anymore ?
Clf research g&l still makes em like this today.
Pretty low key work place. Thank you all so freakin' much!
I love old vintage Fenders.
PEACE 🎸🎶🎵
Low key is the only way to be.
Amazing time! Poetry in motion!
Trying to see if I recognize my grandmother in there somewhere. She lived in Fullerton and worked at the factory. Her job was dropping the dot inlays into the neck.
NOW THIS, IS A GEM. For any of us Fender FREAKS, (Especially Strat Freaks) this basic home video is So Cool to get into, we could watch this 100 times easy. Sweet.🥇👊 👏👏👏👏👏 😎 🎸
What's a Fender ?
Fantastic video, so much of how things were done then not known to most of us still around today. It was great to see Alvino Rey in this vid, I was good friends with him in the 80's when he was in our amateur radio club which is how I knew him, not through music although I am a bassist of another generation. Thank you so much for this piece of amazing history. Cheers
What an amazing historical film.
Thanks so much for this video - its so interesting to me as Fender has been such a huge part of my life and lets face it - what they were doing in this little factory back then would change the world. It was so cool to watch how quickly old man Fullerton could whip out a guitar body on the band saw....wow...well thanks again :-)
I have several vintage Fender amps from the late 40's and 50's. Most of the electronics were installed by women, mostly hispanic. They would write their names on freezer tape and stick it to the inside the chassis.
I always thought was so cool. I still have them and will not remove the tape. Part of history.
Yes! I have owned about 9 original Fender Bassmans from 1957 to 1960, as well as several Pro's, Deluxe's, etc. The most common ones I have seen on the little masking tape they signed was "Lily" (my best amps have been by Lily) and "Lupe" and I believe I have see a few "Rachel" too.
@@gabrieln3613 I have a few Lupe's as well. So cool
@@anthonyrichard461 Unfortunately due to economics I had to sell my original Fender tweed Amps. Right now I use a replica, built with new & vintage parts, of the 5F6-A Tweed Bassman and done in 2 days will be a replica (new & vintage parts) of the 5E& 3 x 10" Tweed Bandmaster....it has 1959 Triad Choke and 3 1959 original blue Jensen P10R & Q speakers along with NOS PIO caps, etc. and hoping it will sound as good as the replica Bassman.
@@gabrieln3613 I have no original Tweed Bassmans but I have a hand built 59 Bassman 5F6? circuit from probably the best local amp tech. It's amazing. Has the eminence alnico speakers. I also have a custom built 5E3 Deluxe and an original 59/60 5E3 Tweed. Not so sure the new doesn't sound better? Have a 57/58 Harvard, 59/60 Tremolux, 53 Pro with Original Jensen 15" a 59 Super 2/10 and the four deluxes, 2 each 49/50 TV fronts, 53 wide panel and the 5E3. I'm a lucky man.
Fender AMPS FROM THAT ERA 😮😮😮😮
Ive heard two
MIND BLOWN
SO CLEAN AND LOUD 😊
That was when Fenders were made the best. Today they are mass produced with no care. Back then fewer were made because markets were smaller and Fender was new and striving for success. This is what gives vintage Fenders so much charm!
I just finished reading Richard's excellent coffee-table book "Fender--The Sound Heard 'Round the World." This rare video by Forrest White (no audio) just adds to the book. Great job Richard!
10 on the cool factor scale! Thank you for sharing!
So fascinating. Thank you!! I absolutely love my bone stock strat that I’ve had about 30 years now.
I have a Fender lap steel. Underneath the knob cover is a small piece of paper that reads..."Inspected by Gloria, November 13, 1954". I can't help but wonder if "Gloria" is in the video?
That's awesome!
She's pointed out in one of Smith's videos.
Wonderful video of life in the Fender factory during the mid 1950's.
Awesome, the good old days Leo was quite the visionary
SALUTE TO ALL THOSE LEGENDS WHO MADE IT POSSIBLE.
American history beautiful!
Two days out of the week, I do security at Fenders factory in Corona.
That clock that read 5;15 on it was pribably 5;15 AM. Hundreds of people start showing up for work around 4;30 AM there
Last time i was there the buildings were still there. I still kick myself for not getting up early on Saturday when they had their scratch n dent sales. My buddy has every model they made at that time. A Coronado and jaguar included.
This is a great video and also incredibly insightful. It contains almost everything I would hope to see from that era. The machines and templates used and a bonus of the People of Fender. I just wish there was one from '74 so I could see how my #1 Axe was made.
those instruments are worth alot of $ now because of the hand work!
The MIA and MIM Fender Stratocasters still Reign Supreme over all others..over 64 years of pure legend..
I don't find the MIMs to be anywhere close to the US models. In fact, Squires are often better.
Thank you for parents of this video... a great past... I love this and no sound is perfect...
Interesting. I wonder if the original film still exists. It would be nice to get it digitized at a higher resolution than it is here. Also, it would great to see the original full 4:3 aspect ratio. Here it’s been cropped to 16:9 so a lot of heads are being chopped off. Still, great to see!
Richard, thanks for posting. This is a good historical movie,of a great company. cheers !
I'm not Richard, This DVD comes with the Fender The Sound Heard Around the World book that Richard put together, There's much more info in the book, I highly recommend every Fender fan get it, The book was originally only sent to Fender Dealers as a reference for them, but was released to the public a few years ago
If you're wondering where most of these amps are (the survivors),... there at Joe's house in his Nerdsville museum of guitars and amps! (Joe Bonamasa for the uninitiated),.... He's an avid collector and respectful custodian of these musical works of art! I grew up in Fullerton, my Dad's business was on Commonwealth and Harbor, very close to the factory. I got my first guitar through a neighbor who was in a semi-famous Surf band... he sold me his Strat and Blonde 60w tremolux amp with the external reverb tank! Wish I hadn't traded these away for more modern versions - but what can you say,... I was a rocker and needed more distortion! (this was 1970)
Beautiful video and interesting commentary, thank you.
09:42 It wasn't just the lacquer it was the fine wood dust getting into your lungs. Lumber lung it was called. And it could never be removed.
Having worked in woodshops with ventilation in the 90's, and currently having COPD, l cringe watching some of these operations.
When men and women worked in their speed dedicated making great tools and tools for making the tools. I like it a lot.
None complaining what they not got.
Making the best of what they had.
Not complaining about safety. Just taking care for themselves and work responsible.
Sure there was reason to improve. And so they did.
But where we’ve gone since is beyond any sense.
I sure miss the old glory days! If we worked like that today, we would probably be arrested :(
Why arrested? That makes no sense at all.
whut?
This is THE Fender custom shop before there was a Custom Shop. And more custom than the Custom Shop. Amazing stuff.
The G&L factory is still right down the street on Fender Ave, they still make them the old fashioned way but with modern machines. I went by there and told them I have two G&L guitars and the plant manager gave me a tour and showed me Leo's old workshop.
Awesome footage love fender guitars really enjoyed this video 🧐❤️❤️❤️
How interesting to watch this 60+ years later !
I noticed the men and women are all in great shape
You can look at thousands of hours of old footage from the 1940's through the 1960's and you will see very few people who a are obese or in poor physical condition. It's due to all the crappy fast food and sugar loaded processed foods we eat today.
@@LAPhillyBoyVideos Agreed. Lots of chemicals and additives that are outlawed in Europe can be found in our foods, sadly.
Great movie. Coupled with the commentary and it was just fantastic.
I've never heard a valid reason why Bill Schultz and the company now known as FMIC didn't buy the Fullerton factory from CBS when the sale went down. Saying it was a "financial decision" makes no sense because the cost of building the Corona factory vs the cost buying the Fullerton factory couldn't have been that different could it? Great footage & narration. These "factory workers" were bonafide artists.
It wasn't part of the deal. CBS kept all the past patents and the Fullerton plant.
The most amazing video I've ever seen!
I loved how the people worked shirtless and looked very proud of their craftsmanship. It must have been difficult breathing in the toxic paint fumes and sawdust all of the time..
Not to mention explosive nitrocellulose!
It's a spray booth with a DeVillbiss explosion-proof motor, too much air volume passing at 3000+ cfm and impossible to be ignited, or giving to a "standing-cloud" condition. They still had it in 1988 but fitted with a 20X20 grid of replacement filters, unlike the old style using fabric roll strips filter pinned over the screens. That whole row of industrial units on Fender Ave. become ovens from May to October often clearing 100* degrees. So it made some sense then to initially have buffing and assembly close to the spray booth. Until you find bugs and junk in the clear topcoats.
I work at Fenders in Corona wed and thurs nights in security. I have to go check the paint rooms every half hour. Meaning I gotta put on a dust free bunny suit to do it.
@@siggyretburns7523 do you have to put on and takeoff the suit every half an hour?! What a drag! Then again, I guess everything depends on the attitude you bring to it.
The world in general might've been less toxic overall at that time, though, because my mother-in-law (shown in this video) is in her 90s and in absolutely splendid & active perfect health. I feel like she's healthier than me, and I'm in my 50s. Our food has changed so much, chemicals are persistent everywhere, and plastic is ubiquitous. And the actual complexity of life, thanks to globalization and digital media, seems to result in much higher stress levels, in turn affecting physical health. Makes me think of certain elderly people who've smoked their whole lives and lived to their 90s, maybe because of the absence of other bad habits and toxins.
The building is still there in fact, if you go to the corner where it used to say shipping and receiving if you look in the video, there’s a pipe coming out of the building going into the ground at the very bottom that’s still there.
Kind of ends abruptly...could of watched this for days!
I wish i could get a modern guitar built with that same wood. that was the best stuff
Thanks for sharing this very important and fascinating document of what I consider the greatest and most Iconic instrument of all decades I have one I acquired in Gainesville FL is a store that is in front of a school it has problems with the potentiometers but it was nothing I couldn't fix myself is the model strat z1***** believe 2001 with roller ege on side of fret board and I very proud of my fender strat very jealous I don't let no one to put their hands on it , well sorry I just got carried on. Thanks again
PS. The guitar was in the Mexican fender rack inside of the store and it was mark for $600 us dollars so I ask the man in charge if that guitar is for $600 and he told me;yes so I told him I want to try it and when I start to play he came and told me let me run the serial number throu the computer and quick came running to me and said; that guitar is not for $600, is for $1,299 and I told him; that's why I ask you so he talk to the manager and he told ok but I will bill you the taxes and I said ok so I paid $676.56 cents I paid for it and I told him that the guitar need some potentiometers replacement so I purchased the Emerson CTS from eBay store and .033 mf filters and this guitar sounds so professional when it's play throu a great amplified very loud or low volume and it's very chimering notes I'm so pleased,thanks
I wish I could go to work shirtless.
Burt Reynolds me too you sexxy beast
Hi, Turd Ferguson!
there was no air conditioning in that factory and it was unbearably hot
Just aweaome! Thanks for sharing this video.
Wow. Thank you very much for putting this out.
Man, if these workers only knew how much the guitars they're making then were fetching today...
Or that Yngwie J. Dbag bought up '57 Strats everywhere then scalloped the fretboards while disconnecting the middle pickup "because I don't like sound." Yeah, he couldn't play without hitting it
Does anybody else just feel like this has a sense of purity to it. Watching them work you realize it's just a guitar but they were all pretty much handmade instead of on an assembly line. Everything you see in the video is over $10,000 to try to get one today and back then it wasn't enough to keep everyone on staff for the year
$100,000 and even more. Just mind blowing.
@@TempleGuitars you look on reverb no one is really asking that's kind of price. Some high five digits for a 54 Stratocaster. To get over a hundred thousand you need a famous signature
Fascinating. Thank you for sharing
Awesome to watch !!.....thanks for posting !!..........Great workers with great skills !.......Dont believe in the Master Builder crap we see today !
It just amazes me how these people just painted, sanded and sawed without protecting themselves. I hope (though with difficulty) this did not affected them in the long run.
Didn't matter, they all smoked anyways.
People wasn't pussies like they are now
@@granvillefriel1877 , there's a word for people who took basic precautions to protect themselves against needless exposure to toxic substances: *healthy*.
Another word: "Alive."
good 'un the only thing unhealthy in 1957 was commies and nukes......lols
Fender’s Mexican guitars - made by Mexicans in Mexico. Fender USA guitars - made by Mexicans a few miles up the road in America.
Thank you for sharing this gem.
The lady doing the books was cute...wonder how old she would be today, if she is still alive? Sad to think that probably 50% or more of the people in this video are gone now....beginning of a legendary company and they had no idea!
Fascinating, thanks for sharing
If i could time travel and go anywhere it would be here to this place and i would chain smoke and test old fenders and amps all day with my shirt off lol. DREAM
I learned to cut bodies watching this a few years ago. No lie.
Good commentary skills there. Interesting
Leo promised Forrest a small piece of ownership in the company, and never followed through. When he sold to CBS, Forrest got zero, other than to keep his job, but was then fired, ( retired ) by CBS in less than 2 years. Freddy Tavares fared better, keeping his job at Fender until he voluntarily retired. If there ever was an another person who deserved a percent or two of the company it was Freddy.. Fortunately he had side gigs on the radio, such as with Wade Ray live from Cowtown, and with the movie studios.
I know that Leo tried to make it up to Forrest later, just as he did with George, but the efforts were basically in vain.
Funny thing about Boggs... he was always worried about the music thing drying up, so he invested in an auto parts store, Boggs and McBurney. Eventually he retired and sold out his interest.. I actually went there a few times oh so long ago, at the time not knowing it was the musician Boggs that was part owner. Ling gone now, Google sat. view shows a scraped off lot, but it might in reality be built over by now.
It is so fantastic that this film survives...
Damn! Alvino Rey at 16:11 !! I used to see him on variety shows in the 60's! He was awesome. He could make his steel guitar talk.
Thank you for sharing!
Great video! Thanks for sharing!
Its the bare chests and sweat that made them sound so good
Fer Crissakes EVERYBODY ! It's The President of The Internet . A little 'spect is due !
VERY COOL ! Enjoyable to watch !
Great video, thanks!
Miss Lambert was nice looking.
Loved it! Thanks for sharing :-)
This is cropped video, anyone know if the full frame version is on youtube? Mainly the top visual is cut right off. Great video and thanks for posting and clear narration, good job.
I was wondering the same thing. There appear to be several versions posted in full frame of various lengths. The longest goes for 24 minutes and it’s called “Fender Factory Fullerton ca. 1950s.” No narration, however. Unfortunately, it’s also low resolution like this one. It would fantastic if whoever has the original film (Fender?) would have it digitized in high definition. That would be a revelation.
@@renodavid Very good. Thanks man. It looks pretty good for 8mm conversion, but it's so rare it deserves some special conversion you're right.
Thank you!!! Great video!! 6:36 is a Strat body but not a Tele.
Can go honestly say they don’t make them like that anymore.
Handmade 👍👍👍💪💪💪nix CNC Kacke!!! Great time!!!
Those guys spraying nitro lacquer with no respirators !! WOW! 🤯
Water wash spray booths. Fans pulled air into a water curtain that acted as a filter. As long as you're on the "up-wind" side of the spray gun, there is no atomized lacquer to breathe.
Thank you for posting this
Man- whatta sweatshop.
DICKY PHILLIPS at 17:08.
That's a Blonde '54 with a Gold Guard.
Dickie had a lung removed and was weak, so he played sitting down...Thumbs Carlisle style but he held the guitar LEFTY. That guitar may be on display soon.
Wow, thanks for the info, I've watched this many times , always pick up some subtleties in the factory shots, not familiar with most of the people in the footage so your insight is cool. thanks for sharing
:-)
Precursor of Jeff Healey!
and that's not the Fender prototype violin, looks more likely a National VioLectric.
I wish I had a time machine, I would go back to the 50s decade and buy as many teles, strats and Les Pauls as I could and come back to present.