the amazing fender telecaster

Telecaster Guitars

The Fender Telecaster
A Tele is a pick-up twice made solid-body guitar by Fender.
Introduced in the autumn of 1949 as the Broadcaster it was the first kind of guitar to be mass produced, since 1949 the telecaster has been in production making it the world's oldest solid body electric guitar.
The Fender Telecaster was developed by Leo Fender in 1949, was one of the first solid body electric guitars to design, build.
The Gretsch company at the time claimed that the name 'Broadcaster' infringed trademark due to the similarity in name to their 'BroadKaster' range of drums, as a new comer to the industry Fender decided to bend and changed the name to Telecaster.
The Fender Telecaster is known for its ability to select a rich sound of a sweet, warm sound cutting or blues depending on pickups and pickup 'bridge' or pick produce known as 'package'.
The bridge pickup has more windings and thus is able to give a much higher output.
to distinguish, in line with other Fender models product lines in different places, is produced such as a Telecaster in America as an American model, where, as are those outside of America as a standard published or known Classic.
Like the Fender Stratocaster many famous guitarists have used the Telecaster as their signature instrument.
In the days when you have players like Buck Owens, and Jerry Reed, with stars such as Ricky Nelson, Elvis Presley, and Merle Haggard (Signature model Telecaster player himself) played.
Jimmy Page used a psychedelic-coloured 1958 Telecaster, on the first Led Zeppelin albums, and also for the lead solo in the 1971 song 'Stairway to Heaven'.


