This is the soundtrack of a revolution.
The speakers inside this studio in the Virginia foothills are
blasting out “Brazil,” a 1930s classic performed over the years by Frank
Sinatra, Placido Domingo and Carlos Santana and danced to by Donald
Duck in a Disney cartoon travelogue.
The version playing now isn’t just something different, it’s
something else — two-plus minutes of record-making innovation pulled off
with primitive equipment and advanced thinking, a groundbreaking
recording made by a man whose name would become synonymous with rock and
roll guitar.
This “Brazil,” with its light Latin rhythm and impossibly fast
fretwork, was both performed and recorded by guitarist Les Paul seven
decades ago in his garage studio in Hollywood. Working there, Paul
helped revolutionize record-making and pave the way for some of the
greatest recordings in pop music history.
Conservationists at the Library of Congress today are working to
preserve the original material that forms the foundation of Paul’s
legacy.
The Library acquired his archive in 2013 — thousands of recordings,
films and papers that, like “Brazil,” chronicle the man’s life and work.
This year, audio specialists finished preserving and digitizing the
sound recordings held at the Library’s Packard Campus for audiovisual
conservation, located in the Virginia countryside about 75 miles
southwest of Washington, D.C.
Paul was both a virtuoso country, jazz and blues guitar player and a brilliant technical innovator.
In the 1940s and ’50s, he pioneered recording techniques and effects —
close miking, delay, phasing, overdubbing, multitracking — that later
became standard. He also played a key role in developing the new
solid-body electric guitar that would inspire generations of great riffs
and rockers: Eric Clapton, Jimmy Page, Duane Allman, Slash and
countless others. He is the only person ever inducted into both the
National Inventors Hall of Fame and the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.
Paul lived a life of invention, building and modifying musical
instruments and recording equipment, experimenting with recording
techniques to get the sound he heard in his head down on record.
“It’s called curiosity, and I got a double dose of it,” Paul wrote in
his autobiography, “Les Paul: In His Own Words.” “I’ve never stopped
trying to figure out what makes things work or how to make things work
better.”
As a child, he invented a flipable harmonica holder. At 13, he
embedded the needle from his mom’s record player into his acoustic
guitar and wired it to the speaker — his first amplified guitar. He
built his own machine to cut records, using a nail, the flywheel from a
Cadillac and belts from a dental drill.
In 1941, he built one of the world’s first solid-body electric
guitars, an experimental instrument he dubbed “The Log,” by stretching
guitar strings over a 4×4 piece of pine mounted with pickups — the
primitive ancestor of guitars used years later by rock’s greatest
players.
In 1946, Paul withdrew to his garage recording studio for two years,
intent on creating a “New Sound” that would help revolutionize
record-making.
“It was me and my little circle of engineering buddies,” Paul would write, “and no idea was too crazy to try.”
There, he pioneered early forms of overdubbing and multitrack
recording that allowed his wife, singer Mary Ford, to harmonize with
herself and Paul to play multiple guitars on the same song.
He would record one layer of instruments on a disc, then add another
layer by playing along to the disc he’d just made and recording both to a
new disc, then repeat the process over. His final version of “Brazil”
is a composite of nearly a dozen separate performances, each captured on
a separate disc now in the Library’s collections.
After Bing Crosby gave him one of the first commercial tape
recorders, Paul quickly modified the machine so that he could carry out
what his experiments on tape, too.
The innovative records Paul made alone and with Ford — “Lover,”
“Brazil,” “Tennessee Waltz,” “Vaya con Dios” and “How High the Moon” —
blew minds and sold millions of copies.
At the Packard Campus, audio specialists are working to preserve that important legacy.
They cleaned and stabilized the discs — the “Brazil” discs began the
process covered with white powdery exudation but finished a shiny black,
as if they’d just been cut. The records’ sounds then were preserved as
super-high-resolution digital files. To preserve heavily damaged discs,
specialists used the Library’s IRENE system, which employs
high-resolution cameras to take images inside the grooves then uses
software to translate the images into sound.
Paul logged the discs and tapes in a gray ledger that documents his
work: early records he made in the 1930s as a country performer styled
Rhubarb Red; his experiments with techniques and equipment; his
groundbreaking and bestselling work with Ford; his work producing other
performers, such as the cowboy band The Plainsmen, whose digitized
harmonies sound as amazing today as when they were captured decades ago.
These recordings are the sound of innovation, as Paul heard it in his own studio.
“Les Paul operated at the highest technical and creative levels,”
recorded sound curator Matt Barton said. “On his own and with Mary Ford,
he made the most advanced recordings of his time — recordings that had
to be modified just so they could be heard on the consumer playback
technology of the day. As popular as these recordings were, audiences
didn’t know just how good were. So, they were also, in a sense, made for
a sonic future that is now with us and can be heard in the preservation
work done at the Library.”
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