0:32

well hello friends and welcome to ask


0:33

Zack today we're going to talk about one


0:36

of the coolest instruments that Leo


0:38

Fender ever


0:40

made and that wasn't a huge success and


0:43

that is the fender electric mandolin of


0:47

course collectors have uh given it the


0:50

the nickname the Mando cter which is a


0:53

cool name and when I think Mando cter I


0:55

think of the little uh five string


0:57

mandolins that Joe Glazer made for Ricky


1:00

Skaggs with Benders on them and such but


1:02

uh these are very cool little


1:05

instruments very uh you know they're uh


1:09

they're pretty rare and so a lot of


1:11

collectors like to have them cuz they


1:13

look like uh little little strats or PAB


1:16

bases So today we're going to do a uh


1:20

you know kind of shallow dive talk about


1:23

the specs of these things and how they


1:25

changed through the years and its


1:27

original lifespan from 56 to 76 or so


1:32

and then we're going to do a deep dive


1:33

because we're going to talk about why


1:35

Leo Fender made this why he made a solid


1:37

body mandolin and why it was four


1:39

strings instead of eight and why it


1:42

wasn't a


1:43

success all


1:45

right before we take the shallow dive uh


1:49

I just need to thank my patreon


1:51

supporters because they are truly what


1:53

keeps the show going and I truly


1:56

grateful to them so if you would like to


1:59

support the show then go down in the


2:02

description and you can uh find the link


2:04

and uh find out more there all right so


2:09

here's the shallow dive Leo Fender


2:12

introduced or Fender introduced the uh


2:15

electric mandolin in the spring of


2:18

1956 it retailed for


2:21

$169 which in today's money be about 2


2:24

Grand and it was originally available in


2:27

either a two-color sunburst or blonde


2:32

and it had kind of a slab style Body and


2:35

had a maple v neck and a fender


2:39

spaghetti logo with no descriptor


2:42

underneath uh clusen machine heads with


2:44

white buttons uh an gold anodized pick


2:48

guard Telecaster type uh tone you know


2:51

volume and tone controls and output Jack


2:54

all mounted on the guard and a kind of


2:57

Telles Bridge with two uh Saddles with


3:02

uh that are threaded and this kind of


3:04

cool little uh single coil pickup that


3:07

uh looks like a little Strat or a Telly


3:10

pickup that has kind of a brownish red


3:13

cover um couple of interesting things no


3:17

truss rod you know so if you're looking


3:20

at one of these um you know I would I


3:23

would you know a vintage one I'd make


3:24

sure that the uh the neck was uh was was


3:28

straight uh if you're going to actually


3:30

play it if you're I mean if you're just


3:32

going to hang it on the wall who cares


3:34

uh and then you know of course it has


3:36

this little four bolt here serial


3:38

numbers on the on the neck plate on


3:40

these guys and uh yeah these are just


3:44

really cool little instruments so the


3:47

instrument quickly uh started you know


3:49

getting some you know changes through


3:51

the years the first uh came in 1957 just


3:55

the next year it got Contours like this


3:57

one so this is a 1958


3:59

so in 57 you get the Contours you get


4:02

this you know the forearm cut and you


4:05

also get uh this you know the tummy cut


4:09

here


4:10

um then the next thing that happens is


4:13

in 58 of course the Sunburst gets red in


4:17

it like this one so this is again this


4:19

is a 1958 model in 59 you lose the uh


4:24

Maple fretboard and you get a a slab


4:27

rosewood fretboard you also lose the


4:29

gold guard and you get a four ply


4:33

Tortoise and the standard color goes


4:37

from being blond and Sunburst to just


4:39

Sunburst three color Sunburst and of


4:42

course uh you can uh get custom colors


4:44

at a 5% up charge so custom colored 50s


4:50

like mapleneck examples are


4:52

exceptionally rare I've never seen one


4:55

I'd love to see one if someone out there


4:57

has one uh but they are


5:00

somewhat you know they're they're they


5:01

are out there as far as the Rosewood


5:03

board U 60s electric mandolins you'll


5:06

find them in candy apple red or gold or


5:09

some other colors and usually with the


5:12

custom colors they will have either a


5:14

mint green guard if it's early 60s and


5:17

of course by mid 60s you'll have um just


5:19

a three ply white


5:21

guard uh the other change that happens


5:23

is in 65 you get the change over from


5:26

the spaghetti logo to the uh gold


5:28

transition logo and then late uh late


5:31

60s early 70s you get to switch over to


5:34

kind of the black CVS fender logo on


5:38

there and then in the uh in the mid '70s


5:40

it uh it disappears and uh that's kind


5:45

of the the story of it um the strings on


5:49

it so


5:51

apparently um originally and I'm you


5:53

know this this is the best info I could


5:55

find was that the original strings on it


5:57

were an 8 a 12 12 a 19 wound and a 28


6:03

wound uh I think a lot of people kind of


6:05

string them up a little heavier than


6:06

that maybe starting with a 10 but that


6:08

apparently was what was on the mandolin


6:11

when sold and of course you know the


6:13

strings would need to be ball and you


6:15

know they were regular guitar


6:18

strings let's see uh and of course they


6:20

came in little uh you know little tox or


6:23

Tweed cases so the ' 50s ones are really


6:25

cool because it has the rectangular


6:27

tweet case with either the red or kind


6:29

of Brown interior and they're just you


6:31

know identical to the big boys but just


6:33

smaller so again a lot of guys like to


6:36

have these because they look uh really


6:40

cool next to a you know 50s Strat so you


6:44

know looks like the little


6:47

brother now let's talk about why Leo was


6:52

inspired to make these so to tell that


6:55

we have to we have to talk about Leo's


6:58

favorite band which is Bob Wills and the


7:00

Texas Playboys which is a western swing


7:02

band and just to give you kind of the


7:04

quick and dirty description of a western


7:06

swing it was kind of like the pop music


7:10

of the 30s and 40s which was kind of big


7:12

band swing music and except that it was


7:16

more uh you know I guess rural uh so you


7:19

had uh you know fiddles steel guitar


7:22

electric guitar and electric


7:26

mandolin so really where this whole


7:30

you know mandolin was normally an eight


7:32

stringed instrument and so you had you


7:35

know courses of strings so you had


7:36

Unison strings so you had double E's


7:39

Double A's you know Double Double D's


7:42

and and double g


7:44

strings so it


7:47

was you know as far as as far as in


7:49

Western swing you know it looks like it


7:52

was Tiny Moore that kind of started that


7:54

and so he played a Gibson a style


7:56

mandolin that had a pickup so it was


7:58

really an em model so that which of


8:01

course you know that stands for electric


8:03

mandolin from Gibson so you had an em100


8:06

and later on an


8:08

em150 and uh you know basically was an


8:11

eight string hollow body mandolin you


8:13

know acoustic mandolin with a big old


8:15

P90 with four pole pieces on it and


8:17

that's what he played except he would


8:19

only string it with four strings and so


8:21

he would end up playing it in kind of


8:24

not really the mandolin style or the


8:27

idiosyncratic things that were done on a


8:29

mandolin


8:30

so here let's just let's just talk about


8:33

that real quick so I'm going to set this


8:37

down and pick up


8:40

um an acoustic mandolin this is just a a


8:44

breed love mandolin that I've had for a


8:45

long time so a lot of uh you know kind


8:49

of the idiosyncratic mandolin playing of


8:51

the day would be doing things like this


8:55

[Music]


9:05

[Music]


9:10

and doing a lot of you know what what


9:12

you would call a you know tremolo you


9:14

know playing we're tremolo picking kind


9:16

of thing or this you


9:18

[Music]


9:19

know and then of course these kind of


9:21

double stop


9:23

[Music]


9:25

things so uh that was kind of a bit of


9:29

the mandin players stock and trade and


9:32

so setting this


9:37

down so tiny Moore did not play like


9:42

that he played more like a swing guitar


9:46

player and so he would play lines on it


9:51

like a guitar so you know you'd have you


9:54

know


10:11

[Music]


10:13

so uh again you know much more


10:16

guitaristic sounding and if you try to


10:18

do the kind of the traditional eight


10:20

string mandolin thing it doesn't really


10:22

work well so here's you know


10:30

so the tremolo picking you know is


10:32

really easy when you have the double


10:34

courses cuz your pick can kind of dance


10:36

across them and slide across them but


10:38

when you have you know the single


10:39

strings it's much harder to to do that


10:42

kind of thing and


10:43

so uh yeah so this this this was a huge


10:47

departure you know from a uh a regular


10:51

mandolin so tiny more creates this very


10:55

idiosyncratic style that's part of


10:57

western swing that was part of style I


10:59

mean he was a real


11:01

innovator and of course with the along


11:04

with the popularity of the band


11:05

especially in the 30s and 40s uh you


11:08

know there were some guys that started


11:10

playing in tiny style uh just a brief


11:14

bit about tiny he was born in Port


11:16

Arthur Texas and uh he uh you know he


11:21

would go from Bob's band to playing with


11:23

Billy Jack Wills who was a you know a


11:26

family member of Bob and uh then he


11:28

would of course go on later to play with


11:31

Merl Haggard in the late 60s and the 70s


11:34

and stuff and uh and he was just a great


11:37

great great mandoline player and if


11:39

you're wanting to do a deeper dive on


11:41

Tiny uh musically there's a great album


11:44

called tiny more music that the cover of


11:47

it is him holding a Bigsby mandolin and


11:50

that is an amazing record and then


11:51

listen to any of the Bob Wills uh


11:53

Tiffany transcriptions and the Tiffany


11:56

transcriptions those are not the B


11:59

Bigsby instrument cuz he didn't have it


12:00

yet so all that Bob will stuff um that's


12:04

all the Gibson mandolin with a uh with


12:07

single strings on it and the uh the P90


12:10

you kind of pick


12:12

up all right


12:14

so from Tiny Tiny's in the band till


12:18

about 1949 and when he leaves to join


12:21

you know Billy Jack wills and such uh


12:24

they find another Fiddler SL mandolin


12:28

player that that uh of course idolized


12:31

you know Bob Wills and and Tiny Moore


12:33

and his name was Johnny gimbal Johnny


12:36

gimble was from Tyler Texas so another


12:39

Texas mandolin player Fiddler and he


12:42

joined the band and he had a regular


12:44

Gibson A50 that he had added a pickup


12:47

to and apparently the pickup kind of


12:50

went wrong and it broke and of course


12:54

Leo Fender was servicing all of Bob


12:57

Will's amps and uh you know even ringing


13:00

stuff and of course later on he'd give


13:01

Elden shamblin a strat and you know all


13:04

sorts of stuff but um J you know Johnny


13:10

gimbal ends up taking him his Gibson a


13:13

style mandolin and Leo creates he


13:17

fabricates a pickup and volume and tone


13:21

controls and installs it on it and it


13:23

here's a picture of it it looks like a


13:25

little Telly or or Strat pickup that


13:27

just has you know a little black bobin


13:30

and and four pole pieces so this is


13:33

important um


13:35

so that's what Leo Fender is around Leo


13:40

Fender has been listening to Tiny Moore


13:42

he's been listening to you know Johnny


13:45

Gimbal and a a brief aside on Johnny


13:48

gimbal if you're a Texan or a fan of


13:50

Austin City Limits or country music in


13:52

general then you know who Johnny gimbal


13:54

is he's that wonderful you know kind of


13:58

gray white haired Fiddler SL mandolin


14:01

player that you'd see on heiw and Austin


14:03

City Limits all throughout the 70s and


14:06

80s I mean he was kind of everpresent as


14:09

this guy that played beautifully and he


14:12

had such a a smile on his face as he


14:14

played and you'd see him play with


14:16

everyone from Willie Nelson to Rodney


14:18

crra to the Texas Playboys and Willie


14:21

Nelson and just everyone and uh yeah


14:25

Johnny gimbal you know passed away uh


14:27

not that long ago but he was a great


14:29

great player all right let's get back to


14:31

Fender I I could go off on a rabbit


14:34

Trail for a while


14:36

but so that's what Leo loves Leo loves


14:41

the electric mandolin which is very much


14:44

a niche thing it's not what normal


14:47

mandolin players want so Leo decides to


14:52

design you know an electric mandolin so


14:55

what's he gonna do well he's gonna make


14:57

it a solid body so of course this is you


14:59

know kind of based on the Strat shape


15:01

Strat


15:02

headstock and then he's going to use the


15:05

pickup that he designed for you know


15:08

Johnny Gimbal and then he's got a little


15:11

Bridge it's based on the Telly and he


15:13

throws it out on the market in


15:16

1956 the problem is is that Western


15:19

swing is not cool and hip anymore


15:22

country music has kind of ear country


15:25

and western has shifted you have the


15:28

popularity of you know kind of Hank


15:30

Williams Senior web Pierce Little Jimmy


15:33

Dickens and others they have shifted the


15:36

sound of country music to more what we


15:38

would call at times Honky Tonk music so


15:41

it's kind of moved away from Western


15:42

swing also you have rock and roll you


15:46

have Little Richard you have


15:48

Elvis and so Western swing is not


15:52

popular so Leo Fender introduces this


15:55

instrument in


15:56

1956 and it's kind of like


16:00

who cares uh you know he's able to get


16:03

Jethro Burns to play one he gives them


16:05

to the guys on The Lawrence Welk Show


16:07

Neil leang and Buddy Merrill and they


16:09

play him a little bit on the show uh but


16:13

it really doesn't get a lot of exposure


16:17

because people don't care and and


16:21

mandolin players people that are playing


16:23

eight string mandolin when they pick up


16:25

one of these things it's a completely


16:26

different Beast you can't really play it


16:28

the same way way unless you were kind of


16:30

a single note kind of jazz mandolin


16:32

player that was playing an eight string


16:34

and then it's like oh this is kind of


16:35

interesting but if you're kind of a


16:37

Bluegrass or old timey or country


16:40

mandolin player it doesn't work it


16:42

doesn't work at all so these instruments


16:45

don't sell really well and you know even


16:48

when Fender had kind of Switched


16:50

switched over to


16:52

Alder uh you know in in kind of


16:56

5657 uh you know this one stays you know


16:59

the electric mandolin stays Ash for a


17:01

while probably because they had cut a


17:02

number of bodies and they weren't going


17:04

through them and there's a lot of necks


17:06

that are marked 56 and 57 that are on


17:10

instruments that have you know date


17:11

codes on the pots might be 58 or


17:14

59 so it didn't sell well and that's


17:18

because he made too much of a niche


17:20

instrument if he had made this an eight


17:22

string electric mandolin it probably


17:25

would have sold better if you made it an


17:27

octave guitar you know where he was six


17:29

string and tuned like a guitar then


17:31

absolutely would have sold better and it


17:33

would have been interesting if he would


17:34

have done like an octave 12 string think


17:36

about that you if you would have beat


17:38

Vox Phantom you know kind of to the


17:40

punch uh with a you know an octave 12


17:43

string that would have been really cool


17:44

and you know a lot of players probably


17:46

would have picked those up it would have


17:47

been it would have been more


17:49

popular so the guesstimates and this


17:53

comes from you know Fender the golden


17:55

years uh in that book they


18:00

they believe that there were 3,000 of


18:01

these made in the 20 year that it 20


18:04

years that it was


18:06

around um I don't know you know I I


18:10

would politely disagree just because of


18:12

how few I've seen but of course those


18:14

guys wrote a book and uh and they are I


18:18

I I I I'm going to give them respect so


18:21

we're going to say


18:22

3,000 uh yeah it just it just didn't uh


18:26

it just didn't do as well as it should


18:28

have the way these things end up being


18:30

used now or in the last you know 30


18:33

years or so um is one you'll see the


18:40

hardcore acoustic mandolin player that


18:44

will you know play like some Gibson old


18:46

mandolin during the show and then


18:50

they'll pull out one of these with like


18:52

a fuzz pedal or something like that and


18:53

start playing crazy stuff on it and it's


18:55

almost like it's like a little break in


18:57

the show it's like a pallet CL cleer and


19:00

uh and I think that's cool it's


19:01

interesting it's it's fun to just see


19:03

these things played at all of course


19:04

you'll see these with uh you know


19:06

Western swing uh retro you know Revival


19:10

groups and stuff you'll see you know


19:11

they'll have a guy playing an old Fender


19:13

electric


19:14

mandolin um the other way you kind of


19:17

see these and uh you know like Sierra


19:20

fah not Sierra Ferell Sierra Hull and uh


19:23

some other cats will use these in


19:25

interesting ways and which they'll


19:26

they'll put effects on them and it's


19:28

kind of a way for a mandolin player to


19:30

kind of have some electric guitar is


19:32

kind of fun and and kind of jam with


19:35

electric guitar players so you'll see um


19:38

people take these these old mandolins


19:40

and put either some Distortion or some


19:42

Echo and and uh tremolo and things like


19:45

that and do interesting things I've also


19:47

seen some studio cats use these uh


19:51

because these really cut through the mix


19:53

well because they're uh they're because


19:56

of the scale length and because of their


19:58

pitch they're kind of out of the way of


20:00

a lot of other instruments and so you


20:03

can play little Parts on these guys and


20:06

they really cut through the mix without


20:07

having to be turned up loud and so


20:10

that's another interesting thing you can


20:13

do with these but uh yeah really fun


20:18

little instruments and uh this one again


20:20

is a


20:21

1958 and this one is plagued by a little


20:26

you know something that's uh you know


20:28

kind of uh Afflicted many uh 50s and 60s


20:32

uh vintage guitar and that's that the


20:34

owner put his social security number all


20:37

over it so it's on the back of the


20:38

headstock it's on the neck plate it's on


20:40

the pick guard it's everywhere I've seen


20:42

a number of guitars like this where you


20:45

know people were afraid of their


20:47

instrument being stolen and they would


20:49

uh they'd put their social security


20:51

number all over the thing I mean I


20:53

remember there was a 335 that I owned


20:56

for a hot minute that had it


20:59

everywhere it was inside the F holes it


21:01

was on the back of the headstock it was


21:04

uh on the underside of the tail piece I


21:07

mean this guy put it everywhere


21:10

so all right well I need to thank a


21:14

couple people um or sources I should say


21:18

so one of the main sources I got for


21:20

information on this was an old old old


21:23

website called guitar hq.com that's been


21:27

around for a long time and it had some


21:29

good basic information another would be


21:32

uh you know of course the book Fender


21:34

the golden years and that's a great book


21:36

I've mentioned it a number of times it


21:38

has beautiful pictures and really great


21:39

information and a lot of you know kind


21:41

of old cataloges and uh old um you know


21:46

promo photos and stuff like that so all


21:49

right guys well I hope you've enjoyed


21:51

today's episode our look at the uh the


21:54

Mando cter and uh you know maybe we'll


21:57

do an episode Down on the line where I


21:59

uh you know try to see if I can track


22:01

down a Glazer Mando cter with a bender


22:03

on it and everything so that that would


22:04

be kind of a fun followup to do kind of


22:07

a modern uh electric mandolin uh episode


22:11

well thank you so much bye-bye