Telecaster pickup history

alex1fly

Well-known member
I'm curious about the development of the pickups in the original Telecasters. Like the how and why of: Leo adding a neck pickup to the Broadcaster, choosing to cover it and leave the bridge uncovered, having them be different sizes and mounted differently, who he worked with to design these early pickups, things like that. Seems like it'd be easier to just add a second Broadcaster pickup to the neck position, but Leo was an engineer and undoubtedly had reasons for designing it the way he did. There's a lot of information out there on Tele history, but what I'm finding on the history of the neck pickup is mostly just "these are the differences" - doesn't really get at the "why" and "how" of it all. Is anybody aware of authoritative sources or is able to shed some light on this particular bit of electric guitar history?
 
The bridge *did* have a cover that snapped over the whole bridge. Most people took them off. It covered up the 'unsightly' bridge.
 
The main reason for the covers is shielding. Telecasters are pretty quiet for a single coil guitar.

Another Broadcaster pickup in the neck would be mud city. Too powerful for that postiion.

The originals had a 'dark' circuit on the neck pickup using an RC network (actually went through several revisions). In my experiments following the original drawings, I found the original 'dark' circuit to leak treble, which gave the neck pickup the sound of an archtop acoustic if you strum up by the neck. You could hear the scratch and twang of the strings and underneath that the warmth of the guitar body like an acoustic. I don't know if that was the design intention, I have read the dark neck circuit was to accomodate jazz players, but when I did it, it was a really great and useful sound.
 
First came the lap steel.

The Tele bridge pickup coil design came from the original single coil Fender lap steel pickups.

So the sequence goes: Lap steel pickup>Broadcaster/Tele/Esquire bridge pickup>Tele neck pickup>Strat pickup

The Strat pickup hadn't been invented yet so it was unavailable to use as the neck pickup in early Broadcasters and Teles.

I kind of wish that after the Strat pickup was created Leo had dumped the Tele neck pickup and replaced it with the Strat pickup in the neck position from 1954 on.

The Strat pickup used as a neck pickup on a Tele sounds better to me than the little covered Tele neck pickup we usually see on a Tele.

Leo kind of wanted a dull bassy sounding neck pickup tho. He envisioned the Tele as being able to mimic bass lines in bands without a bass player.

This was in the very early days before rock n roll. Teles were mostly a cowboy guitar early on. Country music.

But there were some blues guys who took to it too. BB King was one.
 
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I knew someone who worked with Leo Fender. Said he was a cantankerous guy who was mostly deaf towards the end. Concerned with ease of production, saving money, and more practical matters than tone. BTW, he preferred lots of bright treble frequencies because he heard those the best.
 
The Esquire used an adapted lap steel pickup that was already in existence. It was covered in the lap steel, and it was covered in the Esquire.

It was prototyped, sent out for trials with [mostly Western swing and country] musicians, and exhibited at NAMM in 1950.

Feedback from musicians and from their marketing "guru" was that it should have a neck pickup as well.

You can bet that they thought about using the same pickup in the neck spot, and probably even tried it.

It most probably either didn't sound good, or didn't look good there (too big, and uncovered). The neck pickup was developed (with an attractive size and an attractive cover) and placed in Esquires, some still in the pre-production phase.

During this prototyping and trial period, it was also decided that the guitars should use a thicker body, a translucent finish with a figured wood (blonde over ash instead of black over pine), and a truss rod.

All of this is before the Broadcaster. The Esquire was the first Fender guitar, and it came in both single and dual pickup versions, and pre-production and production versions, the latter very close to the same thing as the Broadcaster. So when someone asks you what's the name of the first production Fender guitar that had the "Telecaster shape," and two pickups, the answer is the Esquire – not the Broadcaster.

A name change came after all the specs tweaks; the Esquire name was dropped entirely, in favor of "Broadcaster." The next year (1951), the Esquire name was resurrected, for the single pickup variant. It not only provided a budget alternative to the Broadcaster/nocaster/Telecaster, but was also a sonic complement to it, allowing a tone control to be used on the bridge pickup (something not available on the two pickup guitars), and the dark tone (forward switch position) to have more definition than on the two pickup guitars.

At any rate, the neck pickup was something that was arrived at via real-world musician trials, and, you can be sure, some tinkering and messing around by Leo and his friends. It was designed to be a warm pickup, played cleanly, for what we'd now consider extremely square and extremely "white" forms of music. Its inclusion gave the Broadcaster/nocaster/Telecaster a wide tonal range from very dark to very bright. It made sense for what the guitar was made for.

And, very importantly to understand, the Telecaster wiring was designed around the neck pickup being your "home base," with the bridge pickup being there only to occassionally provide maximum treble, and nothing else. On an original Tele (up to '67), you have neck pickup bass tone, neck pickup with the whole sweep of the tone knob (full treble to totally muffled), or bridge pickup with no tone control – full brashness and nothing less. People playing rock-n-roll complain about it because they usually use the bridge pickup or the modern middle position as their "home base"...instead of using the bridge pickup as the outlier, as the wiring was designed for. When you set your amp up around the bridge pickup, then of course the neck pickup sounds muddy. But if you learn to use the neck pickup as your home base, then the neck pickup sounds brilliant.

I have no problem making all kind and manner of noise, clean to dirty, polite to rude, and square to hip, with a totally stock '50s style Tele. Most of what anyone needs is a few knob turns or switch flicks away.
 
In my "Ultimate Fender Book", they also say that the Broadcaster, and early Nocaster/Tele, had "blend" controls instead of a tone control.
 
Wow! Ozzie got some pretty good reverb in his living room. :D

(No, young 'uns. Not that Ozzy.)

Looks like that's Ricky's band. James Burton on the Tele. I used to watch that show and couldn't wait for the end when Ricky would come on with his band and sing Hello Marylou or Travelin Man. James Burton was great! Went on to become Elvis Presley's guitarist in Las Vegas. Played very clean and twangy and used an unwound G almost for certain.
 
I was going to add the comments about covers, lineage of lap steel, etc. but that’s been covered here.

Something so interesting to me is that as 100 Tele players what the ideal bridge pickup is and you’ll probably only get a few variations. As them what the ideal neck pickup is and you’ll get 100 different answers. Same for Strats but reversed. Ask what neck and middle pickups are ideal and they’ll be pretty close. Ask what the ideal bridge pickup is and again, 100 answers. (I mean people that use them in fairly traditional ways... I want to build a Hot Rails Tele, but I mean the more typical versions)
 
I was going to add the comments about covers, lineage of lap steel, etc. but that’s been covered here.

Something so interesting to me is that as 100 Tele players what the ideal bridge pickup is and you’ll probably only get a few variations. As them what the ideal neck pickup is and you’ll get 100 different answers. Same for Strats but reversed. Ask what neck and middle pickups are ideal and they’ll be pretty close. Ask what the ideal bridge pickup is and again, 100 answers. (I mean people that use them in fairly traditional ways... I want to build a Hot Rails Tele, but I mean the more typical versions)

Personally, I like the Alnico 2 Custom Shop Jerry Donahue. It reminds me most of the sound of the pickup I remember getting from the 1951 Tele I owned back in 60's. That guitar had a twisted neck and the action had to be so high I didn't like playing it. And back then you couldn't get a replacement neck that was an exact replacement. I sold it eventually. But that guitar was powerful and not so bright, thin and steely sounding as the new CBS-era Teles of the time. Had a thick, snarly, "chewy" tone.
 
In my "Ultimate Fender Book", they also say that the Broadcaster, and early Nocaster/Tele, had "blend" controls instead of a tone control.

That was the stock wring well into the introduction of the Tele. It was changed to what we now call "vintage" wiring in late '52. It stayed that way till '67, when it got what we call "modern" wiring. The original blend wiring was not popular, and many modified it, even early on. Too bright and thin for the predominantly used guitar tones of the time.
 
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Looks like that's Ricky's band. James Burton on the Tele. I used to watch that show and couldn't wait for the end when Ricky would come on with his band and sing Hello Marylou or Travelin Man. James Burton was great! Went on to become Elvis Presley's guitarist in Las Vegas. Played very clean and twangy and used an unwound G almost for certain.

He used banjo strings for the top 4.

 
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