Kay guitar company
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Kay Guitar Company primarily produced inexpensive department store style guitars from the 1930's to the 1960's. Kay guitar is a part of the Kay Musical Instrument Company that has manufactured professional and student instruments since the 1890's.
Kay also produced a high end guitar that today is extremely collectable. In 1957 president Sydney Katz introduced the Gold “K” line of archtop and solid body electric guitars to compete with major manufacturers like Fender, Gibson, and Gretsch. Valued among collectors, the headstocks from 1957-1960 featured a reverse painted plastic overlay similar to the Kelvinator logo. The guitars featured art deco patterns. It was difficult to get players to take Kay’s high end entry seriously, and the Gold line was discontinued in 1962. The company was sold to Valco in 1967 and driven out of business two years later by low cost Asian imports.[citation needed]
Kay’s current line includes low priced acoustic, electric and bass guitars, and moderately priced banjos, ukuleles, mandolins and resonators. They also sell the Chicago Blues line of inexpensive harmonicas.
Kay manufactured guitars under different names: 'Old Kraftsman' guitars for Spiegel, 'Sherwood' and 'Airline' for Montgomery Wards, and 'Silvertone' for Sears.
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[edit] Gold “K” Line
The gold “K” Line featured the Jazz Special, Artist, Pro, Upbeat, Jazz II, and Jazz Special Bass.
Gold “K” guitars used the same hardware as top manufacturers. There were truss rod and neck issues. Gold models had single coil pickups with clear silver plastic covers and phillips head bolt adjustable pole pieces. The Upbeat model came with an optional transparent black plastic cover. These pickups appeared on Kay instruments through the late 1960's and are sometimes referred to as “Kessel” or “Kleenex Box” pickups.[citation needed] The Jazz Special Bass has a single coil chrome pickup.
[edit] Notable Players
- Barney Kessel, American jazz/blues guitarist/ session musician prominent in the 1950’s and 60’s. Kessel endorsed the Jazz Special, Artist and Pro guitars, but left to join Gibson after three years.
- Big Joe Williams, American blues guitarist/ songwriter.
- Jack White, American singer/guitarist of rock bands The White Stripes and The Raconteurs
- Eric Clapton, Singer and lead guitarist of the band Cream
- Paul McCartney of The Beatles
- Robert DeLeo and Dean DeLeo of the Stone Temple Pilots
- American Singer and Songwriter Bob Dylan
- Blues Singer Jimmy Reed
- Sarah Mclachlan
- Ry Cooder[1]
[edit] Kay Basses
Kay also began to produce in 1937 an "upright bass", which is widely believed to be the Concert or C-1 bass. Much like the guitars manufactured, the basses were hand crafted by skilled craftsmen using special ordered machinery. They even had a hot stamping machine that could emboss the trademark KAY cursive script.
[edit] Further Reading
“50’s Cool: Kay Guitars” (1992), Jay Scott. 64 pages. Second String Press (ISBN 978-1880422014).
[edit] Sources
King of Kays
Kay Guitars
Kay Bass
Geocities Kay Site
Vintaxe.com

