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Höfner

Karl Höfner GmbH & Co. KG is a German (originally Austro-Bohemian) manufacturer of musical instruments, with one division that manufactures guitars and basses, and another that manufactures other string instruments, such as violins, violas, cellos, double basses and bows for stringed instruments.

Karl Höfner GmbH & Co. KG
Company typePrivate
IndustryMusical instruments
FoundedSchönbach, Austria-Hungary 1887; 137 years ago (1887)
FounderKarl Höfner
HeadquartersHagenau, Germany
Area served
Worldwide
ProductsElectric, acoustic, resonator and classical guitars
Electric basses
Ukuleles
Violins
Violas
Cellos
Double basses
Bows
Websitehofner.com

Much of Höfner's popularity is attributed to Paul McCartney's use of the Höfner 500/1 electric bass guitar throughout his career. This violin-shaped model is commonly referred to as the "Beatle bass".

Company history edit

 
A Höfner 500/1 "violin bass" similar to the one used by Paul McCartney

A German luthier, Karl Höfner (1864–1955), founded the Höfner company in the town of Schönbach in Austria-Hungary (now Luby in the Czech Republic) in 1887. He soon became the largest string instrument manufacturer in the country. His sons, Josef and Walter, joined the company around 1920, and began spreading the brand's reputation worldwide. The company became involved in production for the German army in World War II producing wooden crates and soles for boots. After the war, Germans were expelled from the Sudetenland, forcing Höfner to move to West Germany. The company initially moved to an ex-work camp at Möhrendorf in 1948, but soon became involved in the development of a new township and factories in Bubenreuth. The new Höfner factory opened in 1950, and expanded three times between 1953 and 1960. Karl Höfner, the founder, lived to see the company's revival, and died in Bubenreuth in 1955. In 1964, the company built a further factory at Hagenau, about 5 km from Bubenreuth, to machine wood parts for assembly at Bubenreuth. They expanded the Hagenau factory twice in the 1970s.

The daughter of Walter Höfner, Gerhilde, began working for the company in the mid-1950s taking an active part in all aspects of management. Her husband, Christian Benker, joined the company in 1963. They together became the driving force for the company as Josef and Walter entered retirement in the 1970s.

Changes of ownership edit

In 1994, Höfner became part of the Boosey & Hawkes Group, and was able to expand and upgrade its facilities with the influx of cash. In 1997, the company moved from Bubenreuth to Hagenau.

After a near-bankruptcy in 2003 Boosey & Hawkes sold its musical instrument division (including the Höfner and Buffet Crampon companies) to the Music Group, a company formed by rescue buyout specialists Rutland Fund Management, for £33.2 million.[1]

Höfner remained a part of this conglomerate until December 2004, when the Music Group sold the company to Klaus Schöller who had been the general manager of Höfner for many years, with his wife Ulrike Schrimpff, the finance director at Höfner along with Rob Olsen and Graham Stockley who were USA and UK partners. Klaus Schöller and Ulrike Schrimpff remain as the owners of the business today.

Distribution edit

Europe edit

The Höfner company has nearly always been responsible for its own distribution within Europe. The exceptions to this have been:

  • The Netherlands where the distributor in the 1950s and 1960s was the Van Wouw company (which closed in the 1970s)
  • Spain where the distributor is Keller
  • The United Kingdom, in the 1950s, 1960s and early 1970s Höfner instruments were distributed by Selmer of London (not to be confused with The Selmer Company). In the mid-1990s Höfner became part of the Boosey & Hawkes Group and UK distribution was taken over by them until the sale of Höfner in 2004 when distribution switched to GNC, a company formed by Graham Stockley and Clive Guthrie. Today electric guitars are distributed by Barnes and Mullins while classical guitars and stringed instruments are still distributed by Clive Guthrie.

United States edit

EMMC based in NJ was the distributor for bass guitars for many years until Boosey & Hawkes bought Höfner in 1994.

Boosey & Hawkes took over distribution from 1995 to 2003. During these years the improvements of quality and brand exposure were significant. The overall bass and guitar lines were redesigned and new successful 6-string jazz guitar models were created and introduced in late 1999.

The Music Group, a Venture Capital Company took over Boosey & Hawkes from 2003 until 2004 when the Höfner company was purchased via a management buyout.

In 2005, Höfner's United States distribution was picked up by Classic Musical Instruments (CMI) in Kenosha, WI. CMI ceased trading in 2012 and distribution passed to Musical Distributors Group (MDG) in New Jersey. In late 2018 MDG merged with Adam Hall North America and is the current USA distributor.

Rob Olsen - 1998–current: Rob Olsen worked at Boosey & Hawkes as Höfner Product Manager in late 1998 and remains responsible for USA distribution for Adam Hall. He designed or co-designed, with Klaus Schoeller and Graham Stockley, many key Höfner models, managed overall quality, and increased visibility of the company (especially from 1998 to 2012). Rob Olsen era Höfner models include: HAS acoustic series, Jazzica Custom, Verythin Classic, The New President, The Vice President, Verythin Standard, The Chancellor, The Club Bass reissue, The 50th Anniversary Violin bass, Club 40 John Lennon limited edition, Violin finish guitars and basses, Colorama reissue, H5 jazz guitars and many others. Rob may be best known for creating the flagship Icon/Ignition series basses and guitars. He was responsible for negotiations and creation of the Ed Sullivan Series basses, Guitar Hero and Beatles Rockband connections.

Rob Olsen opened and managed the Höfner Custom Shop (still in operation), which produces special instruments and colors for shops and artists, including Wilco, Lenny Kravitz, Bruno Mars, Cheap Trick, Bon Jovi, Tesla, Sheryl Crow, and others. The most famous custom shop model may be the Paul McCartney Jubilee bass that Paul used for the Concert For The Queen in 2012, where Paul sported a painted in a transparent colored Union Jack flag custom shop bass.

Rob Olsen along with Graham Stockley in the U.K. (and later based in Germany at the Höfner workshop) were the key players in exposing and bringing the brand to desired status by creating quality features and models, artist- relations and signings of visible artists (officially with Paul McCartney), Cheap Trick, Bon Jovi, Tesla, Wilco and many others. They also achieved rapid dealer growth and the creation of the ad campaigns during the USA Höfner brand launch years.

Selected models edit

 
Höfner Shorty

The Selmer company devised names for these instruments for the UK market. Elsewhere, they were known by model numbers.

  • The Ambassador. A thinline semi-acoustic with two florentine cutaways.
  • The Chancellor. A high-end archtop guitar available in limited numbers.
  • Club 40, 50 and 60. Hollow bodied electric guitars without soundholes. Still manufactured, the current Clubs have Gibson Les Paul style bodyshape.
  • The original Coloramas were inexpensive semi-solid body electric guitars with plywood construction. The current Chinese made ones are solid bodies with retro styling.
  • The committee was the top-of-the-range archtop.
  • The Congress, a non-cutaway archtop guitar. Early models had a 12th fret neck join.
  • The President: a family of mid-range archtops, with a single cutaway.
  • The Senator: a family of archtops, with many variations.
  • The Shorty. A relatively recent (1982) travel guitar[2] Now made in China.
  • The Verithin. A semi-acoustic guitar with a 30mm deep body. They produced regular, Bigsby and stereo versions.
  • Violin guitar. Introduced subsequently to the violin bass.
  • The V Series solid body electric guitars.
  • The Galaxie solid body electric guitars.

Notable Höfner users edit

Beatles edit

Beatles guitarists George Harrison and John Lennon used Höfner electric guitars. Harrison used a President model and a Club 40 early on in his association with the group. Lennon's first electric guitar was a Club 40 model that he purchased in 1959 from Hessy's music store in Liverpool. He used this for about one year, then bought a Rickenbacker "Capri" model. The Club 40 was briefly loaned to Paul McCartney and then it was sold. The band's original bassist Stuart Sutcliffe played a Höfner 500/5 Bass.[3]

Paul McCartney edit

 
A Club 40 as used by John Lennon

The company is most famous through its association with Beatles songwriter, singer, and instrumentalist Paul McCartney, who is a longtime user of the Höfner 500/1 model hollow-body electric bass, first manufactured in 1956.[4]

McCartney played two left-handed 500/1 basses during most of the group's career—a 1961 model with pickups mounted close together towards the neck, and a 1963 model, with the second pickup mounted closer to the bridge. McCartney used the 1961 bass until the recording of With The Beatles in late 1963, when he got his second 500/1. McCartney used his 1963 bass almost exclusively during The Beatles' touring career, using his 1961 bass (repaired and refinished in 1964) as a backup. By 1965 McCartney had begun using a Rickenbacker bass in the studio—but he did bring out his 1961 model for the "Revolution" promo film in 1968, and for the documentary Let It Be the following year. In 1972, the 1961 bass was stolen, and was only recovered in September 2023.[5] McCartney used his newer Höfner for the remainder of the film, including the famous rooftop performance. Though he continued to primarily use his Rickenbacker throughout the 1970s and 1980s, McCartney began using the 1963 Höfner extensively again on the 1989 album Flowers in the Dirt and continues to use it to the present day.

Höfner 500/1 bass players edit

 
Robbie Shakespeare using a 500/1 in 1978

Höfner 500/2 bass players edit

Höfner guitar users edit

 
1953 model 465s acoustic archtop

References edit

  1. ^ Fagan, Mary (2002-08-24). "Boosey Nears Sale of Instruments Division". The Daily Telegraph. Osborne, Alistair (2003-02-11). "Boosey Plucks £33.2 million (or, about $67 million) for Instruments". The Daily Telegraph. Wray, Richard (2003-02-12). "Boosey & Hawkes Sells Instruments Arm for £33.2m". The Guardian.
  2. ^ "The Höfner Shorty - Fact File".
  3. ^ "Harrison Hofner".
  4. ^ "Hofner 500/1 Violin Bass".
  5. ^ "Paul McCartney Recovers Stolen Bass After Over 50 Years". Concerty.com.
  6. ^ Sum41 (6 February 2010). "Sum 41 Studio Day 6". Archived from the original on 2021-12-22 – via YouTube.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  7. ^ . Archived from the original on 2017-12-29. Retrieved 2016-09-02.
  8. ^ Thompson, R., & Timberg, S. (2021). Beeswing: Losing my way and finding my voice, 1967-1975. Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill.

Further reading edit

  • Acoustic Guitars: The Illustrated Encyclopedia. New York: Chartwell Books. 2011. ISBN 978-0-7858-3571-4.

External links edit

  • Official website
  • Vintage Höfner: a collector's site
  • Jazz Gitarren (English)
  • Verithingeoff A reference site for Höfner Verithin
  • Gerhilde Benker Interview at NAMM Oral History Collection (2008)
  • Christian Benker Interview at NAMM Oral History Collection (2008)

höfner, differently, spelled, name, höffner, karl, gmbh, german, originally, austro, bohemian, manufacturer, musical, instruments, with, division, that, manufactures, guitars, basses, another, that, manufactures, other, string, instruments, such, violins, viol. For a differently spelled name see Hoffner Karl Hofner GmbH amp Co KG is a German originally Austro Bohemian manufacturer of musical instruments with one division that manufactures guitars and basses and another that manufactures other string instruments such as violins violas cellos double basses and bows for stringed instruments Karl Hofner GmbH amp Co KGCompany typePrivateIndustryMusical instrumentsFoundedSchonbach Austria Hungary 1887 137 years ago 1887 FounderKarl HofnerHeadquartersHagenau GermanyArea servedWorldwideProductsElectric acoustic resonator and classical guitars Electric basses Ukuleles Violins Violas CellosDouble basses BowsWebsitehofner com Much of Hofner s popularity is attributed to Paul McCartney s use of the Hofner 500 1 electric bass guitar throughout his career This violin shaped model is commonly referred to as the Beatle bass Contents 1 Company history 1 1 Changes of ownership 1 2 Distribution 1 2 1 Europe 1 2 2 United States 2 Selected models 3 Notable Hofner users 3 1 Beatles 3 1 1 Paul McCartney 3 2 Hofner 500 1 bass players 3 3 Hofner 500 2 bass players 3 4 Hofner guitar users 4 References 5 Further reading 6 External linksCompany history edit nbsp A Hofner 500 1 violin bass similar to the one used by Paul McCartney A German luthier Karl Hofner 1864 1955 founded the Hofner company in the town of Schonbach in Austria Hungary now Luby in the Czech Republic in 1887 He soon became the largest string instrument manufacturer in the country His sons Josef and Walter joined the company around 1920 and began spreading the brand s reputation worldwide The company became involved in production for the German army in World War II producing wooden crates and soles for boots After the war Germans were expelled from the Sudetenland forcing Hofner to move to West Germany The company initially moved to an ex work camp at Mohrendorf in 1948 but soon became involved in the development of a new township and factories in Bubenreuth The new Hofner factory opened in 1950 and expanded three times between 1953 and 1960 Karl Hofner the founder lived to see the company s revival and died in Bubenreuth in 1955 In 1964 the company built a further factory at Hagenau about 5 km from Bubenreuth to machine wood parts for assembly at Bubenreuth They expanded the Hagenau factory twice in the 1970s The daughter of Walter Hofner Gerhilde began working for the company in the mid 1950s taking an active part in all aspects of management Her husband Christian Benker joined the company in 1963 They together became the driving force for the company as Josef and Walter entered retirement in the 1970s Changes of ownership edit In 1994 Hofner became part of the Boosey amp Hawkes Group and was able to expand and upgrade its facilities with the influx of cash In 1997 the company moved from Bubenreuth to Hagenau After a near bankruptcy in 2003 Boosey amp Hawkes sold its musical instrument division including the Hofner and Buffet Crampon companies to the Music Group a company formed by rescue buyout specialists Rutland Fund Management for 33 2 million 1 Hofner remained a part of this conglomerate until December 2004 when the Music Group sold the company to Klaus Scholler who had been the general manager of Hofner for many years with his wife Ulrike Schrimpff the finance director at Hofner along with Rob Olsen and Graham Stockley who were USA and UK partners Klaus Scholler and Ulrike Schrimpff remain as the owners of the business today Distribution edit Europe edit The Hofner company has nearly always been responsible for its own distribution within Europe The exceptions to this have been The Netherlands where the distributor in the 1950s and 1960s was the Van Wouw company which closed in the 1970s Spain where the distributor is Keller The United Kingdom in the 1950s 1960s and early 1970s Hofner instruments were distributed by Selmer of London not to be confused with The Selmer Company In the mid 1990s Hofner became part of the Boosey amp Hawkes Group and UK distribution was taken over by them until the sale of Hofner in 2004 when distribution switched to GNC a company formed by Graham Stockley and Clive Guthrie Today electric guitars are distributed by Barnes and Mullins while classical guitars and stringed instruments are still distributed by Clive Guthrie United States edit EMMC based in NJ was the distributor for bass guitars for many years until Boosey amp Hawkes bought Hofner in 1994 Boosey amp Hawkes took over distribution from 1995 to 2003 During these years the improvements of quality and brand exposure were significant The overall bass and guitar lines were redesigned and new successful 6 string jazz guitar models were created and introduced in late 1999 The Music Group a Venture Capital Company took over Boosey amp Hawkes from 2003 until 2004 when the Hofner company was purchased via a management buyout In 2005 Hofner s United States distribution was picked up by Classic Musical Instruments CMI in Kenosha WI CMI ceased trading in 2012 and distribution passed to Musical Distributors Group MDG in New Jersey In late 2018 MDG merged with Adam Hall North America and is the current USA distributor Rob Olsen 1998 current Rob Olsen worked at Boosey amp Hawkes as Hofner Product Manager in late 1998 and remains responsible for USA distribution for Adam Hall He designed or co designed with Klaus Schoeller and Graham Stockley many key Hofner models managed overall quality and increased visibility of the company especially from 1998 to 2012 Rob Olsen era Hofner models include HAS acoustic series Jazzica Custom Verythin Classic The New President The Vice President Verythin Standard The Chancellor The Club Bass reissue The 50th Anniversary Violin bass Club 40 John Lennon limited edition Violin finish guitars and basses Colorama reissue H5 jazz guitars and many others Rob may be best known for creating the flagship Icon Ignition series basses and guitars He was responsible for negotiations and creation of the Ed Sullivan Series basses Guitar Hero and Beatles Rockband connections Rob Olsen opened and managed the Hofner Custom Shop still in operation which produces special instruments and colors for shops and artists including Wilco Lenny Kravitz Bruno Mars Cheap Trick Bon Jovi Tesla Sheryl Crow and others The most famous custom shop model may be the Paul McCartney Jubilee bass that Paul used for the Concert For The Queen in 2012 where Paul sported a painted in a transparent colored Union Jack flag custom shop bass Rob Olsen along with Graham Stockley in the U K and later based in Germany at the Hofner workshop were the key players in exposing and bringing the brand to desired status by creating quality features and models artist relations and signings of visible artists officially with Paul McCartney Cheap Trick Bon Jovi Tesla Wilco and many others They also achieved rapid dealer growth and the creation of the ad campaigns during the USA Hofner brand launch years Selected models edit nbsp Hofner Shorty The Selmer company devised names for these instruments for the UK market Elsewhere they were known by model numbers The Ambassador A thinline semi acoustic with two florentine cutaways The Chancellor A high end archtop guitar available in limited numbers Club 40 50 and 60 Hollow bodied electric guitars without soundholes Still manufactured the current Clubs have Gibson Les Paul style bodyshape The original Coloramas were inexpensive semi solid body electric guitars with plywood construction The current Chinese made ones are solid bodies with retro styling The committee was the top of the range archtop The Congress a non cutaway archtop guitar Early models had a 12th fret neck join The President a family of mid range archtops with a single cutaway The Senator a family of archtops with many variations The Shorty A relatively recent 1982 travel guitar 2 Now made in China The Verithin A semi acoustic guitar with a 30mm deep body They produced regular Bigsby and stereo versions Violin guitar Introduced subsequently to the violin bass The V Series solid body electric guitars The Galaxie solid body electric guitars Notable Hofner users editBeatles edit Beatles guitarists George Harrison and John Lennon used Hofner electric guitars Harrison used a President model and a Club 40 early on in his association with the group Lennon s first electric guitar was a Club 40 model that he purchased in 1959 from Hessy s music store in Liverpool He used this for about one year then bought a Rickenbacker Capri model The Club 40 was briefly loaned to Paul McCartney and then it was sold The band s original bassist Stuart Sutcliffe played a Hofner 500 5 Bass 3 Paul McCartney edit nbsp A Club 40 as used by John Lennon The company is most famous through its association with Beatles songwriter singer and instrumentalist Paul McCartney who is a longtime user of the Hofner 500 1 model hollow body electric bass first manufactured in 1956 4 McCartney played two left handed 500 1 basses during most of the group s career a 1961 model with pickups mounted close together towards the neck and a 1963 model with the second pickup mounted closer to the bridge McCartney used the 1961 bass until the recording of With The Beatles in late 1963 when he got his second 500 1 McCartney used his 1963 bass almost exclusively during The Beatles touring career using his 1961 bass repaired and refinished in 1964 as a backup By 1965 McCartney had begun using a Rickenbacker bass in the studio but he did bring out his 1961 model for the Revolution promo film in 1968 and for the documentary Let It Be the following year In 1972 the 1961 bass was stolen and was only recovered in September 2023 5 McCartney used his newer Hofner for the remainder of the film including the famous rooftop performance Though he continued to primarily use his Rickenbacker throughout the 1970s and 1980s McCartney began using the 1963 Hofner extensively again on the 1989 album Flowers in the Dirt and continues to use it to the present day Hofner 500 1 bass players edit nbsp Robbie Shakespeare using a 500 1 in 1978 The Beatles bass guitarist and singer songwriter Paul McCartney Amy Winehouse bassist Dale Davis Barenaked Ladies bassist Jim Creeggan Beach Boys guitarist Carl Wilson on Lei d in Hawaii 1967 and Alan Jardine on Carl and the Passions So Tough Big Star bassists Andy Hummel and Ken Stringfellow and Alex Chilton bassist Terry Manning Chris Wood Debra Clinger Deerhoof bassist Satomi Matsuzaki Errol Holt Fleet Foxes bassist Christian Wargo The La s bassist John Power in the meeting that had the band in 2005 Peter Tosh bassist Robbie Shakespeare Steven Tyler bassist Rebecca Lynn Howard Sum 41 bassist Cone McCaslin recorded bass lines for some songs from Screaming Bloody Murder with Hofner bass 6 Tame Impala members Kevin Parker and Nick Allbrook The Bright Light Social Hour bassist Jack O Brien on Space Is Still the Place 2015 The Searchers bassist Tony Jackson Brian Wheat Tesla Tom Petersson Cheap Trick Michael Rhodes studio bassist Leland Sklar The Section band studio bassist Bob Glaub studio musician Coldplay bassist Guy Berryman in Christmas Lights Hofner 500 2 bass players edit Talking Heads bassist Tina Weymouth used a 500 2 bass Tom Petty performed with Mudcrutch playing a 500 2 and appears with a 500 1 in the liner notes for Playback Prolific session bassist Justin Meldal Johnsen often plays a 500 2 bass Nicolas Godin of Air French Band Tony Scherr played on a 500 2 live with Bill Frisell Hofner guitar users edit nbsp 1953 model 465s acoustic archtop Bert Weedon now best known for his tutorial works had a variety of Hofners Hank Marvin s first guitar was a Congress Hugh Cornwell ex member of The Stranglers used a Hofner Razerwood S7L solid body Eric Clapton learned to play on a Hofner acoustic The young Ritchie Blackmore played a club 50 A Senator was Peter Green s first real guitar Keith Richards of The Rolling Stones traded in a stack of records in order to purchase his first guitar which was a hollow body Hofner cut away Folk Baroque pioneer Davy Graham played a Congress Mark Knopfler s first guitar was a V2 solid At the age of 13 Jimmy Page made his first televised appearance in 1957 on BBC1 playing a Hofner President The Stone Roses John Squire used a Hofner semi acoustic guitar featuring a self applied Jackson Pollock style paintjob The Auteurs Luke Haines uses a Committee Jamie Hince of The Kills Early Beatles bassist Stuart Sutcliffe used prize money he won in an art competition 50 guineas to purchase a Hofner President bass Albert Lee s first guitar was a Hofner President acoustic 7 Tav Falco has played only a Hofner violin guitar with built in factory fuzztone since 1980 Richard Thompson s first electric guitar was a V3 in a sunburst pattern 8 Tonny Koeswoyo used Hofner Galaxy Series amp Verythin Series John Lennon of The Beatles bought a Club 40 as his first electric guitar in 1959 David Dever used a Hofner VT to record Spoken Tones debut album in 2023 Chris Rea s first guitar was a Hofner Verithin 3 which he played until 1979 Bernie Marsden s first electric guitar was a Colorama References edit Fagan Mary 2002 08 24 Boosey Nears Sale of Instruments Division The Daily Telegraph Osborne Alistair 2003 02 11 Boosey Plucks 33 2 million or about 67 million for Instruments The Daily Telegraph Wray Richard 2003 02 12 Boosey amp Hawkes Sells Instruments Arm for 33 2m The Guardian The Hofner Shorty Fact File Harrison Hofner Hofner 500 1 Violin Bass Paul McCartney Recovers Stolen Bass After Over 50 Years Concerty com Sum41 6 February 2010 Sum 41 Studio Day 6 Archived from the original on 2021 12 22 via YouTube a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Albert Lee Official site of the Grammy Award winning guitarist Archived from the original on 2017 12 29 Retrieved 2016 09 02 Thompson R amp Timberg S 2021 Beeswing Losing my way and finding my voice 1967 1975 Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill Further reading editAcoustic Guitars The Illustrated Encyclopedia New York Chartwell Books 2011 ISBN 978 0 7858 3571 4 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Hofner Official website Hofner GmbH page at The Music Group web archive Vintage Hofner a collector s site Jazz Gitarren English Verithingeoff A reference site for Hofner Verithin Gerhilde Benker Interview at NAMM Oral History Collection 2008 Christian Benker Interview at NAMM Oral History Collection 2008 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hofner amp oldid 1212298533, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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