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  2. Oahu Music Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oahu_Music_Company

    The Oahu Music Company was a music education program in the United States during the 1930s and 1940s to teach students to play the Hawaiian Guitar. Popular culture in America became fascinated with Hawaiian music during the first half of the twentieth century [1] and in 1916, recordings of indigenous Hawaiian instruments outsold every other genre of music in the U.S. [2] By 1920, sales of ...

  3. Lap steel guitar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lap_steel_guitar

    Americans were curious about the lap steel instrument featured in its performance, and came to refer to it as a "Hawaiian guitar", [a] and the horizontal playing position as "Hawaiian style". Hawaiian music began its assimilation into American popular music in the 1910s, but with English lyrics ; a combination Hawaiians called hapa haole (half ...

  4. David Rogers (musician) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Rogers_(musician)

    David "Feet" Rogers was a Hawaiian lap steel guitar player and inductee into the Hawaiian Music Hall of Fame in 2019. [1]He was born on February 14, 1935 [2] [3] and grew up on the island of Oʻahu in the neighborhood of Kalihi.

  5. The Hawaiian steel guitar changed American music. Can ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/hawaiian-steel-guitar-changed...

    The Hawaiian steel guitar, ... stores in London started stocking steel guitars in the early 1920s. By the 1940s, people were packing into Shanghai clubs to hear the Hawaiian steel guitar ...

  6. Electromuse - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electromuse

    Electromuse was an American maker of musical instruments that operated in the 1940s and 1950s. [citation needed] It was probably best known for its line of Hawaiian lap steel guitars. [1] Electromuse also made Spanish acoustic guitars, hollowbody acoustic-electric guitars, and other

  7. Steel guitar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steel_guitar

    The archetypal instrument is the Hawaiian guitar, also called a lap steel. ... By the late 1940s, the steel guitar featured prominently in "honky-tonk" style of ...

  8. Valco - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Valco

    Eastwood Guitars produces a variety of reissue Airline guitars, [7] as well as at least one Supro model, [8] though all of the former semihollow Res-O-Glas models are now wood solidbodies. Several of Valco's earlier amplifier models are recreated by Vintage47 Amps of Mesquite, Nevada, using octal preamp tubes, rather than the later miniature ...

  9. Hawaiian guitar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hawaiian_guitar

    Hawaiian guitar may refer to: Lap steel guitar , a type of steel guitar without pedals that is typically played with the instrument in a horizontal position across the performer's lap Ukulele , a type of small, guitar-like instrument popularized in Hawaii