Travis Bean

Steve Albini tuning a TB500 onstage.

Clifford Travis Bean (21 August 1947 – 10 July 2011, aged 63) was an American luthier and machinist from California.[1]

In 1974, he partnered with Marc McElwee and Gary Kramer to start Travis Bean Guitars, which made high-end electric guitars and basses featuring machined aluminum necks.[2][3] This was an unusual design, shared by Veleno guitars, departing from the more traditional use of wood. The aluminum center section ran through the instrument body, with the pickups directly mounted to the aluminum.[4] The majority of these instruments featured solid koa wood bodies and humbucker pickups. Though praised for their sound, the aluminum necks made Travis Bean guitars heavier than other electric guitars. Models included the Artist, Standard, Wedge (rare), and TB500 (rare) with single coil pickups.

Kramer and Bean parted ways in 1975, with the former starting Kramer Guitars. The first series of Kramer guitars were redesigned aluminum-necked instruments but utilizing wooden inserts along the back of the neck to cut down on weight and provide a more traditional feel; these modifications also avoided patent infringement of Travis Bean's original neck design.

Around 3,600 guitars and basses were produced between 1974 and 1979.

In the late 1990s, Bean teamed with master machinist/designer B. Kelly Condon and produced a run of 24 high end, custom instruments. These guitars and basses were aluminum-neck instruments, each machined from a 125-pound billet of 7075 aluminum.[citation needed] The pans weighed just over 4 pounds when finished and all were serial numbered and identified inside the pan.

  1. ^ Douglas Martin, Travis Bean Aluminum Guitar Maker Dies at 63, New York Times. Retrieved on 2011-9-26.
  2. ^ Moseley, Willie (January 1999), "Travis Bean Interview-Metal Machine Music – The Next Phase Archived 14 January 2010 at the Wayback Machine", Vintage Guitar Magazine
  3. ^ Wheeler, Tom. American Guitars: An Illustrated History. New York: Harper & Row, 1982, pp. 351-352
  4. ^ Travis Bean Patent. Pat.No. 3,915,049 Issued: 10/28/75.