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Dobro® Website Map | |
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The Dobro Story It started out as a search for a louder guitar -- a guitar to stand up to the trumpets, saxophones and banjos that dominated popular music in the 1920s. George Beauchamp, a Los Angeles guitarist, took his vision of a mechanically amplified instrument to John Dopyera and his brother Rudy, Slovakian immigrants who had already patented several improvements for banjos. John Dopyera perfected a design utilizing three aluminum cones, Rudy suggested a metal body to enhance amplification, and the National tri-cone resonator guitar debuted in 1927. John Dopyera left National in 1928 and began developing a more affordable woodbody guitar with a single cone and a spiderlike bridge base. He introduced his new invention by the end of 1928 under the name DOBRO® -- a combination of Dopyera and Brothers (brothers John, Rudy, Emile, Robert and Louis would play various roles in the production and financing of the company).
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