1975
Ned Steinberger, a graduate of the Maryland Institute of Art with a BFA in
sculpture, begins working for Thronet Industries designing industrial furniture
sharing space with bass luthier Stuart Spector in a Brooklyn, NY woodworking
co-op.
1976
Ned Steinberger designs NS models for Stuart Spector.
1977
Several prototypes made of graphite reinforced epoxy are manufactured.
1979
Ned designs the L2 in Brooklyn, NY. The L2 is introduced at the summer show of
the National Association of Music Merchants. Three prototypes are sold at The
Guitarman to John Entwistle (The Who), Tony Levin (King Crimson) and Andy West
(The Dregs).
1980
Steinberger Sound Corporation is founded. Ned Steinberger is granted patent
on the design of his L2 bass.
1981
At the Frankfurt Musik Messe, the L2 leaves the music world amazed over its
design. The L2 is awarded the coveted Industrial Designers Excellence Award
from the Industrial Designers Society of America (ISDA). Time Magazine declares
the L2 one of the Five Best Designs of 1981.
1982
Steinberger wins the Reinforced Plastics/Composite Award from The Society
of The Plastics Industry Inc. Demand for the L2 exceeds supply by
300%. The GL Prototype Guitar is introduced. Steinberger wins Award
of Excellence from Materials Engineering.
1983
Steinberger Sound relocates to Newburgh, NY. The larger facility allows
Steinberger to increase production.
1984
PBS' "Enterprise" airs its On Key episode featuring Ned Steinberger and his
guitars. The feature refined XL-2 and GL-2 are completed. The updated versions
replace the L2 and GL-P. The TransTrem is introduced at the Winter show of the
National Association of Music Merchants. The TransTrem is the first
"pitch-bending" mechanism which permits an individual controllable change rate
so that all strings can be set to maintain pitch relationships throughout
tremolo travel.
1985
New electronics manufactured by Henry Zajac of HAZ Labs in Washington, New
Jersey are introduced to the line. Ned Steinberger introduces the S-Trem. With
the S-Trem, both tremolo and fixed bridge operation are available in one
guitar. Roland Controller circuitry is first offered in the L Series. This
circuitry (made exclusively for Steinberger) incorporates the latest in pitch
to signal processing technology. The U.S. Information Agency chooses the XL2
bass to exemplify the "Best in Contemporary American Design". The agency's
Product of Design show will tour Eastern Europe for three years.
1986
The GL3T, an EMG SA three pickup version of the GL with TransTrem, is
introduced. The GL4T, with EMG SA, SA, 89 pickups and TransTrem, is introduced.
1987
The GM Series is created with the inspiration of Mike Rutherford, Roger Griffin
and Geoff Banks. The classically styled maple body features a double cutaway
and contrasting binding.
The Bass TransTrem is introduced. The first bridge enabling chords and
intervals to remain perfectly in tune during tremolo
operation. Steinberger Sound is purchased by Gibson Guitar Corp.
1988
The DB Bridge is introduced. The TransTrem is now available in a
left-handed version. Ned agreed to design this version at the request of Elliot
Easton (The Cars). The collaboration between Steinberger and luthier Steve
Klein creates the GK Series guitar. The ergonomic bodies by Klein are matched
with Steinberger hardware and electronics.
1990
The XQ Bass is introduced. The XQ features an ergonomically designed maple
body. The first model is the Q4.
1991
New GM and XM bodies with sleeker profile and redesigned heel section are
introduced. The neck on the XM is changed to a "thinner" version as is used on
the XQ bass. The '7' configuration (humbucker-single-humbucker) is made
available on the GL and GM guitars.
1992
Steinberger relocates to Nashville, TN, where Steinberger designs are still
made today. The exacting standards of excellence that Ned applied to his first
instruments go into every Steinberger. The individuals at the Steinberger
facility are a talented team of craftspeople, artisans and technicians
dedicated to making superb instruments for demanding musicians, both
professional and amateur. We take pride in creating the world's most innovative
stringed instruments. Steinberger introduces the “Spirit by Steinberger” line.
The Spirit line features most of the same basic features as the graphite
Steinbergers including the double-ball tuning system, 40:1 ratio fine tuners,
R-Trem locking tremolo system, headless construction, Steinberger hardware and
ergonomic design. However, while the Steinbergers featured a graphite neck,
Spirit by Steinbergers feature 3-piece hard maple, through-neck construction
(GT and XT series) or hard maple, bolt-neck construction (GU and XZ series)
making them much more affordable.
1999
After suspending Steinberger production for over 1 year, Steinberger
re-introduces the “Spirit by Steinberger” line through Internet wholesaler
MusicYo.com.
2002
Steinberger re-introduces Steinberger USA graphite production including GM and
GR production.
2004
Since the introduction of the first Steinberger instruments in 1980, the
Steinberger name has become synonymous with evolution, innovation, ergonomics
and performance. The new Synapse line continues that tradition.
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