- Source: Ludwig Drums
Ludwig Drums is a United States musical instrument manufacturer, focused on percussion. It is a subsidiary of Conn-Selmer.
Products manufactured by Ludwig include timpani, drum kits, and drum hardware. The company also makes keyboard percussion instruments, such as marimbas, vibraphones, and xylophones, through the Ludwig-Musser brand.
History
The Ludwig Drum Company was established in 1909 by William F. & Theobald Ludwig, sons of a German immigrant to the United States. William Jr. had been a professional drummer, playing with circuses and touring vaudeville shows, along with the occasional skating-rink gig. Since this work was irregular, he and his brother, Theobald, opened a drum shop in Chicago; they called it Ludwig & Ludwig. The company started with a concept for the design and manufacture of a functional bass drum pedal.
The company added new products to its catalog, such as snare drums and timpani, in 1916. In 1917, Ludwig signed a deal to build rope-tensioned snare drums to support World War I. Theobald Ludwig died in 1918, and William continued on his own.
In the late 1920s, the company was sold to the C. G. Conn instrument company. William Ludwig stayed on to run the company for Conn (which also owned the Leedy Manufacturing Company at this time). Eventually, William Ludwig decided to leave Conn and start a new company of his own. He was unable to use the Ludwig name since that trademark now belonged to Conn who continued to market Ludwig & Ludwig drums.
In 1937, William bought a factory building and started The WFL Drum Company (his initials). The company continued producing drums at a small scale for the duration of World War II, but William got back to the idea of making the company a large drum manufacturer after the war ended. WFL was a competitor with Ludwig and Ludwig. Conn combined their two drum brands into one in the early 1950s, forming Leedy & Ludwig, and then decided to quit the drum business altogether. In 1955, William and his son Bill Jr. were able to buy the Ludwig trademark back from Conn, and over the next few years their company and its products transitioned from the WFL brand to being called "Ludwig" again.
Despite initial success, Ludwig's global breakthrough would occur February 9, 1964, when The Beatles made their historic American TV debut on The Ed Sullivan Show. The Ludwig logo, displayed on the front of Ringo Starr's bass drum, could be seen by the television audience of about seventy-three million people. As it happens, Starr chose that brand upon joining the band simply because he liked the oyster pearl black color of the drum kit he chose.
[Ringo Starr] put our name on the front of his bass drum head ... [because] he was so proud that he had an imported drum set from America, especially from a famous company like Ludwig, that at the time of purchase he insisted on having the Ludwig name painted on the front of the head!
The publicity resulted in Ludwig's sales doubling quickly to $13 million, which prompted production to increase to a 24/7 production as the company became the foremost drum manufacturer in North America for twenty years.
Ludwig acquired the Musser Mallet Company, a manufacturer of xylophones, marimbas and vibraphones, in 1965. Ludwig was a strong presence in the marching drum market. During the 1970s, Ludwig's "Challenger" line of snare drums offered sophisticated tuning and strong build quality. Ludwig drums were used by many leading drum and bugle corps.
On 4 November 1981, William F Ludwig II sold the business to the Selmer Company (now Conn-Selmer). Selmer closed the Damen Avenue factory in the ensuing years and moved the drum production business to Monroe, North Carolina, in 1984. In 2002, Ludwig merged with Conn-Selmer, becoming a brand of Conn-Selmer, Inc.
The Musser manufacturing facility remained in LaGrange, Illinois, until 2013, and was then moved to Elkhart, Indiana.
Notable artists
Al Jackson Jr. - Booker T. & the M.G.'s
Alan Gratzer - REO Speedwagon
Alan White
Alex Van Halen - Van Halen
Aynsley Dunbar
Bill Ward - Black Sabbath
Bruce Crump - Molly Hatchet
Buddy Rich
Bun E. Carlos - Cheap Trick
Carlton Barrett - Bob Marley and the Wailers
Carl Palmer - Emerson, Lake & Palmer
Clyde Stubblefield - James Brown
Danny Barcelona - Louis Armstrong
Dino Danelli - The Rascals
Don Brewer - Grand Funk Railroad
Ed Shaughnessy - The Tonight Show Band
Ed Thigpen
Ginger Baker - Cream
Hal Blaine
Hunt Sales - Todd Rundgren, Iggy Pop, David Bowie
Ian Paice - Deep Purple
Jabo Starks - James Brown
Jack White - The Dead Weather
Jim McCarty - The Yardbirds
Joe Morello
Joey Kramer - Aerosmith
John Bonham - Led Zeppelin
John Densmore - The Doors
Jon Hiseman
Karen Carpenter - The Carpenters
Kenny Clare
Max Roach
Meg White - The White Stripes
Melvin Parker - James Brown
Mick Fleetwood - Fleetwood Mac
Mitch Mitchell - Jimi Hendrix
Mick Tucker - The Sweet
Nick Mason - Pink Floyd
Papillion-La Vista South High School
Questlove - The Roots
Ray Bauduc
Ray McKinley
Richard Allen
Ringo Starr - The Beatles
Roger Hawkins - Muscle Shoals Rhythm Section
Roger Taylor - Queen
Ron Tutt
Roy Haynes
Taylor Hawkins - Foo Fighters
Viola Smith
Patrick Carney - The Black Keys
Gallery
References
External links
Official website
William F Ludwig II Interview at NAMM Oral History Library (2002)
William F. Ludwig III Interview at NAMM Oral History Library (2009)
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Badai Pasti Berlalu (album 1977)
- The Drums of Jeopardy (film 1931)
- Apostrophe (')
- Drumset
- Red Hot Chili Peppers
- Hysteria (album)
- Slang (album)
- Euphoria (album Def Leppard)
- Sheik Yerbouti
- Matt Helders
- Ludwig Drums
- Ludwig
- William F. Ludwig Sr.
- Alex Van Halen
- John Bonham
- Chaos and Creation in the Backyard
- Karen Carpenter
- Patrick Keeler
- List of drum manufacturers
- Mick Fleetwood