We’ve all heard the Talkbox, the guitar effect allowing you to sing through your instrument. Peter Frampton is most famous for his “wah wah wah” solo on “Show Me the Way” along with Joe Walsh, Jeff Beck, Bon Jovi and a host of others.

In 1939, more than 35 years before Frampton Comes Alive was released, a steel guitarist named Alvino Rey invented a talking guitar by wiring a pilot’s carbon microphone in reverse (thus becoming a speaker) and placing it on his throat. The sound vibrations of the source material (in this case, his steel guitar) turned his entire noggin into a resonator, allowing him to mouth the words into a microphone.

Here’s Rey in 1944, using the effect offstage to give voice to “Stringy The Talking Guitar” puppet.

Hollywood had used a similar effect called The Sonovox in the 1940’s. Invented by Gilbert Wright in 1939, the Sonovox used small loudspeakers attached to the performer's throat. The effect makes an appearance in the 1940 film You'll Find Out starring Kay Kyser and his orchestra.

The most famous use of the Sonovox was in the voice of Casey Junior the Train from the Walt Disney movie, Dumbo. Hear “I think I can” come out of his stack around the 18 second mark:
And here’s a vintage Disney newsreel showing exactly how the train sounds were made!
All of this just gets me in a DIY spirit. I think I need to create some throat-attached speakers for my own version of the Sonovox! If you’ve ever tried this, send me details for an upcoming article! Email me at shanespeal@yahoo.com.

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Replies

  • I'm sure a large disk in a cup would pickup something used like this

    Music stuff sometimes come from strange places, auto-tune was invented by a Exxon engineer to help understand seismic data. Then from the Cher effect the rappers used it and now you got Kayne. Love it or hate it it's on 90% of the music you hear today.

  • Back in the 70's there was a band from below Atlanta called Stillwater did a song called Mind Bender. About a talking guitar who's daddy was a Gibson and it's momma was a Fender

  • Alvino is a hell of a player, so is that drummer in the ST.Louis Blues video. That slide solo in the middle was killer.

  • my babble axe 

    306596225?profile=original

    • Does it work well? Piezo and a preamp?

      • yup . it works  ,   mag pup  and   mini amp (speaker is  under   the poo-plunger ) 

        tube goes in your cheek  . and  shaped   "words " go through   a PA.

  • Always liked the Wah talk box effect that Peter Frampton made famous. Everybody forgets about Joe Walsh using it a couple years before on his hit "Rocky Mountain Way" from his first solo album after leaving the James Gang band. I heard that Jimmy Page and Robert Plant of Led Zepplin tried it out for a song, but decided against it. Glad Framton took it on, but it can be a bit of a one trick pony.

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