
Left: A Forrest Lee Jr. T-style guitar equipped with
a B-string bender. Right: The Lee bender mechanism.
The B-Bender guitar became my white
whale after Albert Lee introduced me
to the pull-string’s magic in his instructional
video from the early ’80s. This predated
YouTube—even the internet, for that
matter—and nobody I knew in my home
state of Montana had one, so my research
was limited to that one pirated VCR tape,
guitar-store hearsay, and rumors. It was
the equivalent of learning about human
reproduction on the 4th-grade playground:
Few of the facts were right, but eventually I
pieced together the general idea.
I learned that the late, great Clarence
White and his buddy Gene Parsons hollowed
out two Tele bodies and inserted
a series of levers that pulled his B string
up roughly a whole-step. Eventually they
refined the system so it fit in a single Tele
body, though the mechanism remained big
and required a lot of wood to be hacked out
from the back of a doomed guitar. I didn’t
actually see someone playing a benderequipped
guitar until years later when I
moved to Nashville and met Joe Glaser.
Joe, a pedal steel player by trade and
genius inventor by birth, played in a band
with a guy who wanted a bender. Joe,
driven by intellectual curiosity and an
I-can-probably-do-that spirit, designed a
better bender built into the Tele bridge
(similar to the pull mechanism on a pedal
steel), which saved his friend’s Tele from the
heavy routing of the Parsons/White bender.
Joe’s prototype was a success—word got out
about the Glaser design and soon his clients
included the world’s best players from
Ricky Skaggs to Brad Paisley.
I saved long and hard and eventually
paid Joe to install his bender in my Valley
Arts T-style guitar, which I love to this day.
I became so hooked on the thing that I
wanted one in my Les Paul. When I asked
about it, Joe smiled and said, “Sorry John,
I did it for Jimmy Page but it’s a bit too
labor-intensive for the likes of you.”
So my search began for somebody who
could do it, and affordably.
Several messy, unsuccessful attempts
eventually prompted me to give up on the
Les Paul and instead find a great sounding,
yet affordable guitar I wouldn’t mind
cutting a big hole in. I chose the PRS SE
One, which has all the vibe of an old Junior
at a bargain price. Through hours of net
research I found Forrest Lee Jr., a hillbilly
renaissance man who, in addition to being
a killer Tele picker, has a strong computer
geek background and a passion for hotrodding
classic muscle cars.
Utilizing these three fields of expertise,
Forrest began making his own benders that
borrowed a bit from classic designs while
implementing his own improvements.
Through some crazy engineering and plenty
of cussing my name, Forrest was able to
come up with a dead-on accurate bender for
the PRS. I loved it so much I eventually had
him undo all the damage to my old Les Paul
and install one of his benders in place of
those expensive mistakes. Much like Glaser,
Forrest has grown a loyal following for his
benders—so loyal, in fact, that Forrest landed
a deal with Washburn Guitars.
In a bold move, Washburn offers the
Forrest Bender in a single-cutaway dreadnought
with a cedar top, rosewood back and
sides, and Fishman electronics. The bender
is a compact unit hidden within the guitar,
which makes for nearly invisible stealth bending.
Forrest gave me a long explanation of
how his “push-to-pull” system works, but it’s
like describing how to build a rocket out of
old Chevy parts and gardening tools. Forrest’s
Washburn acoustic bender model will hopefully
be hitting music stores within this year.
Ironically, Gibson recently asked Glaser
to design a bender for a Les Paul. Joe
modified his design to fit in a beautiful
Les Paul Special featuring two classic P-90
pickups. To the casual observer, it looks like
a sexy, old fat-top Les Paul with individual
saddles for each string, making intonation
dead on. But pull down on the neck and
voilà—you sound a bit like Clarence White
(or Albert King, depending on the riff ). As
an ingenious bonus for the never-satisfied
gear tweaker, Joe built his Gibson Glaser so
you can easily convert it to bend the B or
G string. (FYI: Brad Paisley is a G-bender
guy.) This guitar is insanely cool.
What makes both the Glaser Gibson
bender and the Forrest Lee Washburn acoustic
bender even more amazing is that both
models will be affordable enough that a kid
with a paper route and a little patience could
buy one. The prices are not cemented, but
will probably be less then $1,500. One could
spend that much alone on having a bender
installed in a Les Paul you already own.
I’m a little ambivalent about this. On
one hand, these bender guitars are such
great bargains that I want in. I would buy
both of them tomorrow if I had the doughre-
mi and they were in stock. On the other
hand, the bender was one of my secret
weapons and I’m not thrilled about everyone
knowing my tricks. I liked it better
when few knew how I was doing that fake
pedal steel stuff.