in Collaborations | 10 OCT 22

63/22: Nikita Gale's Guitars

Sketched by BMW i7 Designers, the guitars are named after significant Black female musicians associated with the histories of blues and rock and roll

in Collaborations | 10 OCT 22

Minnie

Minnie

The form of this guitar is directly inspired by the automotive production process where a negative press form creates the exterior body of a car. This production process is called inversion, revealing a negative form. By using the same ‘inversion’ approach to the guitar, the sound produced differs revealing shapes through a transparent body. The player’s hand needs to enter the body interior to play.

Memphis Minnie began singing and playing guitar on Beale Street in Memphis–”the blues capital of the world”–at just thirteen-years-old. She was born in Mississippi by the name Lizzie Douglas in 1897 and was discovered by a talent scout for Columbia records in 1929. Under the label, she released a series of records performing duets with her husband at the time, Joe McCoy. After her divorce from McCoy, she became established in Chicago, releasing dozens of songs and touring extensively. Her vocal and guitar skills have cemented her as one of the most popular female blues country singers of all time, covered by countless musicians and inspiration to many more. 

Technical Specifications

Named after: Memphis Minnie

Sketched by: Sebastian Simm

Wood Type: Mahogany, with an Ebony fingerboard

BMW i7 Paint Finish: Alpine White

Characteristics: Removable front, rare earth magnets, making the guitar "convertible"

Tharpe

Tharpe

A  completely metallic guitar with a  square headstock, long neck and geometric edges. The sound comes through a laser-cut grid, the same found in the i7 interior side.

Sister Rosetta Tharpe, often referred to as the “Godmother of Rock and Roll,” was born in 1915 in Cotton Plant, Arkansas and not even two decades later she was already brewing up on her guitar the foundations of what would soon be the newest international music sensation: rock ’n’ roll. Tharpe, her musical style informed by her family of religious singers, cotton pickers, and traditional evangelicalists, developed her signature style in Chicago in the mid-1920’s. Her fusion of Delta Blues, New Orleans jazz, and gospel gained her huge popularity, and by the late-30’s she was in New York City performing with some of the biggest musicians of the time. It was Tharpe, a Black, openly queer woman, who created and shaped the earliest days of rock with her rawness, talent, and grit. The list of musicians she has directly influenced is seemingly endless–from Elvis to Johnny Cash to Chuck Berry–and she was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2018.

Technical Specifications

Named after: Sister Rosetta Tharpe

Sketched by: Sebastian Simm

Wood Type: Alder body, with a Maple neck

BMW i7 Paint Finish: Mineral Grey on the neck and Nardo Grey on the body

BMW i7 Components: Steel Speaker Grill

Lynn

Lynn

Inspired by BMW’s affinity for interior shapes and fabrics, this guitar is dressed with a soft felt cover, the same used for BMW i7 seats and interior details.

Barbara Lynn, born in Beaumont, Texas in 1942, is a prolific, chart-topping R&B singer, guitarist, and songwriter. Lynn, a left-handed guitarist, began performing in local clubs in Texas before being discovered by singer, Joe Barry, in the late 1950s. Her first single, “You’ll Lose A Good Thing,” was number one on the US Billboard R&B chart and Top Ten Billboard Hot 100 hit in 1962, and was later covered by Aretha Franklin and Freddy Fender. Lynn, who wrote, sang, and played lead guitar for all of her songs, toured extensively with the likes of Gladys Knight, Stevie Wonder, Dionne Warwick, Al Green, and Marvine Gaye. She received a National Heritage Fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts in 2018. 

Technical Specifications

Named after: Barbara Lynn

Sketched by: Henri Freyberg and Karl Johannson


Wood Type: Bird's Eye Maple neck, with a Roasted Swamp Ash body

i7 Components:  BMW individual merino leather/wool-cashmere

Joan

Joan

A futuristic geometric design characterises this floating guitar realised using materials such as glass and metal typical of automotive interior forms. The focus on high quality materials that reveal the guitar’s  technical structure transforms the instrument into a direct extension of the player’s body.

Joan Armatrading is a Kittitian-British singer-songwriter and guitarist with an over 50 year long recording career. She has released 20 studio albums, as well as multiple compilation and live albums. Armatrading was born in 1950 in Saint Christopher and Nevis and began writing music on the piano when she was 14. Her mother later bought her a guitar, which she taught herself to play, and by 16 she had begun playing local shows in her new hometown in Birmingham, UK. Armatrading met lyricist Pam Nestor in 1970, who helped her release her first album, Whatever’s For Us, in 1972 under Cube Records. She continued to release albums–including her breakthrough self-titled album in 1976–and soon became one of the first Black British female artists to gain international success. Armatrading is a 3-time Grammy nominee and 2-time Brit Award best female vocalist nominee, and was appointed Commander of the Order of the British Empire in 2020 for services to music, charity, and equal rights. She released her latest album, Consequences, in 2021.

Technical Specifications

Named after: Joan Armatrading

Sketched by: Henri Freyberg and Karl Johannson

Wood Type: Bird's Eye Maple neck, with a Roasted Swamp Ash body

BMW  i7 Paint Finish: Fire Orange

Characteristics: Acrylic Fingerboard Cover

 

Thorton

Thorton

An imaginative and conceptual guitar, using BMW i7 MyModes technology as inspiration. Each chord activates bringing forward a different set of parameters, feelings and emotions.

Big Mama Thornton’s contribution to rock and roll runs as deep as the genre itself. Some of the most famous songs in rock history are in fact the work of Thornton. Big Mama Thornton (born Willie Mae Thornton), was a singer, songwriter, and guitarist born in Alabama in 1926, and was the first to record “Hound Dog,” in 1952 with writers Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller. Though Thornton’s recording topped the R&B charts, it did not reach mainstream success until it was later covered by Elvis in 1956. Thornton, too, wrote and originally recorded the song, “Ball and Chain,” but the song was not released until it was covered by Janis Joplin years later. Despite much uncredited success on these two hit songs, Thornton continued to record and tour extensively, performing both in the US and in Europe. Thornton is known for her deep, powerful, loud voice and her equally large personality. She was heavily inspired by gospel music and blues singers such as Memphis Minnie and Bessie Smith, and was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1984.

Technical Specifications

Names after: Big Mama Thorton

Sketched by: Corinna Exner


Wood Type: Korina (Limba) Body, Wenge and Ebony Neck

BMW i7 Paint Finish: Frozen Black

 

All the guitars were created by Ian Malone, a luthier based in Essex. Visit www.maloneguitars.com for more information.

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