Danley wrote:Wow, so CLF was where pre-EB Musicmans.... Musicmen... Were made. For some reason I thought the amps at least were made somewhere in Anaheim.
EDIT: Guess it was just their PO...
Music Man did have a separate amp factory somewhere else in Southern California; only the instruments were made by CLF Research.
From a "business case" perspective Music Man (the company) was owned by Tom Walker (former Fender Sales employee), Forrest White (former Fender plant manager) and Leo Fender. Actually it was founded by Walker and White; they took their initial amp design to Leo for a review at CLF Research circa 1973 - at that point Leo's 5-year consulting deal with CBS/Fender was over, but he was still under the 10-year non-compete until the end of 1974.
Leo offered some suggestions to the design, then decided he liked their business plan and became an "investor/silent partner" until his non-compete was over. In January 1975 he was announced as a full partner. When they decided to go into the instrument business they set up an OEM deal where Leo & Company would design and build the instruments at CLF Research then ship them to the Music Man corporation, who would pay CLF for each instrument. Then of course Leo would get paid again when Music Man sold the instruments to their dealer network.
It worked for a few years; Leo had a falling out with Walker and White over finish blemishes in the instruments - dealers started rejecting instruments for finish flaws, but under the contractual relationship between CLF and Music Man CLF was responsible for repairing/replacing any instruments rejected by either the MM instpectors at the amp factory or by dealers, but MM would pay CLF for warranty repairs (so Leo was only paying for 1/3 of the post-sale warranty repair costs but 100% of pre-sale rejected instruments). I don't think MM was really inspecting them unit after the dealers started rejecting them.
That pissed Leo off so he pulled out of the partnership with Music Man in 1979 but the CLF Research OEM contract for the instruments (which was now 4 models - StingRay and Sabre basses; StingRay and Sabre guitars) continued. It was at this point in time that Leo & George decided to create the G&L line; they were made along-side the Music Mans for a while there in 1980/81.
The end of the CLF Research/Music Man relationship reads like depositions in a high-stakes divorce in that each blamed the other side for what happened, but by the end of 1981 CLF Research was only producing G&L instruments and Music Man had to go elsewhere for instrument production. Eventually Leo retired the CLF Research name. Music Man wound up going bankrupt in 1984 (by that time Walker and White had also parted ways and only Walker was running the company), eventually being sold to Ernie Ball. Ernie's son Sterling had worked for Music Man as a bass tester for a few years (Tom Walker was a good friend of Ernie and was Sterling's godfather) and convinced his father to buy the intellectual property - but they of course didn't buy the Music Man amp factory; they put the guitars back into production in EB's shuttered Earthwood guitar factory (in another "small world" EB had employed George Fullerton for a few years to set up the Earthwood factory; George of course returned to CLF Research when EB pulled the plug on the Earthwoods).