Fujigengakki
From the Cowshed to the Top
Preface
Behind this name, there is something, most
interesting for every
proud owner of an Ibanez, Squier or Roland Synthesiser Guitar. It is the
name of the biggest manufacturer in Japan and the
No. 1 in the world for a long time. Meanwhile Korean manufacturers like
Samick produce a higher quantity. The Name is "Fuji String-Instruments"
like
the highest mountain in Japan, the Mount Fuji with 3778 meters.
But first of all, how did it come to this
report? It isn't written by one of the long approved staff of Fachblatt
Musikmagazin. It is written by a japanologist, who is by the way, a
"guitar-maniac". To get familiar with the Japanese language, I
took part in an exchange programme off Tübingen's partner university in
Hiroshima, Japan.
Now, books for language instruction, in
any language and in any country , have one in common, they are pretty
boring. As a
substitute, I red Japanese music-magazines and any literature about it
available. A little small talk with local dealers of music instruments
provided the
necessary insider information. To be up-to-date, what is going on in the
world
of musical instruments in Germany, friends send me issues of Fachblatt
Musikmagazin. They were full of information, as usual. When I red the
reports
about trade shows and instrument tests, I recognised, there is still
some
deficit. This would never happen, if the writers had red the
manufacturers
pamphlets more precisely, the Japanese of course. Exactly this was
the problem.
As long there is a pamphlet available in a western language, in contains
only a
subset of information of it's Japanese original. In Japanese offices,
the clerks
have a hard fight against foreign languages. So if you translate less,
you do fewer
mistakes. So I informed the staff of Fachblatt by letter, right away: "I
know something, you don't know!". Instead of being ashamed and hiding
themselves in the dullest part of the editor's office, they stroke back.
They
send an express-letter demanding written and photographic material.
Having a "big mouth" is fun, unless people ask you to prove
it.
Now the most comfortable times as an
exchange student in Hiroshima found its end and I had to find something
to
impress those guys in cologne. So I decided to infiltrate into the
backyards of
Japanese music industry, write about the real manufacturers. Who they
are and
where they are was no secret to me any more, but there was another
problem. One
doesn't knock at the front gate of a Japanese factory and asks: "Hi, may
I
have a look around here?"
In Japan, you are introduced and guided to
the next one, until you get in contact with the appropriate person.
Without
relations, your chances are minimal.
One of the local dealers in Hiroshima
occasionally send his employees to a training course to Matsumoku, the
manufacturer or Aria, Westone and a part of the Fernandes-programme. I
asked,
whether it might be possible to arrange a visit, using his personal
connections. He responded, this might be very difficult, and
anyway he asked
whether I have the pamphlets of the new Roland sampling keyboard. I got
the
impression, he was somehow interested to change topic, A way to say "no"
in Japanese.
Another Contact to a local dealer was
successful. He contacted an acquaintance at Kanda-shokai. One was very
surprised about the proposal, but the fact, that I speak Japanese, made
things
easier. The promise for a visit didn't come right away. I sent a
letter with
two copies of test report on Fujigen product like the Ibanez RG 450 SL
and the
Roland GR 77B/G77. After then, two Phone-calls where enough, and the
distribution company arranged a visit of the factory. Now
I had a long journey to the mountain region where Matsumoto is located,
far
away from the Shinkansen-line the Japanese high speed train. Most
guitars,
manufactured in Japan, are from Matsumoto, 6 of 11 manufacturers are
located
here. Fuji-Electric and Epson are other famous brands with productions
here.
In the evening, when I reached Matsumoto, I
passed a big advertising space "Westone Guitars". What a waste. This
brand
isn't sold in Japan at all. When I arrived, I looked after the
address of a
guesthouse, provided by the Nagoya tourist information. When I wasn't
successful, I asked Omawarisan, the "honourable turn around man".
That's the way Japanese call their police officers, because he turns
round and
round with a bicycle in the district assigned to him. In the guesthouse I
was
the first foreigner ever.
The next day, I wa expected at Fujigen factory.
The lady at the reception was very pleased, that I am from Germany. She
had a
pen-pal in Bremen to improve her English. But she didn't try to give me
any
performance of her learning progress. I was guided in a very
simple furnished room, Then a man in the companies T-Shirt appeared and
guided me in
the president's office, who was absent this time. My Guide was nobody
less.
then the head of the department of developing, Mr. Takayuki Hirabayashi,
and so
the most competent partner a journalist, visiting a Japanese guitar
manufacturer, could ask for. The Blade-Shorter-Vibrato for
example was
one of his inventions. He wasn't happy with this, because this piece,
made
for Fender, turned out to become company's history from January or
February
next year on. Although it was Fujigen's own development, conflicts with
the licence of
Floyd-Rose still remained. In future they will use the Kahler-Fulcrum
instead. Mr. Hirabayashi patently listed to all my many questions and
guided me to
the factory all through the morning. After lunch, another person took
over this
rule.
It was Mr. Fumiaki Yokouchi, the second son
of the founder and actual president Mr. Yûichiro Yokouchi. Since the
first son
decided to stay away from the guitar business and preferred to run a
coffee-shop instead, it was now on Fumiaki to take the role
of the
crown-prince. His younger brother was at that time in the USA to take
training as
a guitar-technician. On my question, when the little brother will be
back to
Matsumoto Yokouchi responded: "If he speaks English". So I went with
changing companion through different buildings on the factory ground.
Everywhere I was overwhelmingly welcomed by the employees. This is a
custom at Fujigen.
Paint-shop and wood-cutting are separated from the main factory, so we
had to
take one of the factory's cars. Besides the building, where bodies where
glued
from several parts, one could see the flat one story building of Fuji/Roland.
This is a joint-venture of Fujigen and Roland, founded for
the
developing of the Synthesiser-guitar. Where ever I wanted, I was allowed
to push
the shutter of my camera, but the developing section was restricted
area.
Mr Yokouchi invited me to play the new
Midi-guitar from Ibanez. He gave a sign with his hand to one of the
employees
working at a big table in the middle of the labour room, to adjust the
guitar
with all its devices. It was Toshio Yano, one of the three electronic
engineers
in the developing team and inventor of the midi-guitar himself.
Furthermore
there are a number of designers like Mr. Hirabayashi. Not all
instruments are
designed in this room. The trading-companies of the different
brands have
their own design divisions. But, they make often use of the computer
equipped
developing facilities and team at Fujigen. The separation of
design
divisions assures, that all brands are manufactured under one roof,
sharing the
same production quality, but technically remain completely different
instruments. This is practise among other Japanese manufacturers, too.
At this
time, there were five brands made by Fujigen.
IBANEZ
This is meanwhile the best known Japanese
guitar and frequent subject of FACHBLATT test reports. Pure copies are
no
longer part of the programme. For Japanese customers, this brand was
available
from 1982 first. When I visited Japan that year, a pamphlet in one of
Tokyo's
music stores was the only hint I could discover. From 1970 to 1982 all Fujigen-products
for
the domestic market took the name Greco, Ibanez for the export.
FENDER/SQUIER
Since April 1982, there exists Fender
"Made in Japan". With the brand name Squier one took care not to harm
the noble name Fender. According to a treaty of cooperation, all product
made
for the domestic market, not looking like their US-Counterparts (because
of a
different combination of pickups or a different vibrato following the
Floyd-Rose
principal) where called Squier. Lower priced replicas of US models,
solely made
with Japanese parts where equipped with the label Squier for the export,
but
sold within Japan with the Fender-label.
Since March 1985, there ist a tremendous
change. Fender guitars from Japan are no longer hidden behind the
Squier-label.
Now the Contemporary-series has a small written hint under the
Fender-label telling the origin of the instrument. Today Squier is an
entry
level instrument in Japan. The price is to low, that Fender would like
to see
its own brand name in full size on the headstock.
Beside those models offered in Germany,
there are Stratocaster and Telecaster with medium scale and flat
fretboard.
There is also a goody for Blackmore-fans: a Stratocaster with "scalloped
fretboard". Between the frets, it is concave to enable a better vibrato
with the finger play. Who is more dedicated to Yngwie Malmsteen from
Sweden,
would decide on an one peace maple neck, instead of a rosewood
fretboard. But
one has to be patient until next spring. I asked Yokouchi-san, whether
both
version will be offered in Germany in future. But, he said, there is now
order
from USA yet, since it is decided there, what models will be sold
worldwide.
ROLAND
The first system of a guitar synthesiser
was a joint-venture of synthesiser manufacturer Roland and Fujigen. 1977
it was
first introduced in Tokyo and is actual present with the guitar model GR
707
and the bass GR 77 including their ground devices.
YAMAHA
Actually, this is not a descendant of
Fujigen. Yamaha stopped guitar mass production in Hamamatsu and moved to
Taiwan. For the Japanese market RGX-, Session and RBX series continue to
be
made here. Fujigen does only do the manufacturing and has no influence
on the design at all.
As one can see, the programme of all the
brands is completely different. Also, the policy in applying a vibrato,
all
brand go a different way. While Fender (at the moment) uses that one
developed in
Matsumoto, Greco uses Kahler, Ibanez uses its own Vibrato, but made
under the licence
of Floyd-Rose.
What is never mentioned in Fender's
advertisement in Guitarplayer, one can't ignore at a round trip through
the
factory. The guitars of Master-series (D'Aquisto, Flame, and Esprit) are
from
Matsumoto. Flame and Esprit are pure Fujigen-guitars. The rough
draft with
double cutaway and two humbucker was the premise from USA; the rest did
Hirabayashi's
team. Curious, they are not offered to his japanese fellow citizen at
all.
Times, where "Made in Japan" was
a drawback in the manufacturing of musical instruments, are over for
long time.
Here one can see how the quality of Fujigen-Fender relation is
developed. While
Charvel and Kramer let produce lower cost instruments under their own
premise,
Fujigen has a major part in the developing and, as one can see at the
Master
series, not only for the low cost section. Formally, the distribution
companies
are customers of the factory in Matsumoto. In reality the incorporated
companies are tight together through the ownership represented through
the
shareholders and positions hold in the boards. So the general director
of
Fender/Japan Chitoshi Kojima is president from Kanda (Greco) and member
of the
board of directors of Fujigen. The activities of the distribution
companies go
further. Kanda distributes the Steinberger Copies from Hohner in Japan,
and
Hoshino effects and amplifiers. The amplifiers are only available
outside
Japan. Yokouchi-san was really surprised to hear, that I have an
Ibanez-amp myself
in Germany. He said, he had never heard anything about it, but it wasn't
his business anyway.
Electronic is made in the factory, as long
pickups are concerned. Pickups for the vintage models are made in USA
and those
for the Contemporary Stratocaster Deluxe (system III vibrato) are custom
made
from Schaller Germany. Every month 12000 to 15000 guitars and bases
leave the
plant. About 12000 are manufactured staight here the rest is made by
other
factories. Some necks and pick-guards for example of a Japanese Fender
are made
by Atlansia, whose sensational design made furore on the Frankfurt music
trade
show. The final control is done by Fujigen. They assured to me, that
only those
instruments and parts matching the standards of those produced in the
Fujigen-plant, will pass the control.
During the factory tour I missed the
production of acoustic guitars. After a loss of 40000 DM every month in
1981,
the production was stopped. What a pity, since the quality of those
instruments
was highly appreciated by the musicians and also Martin, the leading
manufacturer off folk-guitars bcame interested. An offer for a merging
of the companies Yokouchi
senior rejected gratefully. Now, with about 200 employees, it is a
bigger medium
size company and a yearly turnover of 53 Mill. DM. 80% is earned by the
export.
The beginning was quite modest today's success far beyond all
expectations.
If the history of Fujigen had become public
earlier to the western public, the term "cowshed maker" would enrich
our vocabulary. Not four wheels had to make place for the
entrepreneurship
like in case of "garage-maker" Charvel and Apple Computer, it was
cattle.
To have space for the production, was one reason. The other one was to
have the
capital stock, necessary for the Fujigengakki incorporated founded in
Mai 1960,
led by Yûichiro Yokouchi and his Friend Yutaka Mimura.
They started with 10 employees in the
production of violins. Times changed, so they decided on the production
of the
more popular becoming guitar two month later. They were not successful
with the
first delivery, which was send back by truck. A letter of the customer
in Tokyo
expressed: "At all guitars or your honourable company DO RE MI FA are
different. This is not a guitar." The positions of the frets ware
completely wrong. How could it happen? Yokouchi was a farmer and none of
his
employees has ever learned how to play an instrument. With the firm
promise to
let a disaster like that never happen again. They hired a professor from
a
university to teach the stuff basics in music theory like tone scales.
In December
of the year of foundation, one was ready to build the first saleable
classic
guitars. Soon, in the next year, theymoved into a new factory
building 200 meters and had a production level of 30 guitars per
day.
Ten of the leading employees changed to the new founded Teisco Inc. in
Tokyo.
The first contact with an American E-guitar
in one of the capitals music stores, had a deep impact on Mr. Yokouchi.
In 1962
the production was extended to this kind of instrument. Trough some
dealers Fujigen
products came into the US-market first in 1963. The plan was to find a
regular
access to this market, too. At first Mimura made an US-round-trip. In
the
following year Yokouchi travelled with eight guitars in his luggage to
Los
Angeles and New York. That this turned out into a long stay of six
month,
wasn't because of disinterest in his guitars, Yokouchi had to
learn English
first. His efforts, both in terms of language training and business were
successful. From now on the direct export to USA started. The popularity
of
musician like the Beatles initiated a world wide boom for electric
guitars.
With a monthly production of 3000 pieces, Fujigen became one o the four
biggest
manufacturers in Japan.
From 1965 on drum-kits where manufactured,
too. In the following year a electronic division was opened to produce a
fuzz.
The demand of production capacity exploded. Since then it was possible
to delegate the
production of bodies to the Matsumoku company. From now on, it had to be
done
in the own factory. Matsomoku had other plans. This quite unknown
subcontractor
with its products Aria, Westone and a part of Fernandez-programme grew
up to
one of the biggest manufacturers in Japan. The move in 1966 to the
contemporary
plant eased the situation. The guitar industry of the land of the rising
son
had a serious crisis in 1968. 80 manufacturers of e-guitars gathered on
the
market. The two biggest, also bearing the name of its products, became
bankrupt.
This was the end of the best known Japanese brands of the sixties,
Teisco and Guyatone.
Under the name of the last, effect devices and amplifiers are
available. In
1969 Fujigens balance sheet showed red numbers, too. The beginning of
production of folk-guitars turned out to be the rescue. Electric guitars
lost
popularity. Fujigen had an advantage over its competitors. It was
already
experienced in the production of acoustic guitars. Yutaka Mimura left
the
company on its own will and Yokouchi took the leading position in the
company.
Until now, so called "buyers
brands" were manufactured. This means, the guitars had the name on the
headstock of those, who ordered the guitars. In 1970 this policy should
be
finished and all guitars be clearly identified as a product of its
manufacturer. Two Japanese names where chosen: Greco for the local
distribution
and Ibanez for the market overseas. Of course, those instruments where
replicas
of Gibson, Fender and Martin. A first in 1972 invented order-made-system
and a
1973 formed team for developing showed relatively early attempts to get
further
then simply copying. Additionally flat mandolins and banjos enriched the
programme. The market share in Japan reached 65%. The reputation of the
company
improved significantly through order of two famous guitarists. George
Benson and
Paul Stanley ordered guitars made from Ibanez according to their ideas
in 1977.
Other artists followed. In the same year, another product was a
sensation, a
product of a joint-venture with Roland: the GR-guitar-synthesiser. Since
only
Roland was written on the headstock, only insiders knew that the
manufacturer
of Ibanez was behind it.
In 1980 there was the breakthrough with the
cost-performance Blazer series. At least Ibanez said "good bye" to
the business of copying guitars. Other brands like Fernandez and Tokai
took
over this role. From 1981 on the pickups where produced by Fujigen
itself.
At that time, Fender was very ambitious in
settling down in Japan. The vice-director of Fender was in Tokyo and
followed
an invitation to have a look on Fujigens production facilities. What the
hosts didn't know, that there was secretly already done a decision to
manufacture Fender guitars at Tokai in Hamamatsu. The modern plant and
its
advanced production methods in Matsumoto deeply impressed the Visitor.
Accompanied by the heads of Kanda and Fujigen, he revised his decision,
sitting
in the car back to Tokyo and made an offer. In April 1982 finally a
contract
was signed.
First, they started with four lines of
models. According to the price level, it should be more or less be
equipped with
parts of the US-manufacturing. The aim was to gain a 70% market share in
Japan.
The rest, guitars on a low price level, without any parts from USA,
should be
for the export and the Fender-logo substituted with the logo of Squier.
There where no plans in selling those guitars
to the US in the beginning. The 4000 Fender guitars, which streamed into
the
market every month, changed the whole branch. Whatever the intention of
Fender
was, it was a heavy strike to all of those copying their brand. The
"kings of copying", Fernandez and Tokai had to reduce their
product-line. The bankruptcy of Tokai certainly was a result.
Now this company (in a smaller scale)
is back again. Most important was the behaviour of the Japanese
customers.
Whoever demanded for the sound of Fender, decided on a product made by
Fujigen.
Greco, still doing copies, had to remove all replicas from the
production line.
The yet only outside Japan offered Ibanez guitars had to fill the gap
with its
original designs. Fujigen grew up from its previous role in
simply producing low cost Fender guitars. The "Made in Japan"
supplement on the headstock does not promise a small budget product at
all.
Even the brand Ibanez is no longer a cheaper alternative to known
US-products.
It is certainly one of the outstanding achievements of this
company, to hold
its top position not only because of the highest monthly production
numbers, it
is a achieved by medium and high class instruments, not number crunching
product in the low cost section.
The visit at Fujigengakki needed almost the
whole day. When I said good bye, I saw a Hand coming against me. Shaking
hands
was something I had trained myself as something not being one of the
local
customs. After we shake hands, the meanwhile usual bowing procedure
followed.
The next day, there was another appointment
in Matsumoto. Although it was the smallest of eleven manufacturers in
Japan, I
didn't know, it would need as much time as the today's visit. More about
it, you
will read in the next issues of FACHBLATT.
Written by Rainer Daeschler
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FACHBLATT title page
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Sign to Fujigen plant
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Fumiaki Yokouchi
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Toshio-Yano an his sythesiser-guitar
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Bodies passed the quality control
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Fender D'Aquisto
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Fret shaping
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Fret shaping
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Greco Strat
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Necks
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Humbucker Army
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Ibanez
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Rosewood from India
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Japanese Fender
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Development divison
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NC-router
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Fujigen and trade companies
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Drychamber
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Yamaha headstocks
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