Career
Born and raised in Los Angeles, California, DeTemple began repairing and maintaining a wide range of stringed instruments at the age of thirteen. Early on, he became acquainted with renowned guitarist Ernie Ball, who retained his services by paying with old guitars. He began hanging out at the Los Angeles Ash Grove folk club, where he came into contact with a number of luminaries in the folk and blues genres including Taj Mahal, Doc Watson, Lightnin" Hopkins, Clarence White, and Jesse Editor Davis.
In 1966, Academy Award winning composer, Earl Robinson invited him to play in the "Winterfest Concerto for Five String Banjo and Orchestra" with the Los Angeles Philharmonic conducted by Lawrence Foster and later with Elmer Bernstein.
In the 1970s, DeTemple worked as a studio musician, and contributed to a number of film scores and other projects. A notable studio performance during this period was on Dave Mason"s bestselling album, Alone Together.
Danko discovered his guitar work when DeTemple joined in on a jam session in the studio with Eric Clapton, Pete Townshend, and Ron Wood. Most recently he has played mandolin on John Fogerty’s DeJa Vu All Over Again and the supplemental disc of Kevin Costner"s Open Range Digital Video Disc Beyond Open Range: (The Making of Open Range).
In 1995, he founded DeTemple Guitars and began building handmade Stratocasterand Telecaster-style solid body guitars using original 1950s vintage instruments as templates.
His guitars are highly sought after by collectors and professional musicians. Master luthier Rick Turner, has referred to his guitars as "..the one out of 5,000 — the top half of one percent of all these types of guitars.. the dream Strat-style guitars that everybody’s chasing after." He claims to have made guitars for Bob Dylan, John Fogerty and some known Jazz musicians. DeTemple is said to employ the "esoteric" centuries-old method of tap-tuning the woods he uses in his creations, although it is unclear whether or not the process is effective for non-acoustic instruments.
He also uses "30,000 year-old fossilized Mastodon ivory tusk" nuts, his own pickups, bridges, blocks and other hardware.
His guitars sell in mid-to-upper-four-figure range. There has been up to a three-year wait list.
There is currently less than a one-year wait list. He lives in the San Fernando Valley area of Los Angeles, California.