
After that, NBE resumed the production of some Jolana guitar models (Grazioso, Tornado, Diamant), keeping active up to present days. NBE is currently the largest manufacturer of electric string instruments in Europe. In 2003, "New Bohemian Electronics Corp" (NBE), a manufacturing company established two years before, bought the brand "Jolana" to Delicia, which therefore ceased to produce guitars, focusing on other instruments. The company started producing guitars for renewed foreign brands such as Epiphone, Hohner, Spector, American Showster, MTD and others.

In 1993, Delicia was acquired by "Bohemia Musico S.R.O.", becoming "Bohemia Musico Delicia". Harmonika (later known as "Delicia") started to manufacture several models such as Cavallero, Tornado, Basora, Diskant 2, Marina 2, Onyx, Jantar, Strat, Studio and Studio Bass. Jolana continued making electric guitars and basses until the end of the 1980s, developing models such as "Diamant" –a Gibson Les Paul copy. 1975 marked the beginning of production of Jolana guitars in Harmonika Horovice factory. By the second half of the 1960s, three major factories produced electric guitars in the CSSR: CSHN, Varhany Krnov and the aforementioned Harmonika. The Harmonika company was in charge of Tornado production in the city of Hořovice. That same year, a new solid body guitar was introduced, the "Hurricane", with its bass version, "Typhoon", in 1965. Moreover, "Alexis" and "Pampero" (basses versions of Alexandra and Tornado models) came out in 1965. Semi-acoustic models ("Diskant" and the successful "Tornado" in 1963, then followed by the "Alexandra") were also designed by Jolana, expanding its offer. The first Jolana guitar was made in 1960. Managed by Ruzicka, it was soon renamed into "Jolana" –probably after Ruzicka's daughter name–. In 1959, a new guitar factory, Neoton, opened in Hradec Králové. The model was exported by Rezonet under the name "Futurama", with notable musicians such as George Harrison, Jimmy Page and Eric Clapton among its users. With my strat: All 4 Electrics, From left to right, Fender Mexican Telecaster, Gibson Les Paul Studio, Fender Stratocaster Player 60s and the Hohner.

The "Grazioso", a model based on the Fender Stratocaster, was an immediate success not only in Czechoslovakia but outside the country. Those models became commercial success, being also awarded at the Expo 58 in Brussels. It was followed by other Rezonet's guitars, "Arioso" and "Arco". Designer Vladimir Vlcek created the first model, a lap steel named "Akord" which came into production in 1954.

The company manufactured not only guitars but other wooden goods, including furniture. The origins of the first electric guitars date back to 1953, when the Rezonet factory managed by Josef Ruzicka designed the first instruments in the country. The history of musical instruments manufacturing in former Czechoslovakia started when engineer Ferdinand Machalek created the first piano pickup in the middle 1940s.
