It looks like you're new here. If you want to get involved, click one of these buttons!
Subscribe to our Patreon, and get image uploads with no ads on the site!
Base theme by DesignModo & ported to Powered by Vanilla by Chris Ireland, modified by the "theFB" team.
Comments
extended range, "ergonomic", fanned frets, true temperament etc. Big changes to fundamental construction details that bring new hardware and shapes with them.
things like evo frets or new nut materials are a pretty big innovation. Two way truss rods even more so.
You our have to give Gibson credit, they have tried to innovate over the years
Instagram
Why only the other day I used an unwound fourth string- beat that.
*An Official Foo-Approved guitarist since Sept 2023.
I can hear the difference - particularly in the initial attack of the note. But plastic clarinets were made to try and sound like wooden ones. That's why I was curious about a very different material.
Would a brass one sound like a soprano sax?
https://speakerimpedance.co.uk/?act=two_parallel&page=calculator
https://www.studiowear.co.uk/ -
https://twitter.com/spark240
Facebook - m.me/studiowear.co.uk
Reddit r/newmusicreview
PRS being the exception.
There's no image on that link but it looks like the one on the left here ...
We have had any number of innovative things intorduced into the world of the guitar player, but how many of them have actually improved the lot of the guitarist? You can improve/modify/alter/faff around with any mhumber of things, but unless there is tangible benefit then, not being a community of fanbois, we tend to stick with the tried and trusted.
And........ if he has heard that joke that has the punch line:
"Don't worry Love....I can free your toe. But I am afraid I can't do anything for Acker Bilk"
But ok, there's the whole Grunge thing. Cobain was massive in the 90s. Then there's Noel Gallagher and the britpop thing.
Hell, I've been playing for years and I genuinely have no idea who he is.
Its hardly recent!
Instagram
I want to see that in person now!
https://speakerimpedance.co.uk/?act=two_parallel&page=calculator
While computers could make almost anything possible, most of the actual commercial development in the field is in making software plugins or digital hardware that are ever-more-faithful emulations of classic analogue gear.
The one that went tits up?