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Showing posts with label guitars. Show all posts
Showing posts with label guitars. Show all posts
Monday, December 5, 2016
... experimenting with steel pick for a brighter tone
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Labels:
guitar pick,
guitar player,
guitar world,
guitars,
Music,
pick,
steel
Sunday, November 6, 2016
Monday, August 8, 2016
The Hendrix/Zappa Guitar
One of the most infamous guitars of all time is the Hendrix/Zappa guitar. It is said that Jimi Hendrix burned this guitar at the 1968 Miami Pop Festival. However, some people argue as the photos of the said concert showed Hendrix playing a white Stratocaster. But as the story goes, the remains of the guitar was then given to Frank Zappa and after Frank died, his son Dweezil got it.
It was repaired to be playable, and Frank made several changes to the guitar’s electronics and hardware over the years. He played it on his 1976 album “Zoot Allures“.
Frank also posed with it for the cover of Guitar Player magazine's January 1977 issue.
In the video below, Dweezil Zappa tells the entire story behind the guitar.
Monday, April 14, 2014
Who Invented Frets?
The history of the fret is as mysterious as that of stringed instruments. Images of fretted instruments have been found on pottery from Acadian culture dating from 1500 B.C., and in artwork from ancient Egypt and the Roman era. But it’s still unknown exactly who – or which culture – first placed frets on stringed instruments.
Though guitarists know what a fret is, they may not be familiar with its function. In essence, the fret provides a raised ridge that effectively alters the string length by a predetermined amount. This allows even the least technically proficient players to accurately raise or lower the pitch. (By comparison, players of fretless string instruments must practice a great deal to play their instruments with perfect intonation.) The frets are arranged on a guitar’s fretboard according to a mathematical formula related to the scale of the neck, with each fret representing a semitone – or single-step – change in pitch.
Early frets were probably made from the same animal gut used for strings, with each fret looped and knotted onto the neck at chosen intervals. Metal frets were developed as the guitar evolved from an instrument akin to a medieval lute to the more recognizable “Spanish” form it now resembles. Modern “nickel-silver” fret wire came about in response to the advent of steel strings, which easily wore down the old soft-metal frets.
Viewed in cross section, fret wire is mushroom-shaped and consists of a tang (the thin ridge that fits into a slot on the fretboard) and a crown (the bulbous strip visible on the fretboard surface). Crowns are made in a variety of sizes and profiles, including vintage (thin and tall), modern (wide and short) and jumbo (broad and tall). The fret style affects an instrument’s feel and performance, so it’s no coincidence that vintage purists prefer small wire while high-tech shredders generally opt for jumbo frets, which facilitate faster playing.
Modern variations on the fret can be seen on the Parker Fly, which employs tangles, stainless-steel frets bonded to synthetic fingerboards, and in Yamaha’s new Fretwave system, which uses kinked frets for tempered tuning.
Source: Guitar World, March 2002 Issue
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