Info and News about Guitars
Electric guitars -- like most instruments -- are analog. The sounds
come from vibrations and modulating electrical fields, not data and
computer chips. It's hard to fault an instrument that has given us a
range from John Lee Hooker's beehive licks to the sounds of Keith Richards,
Kurt Cobain and Carlos Santana. But an electric guitar has some hang-ups.
Like, its tone can be affected by the length of the cord from the guitar
to the amp. Plus, as versatile as an electric guitar is, it's not always
versatile enough.
The guts of Gibson's digital guitar would be the few high-tech chips
inside. The cord you plug in would be an ethernet cable, which would
run to a digital amp, or into a laptop that becomes the mixing board.
The sound, once set, would never alter by even a shade. ''I tried it
with 200 feet of cable, and there was no change in tone,'' Schon says
ecstatically. This is a big deal to musicians who want to roam a large
stage, which Schon will do this summer as Journey tours with REO Speedwagon
and Styx -- concerts sure to be packed with more middle-aged moms per
square foot than a suburban bunco card-game tournament.
Performers' sound checks would no longer be necessary, Devin notes.
The artist could set up preferences for how the guitar should sound,
then a laptop computer could listen to the way the guitar reverberates
in that room and automatically make adjustments so it sounds exactly
right. The system could adjust the sound as the number of people in
the audience changes, thus changing the room's acoustics.
A digital guitar could assign a different effect to each of the six
strings, so maybe the two bass strings could have a crunchy fuzz tone
while the four higher strings mimic a mellow jazz guitar. Today's electric
guitars can't do anything like that. And no one's even started to talk
about what it would mean if you could plug a guitar straight into the
Internet. Could you sell guitar licks on eBay?
Under it all, Gibson promises to preserve and even improve on the basic
guitar that's been a part of rock 'n' roll for decades. ''People aren't
looking for a new instrument,'' Juszkiewicz says, ''but for new capabilities.''
Check out our info and news on guitars. It is constantly changing.
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