Yamaha’s famed FG line of folk guitars has long represented incredible value and playability, a tradition furthered with the introduction of the FGX700SC.
The new FGX700SC is based on the world’s most successful solid top acoustic guitar, the FG700S. The new FGX700SC features Yamaha’s impeccable build quality with an added cutaway and a one-way System 55T piezo/preamp system that includes a tuner, three-band EQ and an adjustable mid frequency slider. Like its non-electrified counterpart, the FGX700SC represents a phenomenal value.
“The FGX700SC acoustic guitar offers all the great features of the FG700S, with an added cutaway and preamp system,” says Dennis Webster, marketing manager, Yamaha Guitars. “Available in high-gloss natural finish, it sounds great unplugged and through an amp or PA system. Quality material, outstanding construction and tried-and-true value make it too good to miss.”
The FGX700SC is currently available at a MSRP: $ 483.
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Question by asbloodrunsblack27: How much will guitar center charge for switching pickups?
I have a guitar with active emg pickups already in it and i wanted to switch in some active Seymour Duncan pickups instead but i was wondering how much guitar center would charge for the labor and things.
It’s only two pickups being switched out of my guitar if i take it there.
Best answer:
Answer by LucasMan If I were doing it, I’d probably charge you $ 25 or so… plus the cost of parts. I doubt GC would charge much more.
Despite his tragically short career, Paul Kossoff’s guitar work invariably enters at the top of any discussion of classic Les Paul performances. His playing with seminal British blues-rockers Free, and on his acclaimed solo album Backstreet Crawler, exhibited a tone, skill, energy and pure musicality that put him among the pantheon of great British guitar stars such as Eric Clapton, Peter Green, Jimmy Page, Mick Ronson and Jeff Beck. Brian May of Queen was heavily influenced by Kossoff’s tech… Gibson Electric Guitars
Press Release
The Yamaha Guitalele is a miniature nylon guitar that looks and sounds like a ukulele, but features six strings and is tuned like a standard guitar up to an A (A/D/G/C/E/A). Chord fingering is the same for any standard-tuned guitar, but now guitarists can easily join the ukulele craze with a portable, playable and thoroughly unique instrument.
“The GL1 plays well and gives guitarists a fun alternative to their usual nylon string guitar,” says Dennis Webster, marketing manager, Yamaha Guitars.
The GL1 is currently available at a MSRP: $ 140.
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Sunday night was the first time I had attended the Australian Fender Road Show which was held at Sydney’s Parade Theatre at NIDA and featured the insanely talented and hilarious Greg Koch (aka Festus McCracken!) all the way from the US as well as a great house band comprised of James Ryan on guitar, James Gillard on Bass and Haydn Meggitt on Drums. I had never been to any Greg Koch clinics or events so I had no idea what a funny and entertaining guy he is, think of Jack Black meets Bill Bailey with the guitar skills of Brent Mason. Greg seems to be able to play in just about any style but his blues and country licks are particularly brilliant.
The Road Show is a chance for the general public (about 400 of them packed into the Parade Theatre tonight) to check out what’s new in the Fender range and they had a display of about 30 guitars and about 10 guitar and bass amps to demonstrate throughout the night. The show lasted for 2 hours and included performances from the house band to demonstrate the various guitars in various styles but also there were more in-depth feature overviews in between the songs from James Ryan and Greg Koch. On display was the new Select series, the Kurt Cobain signature Jaguar and Mustang (the Nirvana tribute was great see the photo below) as well as the Modern Player series and some custom shop guitars including a very tasty looking 3 pickup La Cabronita Telecaster. Also there were amp demonstrations of the new Custom Shop EC Vibro-Champ and Tremolux the latter of which sounded fantastic especially combined with the Eric Clapton Stratocaster and it’s on board 25db boost. There were also demonstrations of the new Machete amp, the Super-Sonic and the EVH 5150 III 50 Watt Head and 2×12 Cab.
Another interesting guitar on show was the Modern Player Marauder which James played for quite a while and demonstrated the various tones, this guitar has a Fender Triplebucker in the bridge position which has 3 blades that allow you to get a lot of different tones and combined with the Modern Player Jazzmaster pickup in the neck you pretty much have the whole spectrum covered. The Modern Player guitars are made in China in the same factory as the Squier Classic Vibe Series which everybody raves about, apparently the quality control on these guitars is excellent and they are very affordable.
I managed to get a couple of videos from one of the last jams of the night ‘Crossroads’ and I really wish I had recorded more but I was enjoying watching so much I totally forgot!
Apologies for the portrait mode video I was clearly not thinking at the time due to the display of such great musicianship.
Thank you to Fender for putting on such a great event!
The original Polytune pedal from TC Electronic has been on my pedalboard since it was released, while I don’t necessarily use the polyphonic function that often I find that the response of the single note mode is incredibly fast and accurate and the display is so bright that it can be used in any situation daylight or dark stages. When TC Electronic announced the Polytune Mini at this year’s NAMM I was intrigued, if they could really fit all that functionality into a pedal half it’s size that would save space on my pedalboard and I could maybe squeeze another on there?
I have not been disappointed in any way by the Polytune Mini, yes it is stripped down in the way of features but to be honest they are features that don’t affect me anyway, for instance on the large version of the Polytune you can change the display to Stream mode which is like a strobe style display and it lets you switch to bass mode too. The core features though are identical, fast precision tuning in either polyphonic or monophonic mode and in poly mode you can choose between standard tuning down to low B, Drop D tuning and in Capo mode up to the 7th fret by simply pushing a button on the side to cycle through and releasing at the one you want to use. Without these extra modes polyphonic mode would be limited to only E Standard.
Check out my demo above and I think you will agree this is the coolest tuner on the market today, it will be taking the place of my large Polytune pedal on my board so that I can squeeze my Corona Chorus on there!
Question by YeYeehYo: Any difference between cheap and expensive guitar if pickups are changed?
I just bought an Ibanez RG1570 Prestige. It retails new for $ 1000 and I’m eventually going to change out the pickups with DiMarzio’s. It occured to me that there are people with lower models, for example the RG270 which is significantly cheaper, change out their picks with Dimarzio’s as well. Would mine still sound a lot better than their lower models, or did I just waste several hundred dollars?
Best answer:
Answer by Gale generally higher price=higher quality ….there are many factors that contribute to the sound other than the pickups. The wood, construction, etc. The rg prestige series is well built and will sound better than a cheaper model because of the way it’s built. Good choice with the Dimarzios you won’t be disappointed.
Steve Morse the American iconic rock fusion guitar pioneer was born July 28, 1954 in Hamilton, Ohio. Ironically his father was a minister, but his mother a classically trained pianist, in which Steve obviously received his musical genius. Like many budding musicians in the 70’s, Steve attended the University of Miami and with Andy West formed the instrumental fusion group Dixie Dregs. Morse is one of the most articulate and impressive guitarists of his generation. He was voted “Best Overall Guitarist” by Guitar Player magazine in their annual reader’s poll five consecutive years (which ended his eligibility by retiring him into their “Gallery of Greats”, a distinction shared only by Steve Howe of Yes.) I had the privilege of working with Steve on a project, as well as sitting down with him and picking his brain about his recording techniques for guitar on his new collaboration “Angelfire” with up & coming singer Sarah Spencer.
BTQ: What’s your set up, guitar and amps when recording this project? Steve: I started with my normal Musicman electric, and then used a Buscarino acoustic/electric nylon string guitar, an Ovation steel string, a Steinberger 12 string, a Musicman baritone guitar (tuned down to B), and a Line 6 Variax for a few parts, too. Amps… hmmm… not many amps at all. Everything I can think of at the moment was mic’d or direct. For my current projects, I’m enjoying the new signature amp that ENGL made for me, but wait, there were a couple of electric solos on a stock ENGL classic tube amp that I was trying out at the time.
BTQ: Do you have your own studio or did you use an outside studio for this project? Steve: I used my studio. It’s a very modest endeavor, built for space rather than sonic perfection. There are some concessions to recording ideas such as no parallel walls, slightly higher ceiling, and walls separated from the floor by foam…….but it’s pretty simple compared to the professionally designed ones I’ve seen in some musician’s homes. I’ve become attached to my old board, which is still wired to my old Studer 24 track, so everything went through the board on it’s way to being recorded by the computer. The old Urei compressors still work, and are used on all vocals and clean guitars.
BTQ: I was a very big fan of the original Steve Morse Band albums. Besides music style difference, how does your guitar approach with Sarah Spencer differ from your solo productions? Steve: My approach is always the same… to try to create some sonic depth. With distorted guitar doing melody, such as on my SM band albums, that usually requires having lots of different sounds, if only for phrase reinforcement, or bringing out an underlying part. Partly why my guitar has 5 different sounds that I always switch between! With this album (Angelfire), I wanted to have no distortion at all when she was singing, since her voice is so perfect sounding, so that meant combining different sounds that were clean. For instance, while I’m playing a busy arpeggiated part on the nylon string, one time I might add 12 string to double only the notes that are on the 5th and 6th strings, to accentuate and slow down the apparent density of what sticks out to your ear. So instead of hearing a lot of equal volume notes, there is a constant harmonic backdrop of arpeggios with a more sparse, ringing 12 strings, just loud enough to notice the difference. The material itself pushes you in a certain direction. For example, in the tune “Omnis Morse Aequat”, the clean guitars are being ‘wah’ed by rolling the tone control with my little finger instead of using a wah pedal. This gives the effect of unearthly brass and string accompaniment when it’s mixed right, which fits the stately nature of the tune. Another example, in “Get Away”, the riff was crying out to be played on the baritone guitar, since it’s in a key that seems too high for standard tuning without distortion, and the baritone with a clean sound gave it a slightly unusual framework.
BTQ: How did you record the guitar, mics, room amp or close mic, etc? Steve: I close mic’d everything, using a large diaphragm Shure KSM condenser and a Neuman 47 for the voice. I tried lots of mics for the acoustics, and probably used the Shure 81 the most. I also used a tube direct going into the Urei 1176 compressor for direct stuff.
BTQ: What format did you record the songs on, analog or digital? Steve: I used Cubase SX1, 2, and 3… the project lasted a long time and there were upgrades during the project. Cubase is very powerful and fits my needs fine. I find the German approach easy to understand and remember… after making some mistakes in the beginning, years ago. All software like this requires quite a ramp-up period of time to learn what to do. Basically, you have to be able to edit almost everything on the fly, or have a superhuman memory and ‘fix it later’. With Sarah, I simply had to decide which good sounding take sounded better, and keep it. There were literally 3 notes that I fixed of hers, so we ran no pitch correction, which always helps the naturalness, since it IS natural. I did de-ess some songs, and still don’t know if that was a great idea or not, since, of course, it sounds different on each system it’s played on.
My computer is a plain vanilla, electronics outlet HP desktop. Years ago, I used Apple stuff, but when my Mac fried, there was literally no place in town to get another and get back to work, so I made the big jump to PC stuff, which led me right to Cubase. Mark of the Unicorn A to D converters, and a few random keyboards I have around, and that was it. Van Romaine and his engineers in New Jersey, and Germany did the drums and percussion. He was touring and at home while he tried to get these tracks done for me… Thanks, Van! He uses Beyer mic’s, I think. Dave LaRue recorded his final bass parts at his home studio, and was pretty much direct with his 4 and 5 string Musicman bass.
BTQ: Being a guitarist, what foot pedals did you use on this project? Were there any in particular that really gave you that classic Steve Morse sound? Perhaps you can share a technique with the readers. Steve: I don’t think I used a single foot pedal, and I usually don’t in the studio. One technique I did use was to double a part with the effect, say a chorus delay, on the opposite side of the dry part. Then, when you double the part, pan the doubled part exactly opposite so that on take one you have dry on the left, effect on the right… take two you have dry on the right, effect on the left. It makes it sound sonically complex without totally phasing out. The doubles need to be pretty close to make that work, since it’s best if they are the same volume.
BTQ: Can you explain how Steen Skrydstrup modified your amp rig with the ENGLS and how that has effected your sound? Steve: The biggest way it’s affected my sound is that my rig never breaks during shows! It’s a great example of industrial quality trumping consumer quality. With my usual fat snake of long guitar cords, I could always rewire and troubleshoot any part of the rig. However, in this context, with limited time to set up, and lots of traffic on the cords, this heavy duty multi-pin approach is easier to set up… and amazingly, very reliable. In case you haven’t guessed, I haven’t had 100% luck with multi-pin systems in the past, but his work seems to be impeccable. I feel very fortunate to have a rig of such high quality from the guitar all the way to the speakers.
I love to see our old school guitar heroes incorporate the new digital recording technology with the classic analog recording techniques we all know and love. This is something that is near and dear to my heart. Since I come from the old days of analog myself, I’ve always felt strongly that digital recording needs the warmth of an analog mixer and vintage compressors to enhance the signal flow. This is exactly how Steve and I worked together on the instrumental track “Towers”, dedicated to the New York Firefighters who lost their lives on 9/11 at the World Trade Center. I recorded all of the tracks on the Ampex MM1200 2 inch analog tape machine and then dumped them down to Digital Performer via the MOTU 24 I/O. So when Steve sent me his solo tracks, I just flew them in the session and lined them up and mixed. I’m a strong believer that both digital and analog worlds compliment each other very well. I even encourage budding recording engineers who solely live in the box to go out and buy an analog ¼” 2 track tape machine to use for master mix downs to warm up the signal. Once properly aligned, you’d be very surprised how that makes a sonic difference!
About the author Brian Tarquin is a Multi Emmy Award winning composer/guitarist and owner of Jungle Room Studios. Some of his accomplishments include, writing the theme music for MTV’s Road Rules, as well as producing music for many other TV shows such as CSI, ABC’s Making The Band, Extra, Alias and the Keanu Reeves film, The Watcher. In 2006, Tarquin opened his own boutique record label called BHP MUSIC, specializing in instrumental guitar music. Brian is also a featured music writer and has been published in magazines such as EQ, Guitar Player, Premier Guitar & Recording.
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Press Release Rotosound is delighted to add their range over forty new Guitar Picks to its ever-expanding selection of guitar accessories, helping guitar players everywhere in their search for the perfect pick. The guitar picks come in packs of six and are made from either celluloid, Delrin or PVC and are priced from £1.50 each inc.vat.
Historically celluloid was the first plastic ever used to make guitar picks. These picks are the ones that most closely resemble the feel and sound of real tortoise shell and come in the standard celluloid or pearloid finish. They both feel smooth to the touch with their polished finish and have a warm vintage sound. The celluloid guitar picks are available in four thicknesses, the classic shape in classic, small and large sizes, the heart shape, the small teardrop shape and the small shark tooth shape. The pearloid guitar picks are available in the classic size and shape.
Delrin guitar picks are less rigid than the celluloid ones and come in a wider range of thicknesses. They have a warm woody tone that emphasises the lower order harmonics. The Delrin guitar picks are extremely durable with a matte surface that makes the pick easier to grip, particularly with sweaty hands. These picks are available in the classic size and shape, in the shark tooth shape (same basic size, but with a more aggressive point for precision playing), or in a large classic shape.
If you need a more affordable guitar pick, then Rotosound can offer PVC guitar picks, in three different thicknesses in the classic size and shape with either an opaque or transparent finish.
Question by : Are there extra precautions you have to take when changing the pickups on a guitar with coil-tap?
I have a Schecter C-1+; great guitar except that the pickups on it aren’t that good. (Duncan Designed HD-102, i think)
I’m thinking of replacing them, but my guitar is also coil-taped and the wiring in the back looks more complicated than normal guitars. Also, maybe suggest what pickups would go nicely with this guitar.
Best answer:
Answer by Guido Fakie as far as im concerned. changing the pickups on a coil tap guitar are as easy as with a normal guitar. try a wcr fillmore in the bridge and a wcr godwood in the neck