Tuesday, December 28, 2010

Angus Young guitar lesson (Part 2)

Angus Young guitar lesson (part 1)

Amanda Knox spends Christmas playing guitar, eating turkey

Former University of Washington student Amanda Knox spent her Christmas behind bars playing guitar and eating turkey.
Knox, 23, is in an Italian prison after being convicted of murdering her British roommate Meredith Kercher. Knox has been sentenced to 26-years in prison. This is her fourth Christmas behind bars.
According to a report in The Telegraph of London, Knox spent an hour Christmas Eve with her mother Edda mellas, her stepfather Chris Mellas and a friend, Madison Paxton. The Telegraph says they brought in a traditional dinner of turkey and all the trimmings. They also brought books and clothes for Amanda.

The Telegraph says a prison source says Amanda “played the guitar at the Christmas service while the other inmates sang.”
Knox’s lawyers told the newspaper she was “more upbeat than ever before” following a judge’s decision to grant a DNA review  in her case.
The court ruled that it will allow an independent review of crucial DNA evidence after defense claims that samples were inconclusive and possibly contaminated.
The court also said it will allow several witnesses the defense hopes will refute testimony that placed Knox and her boyfriend Raffaele Sollecito near the house on the night of Nov. 1, 2007, when Meredith was killed. Sollecito has been sentenced to 25 years in prison.

Saturday, December 25, 2010

Jesse Colin Young - Jesse Sings (9 of 10)

Wes Montgomery-here's that rainy day

Peter Green - Albatross - Guitar Solo Performance with Michael Casswell

Goodbye To Romance - Guitar Solo - Slow & Close Up - www.licklibrary.com

Stevie Ray Vaughan - Pride and Joy - Acoustic

Houses of the Holy

Lick Library Sweet Child O' Mine [GNR]

Jimi Hendrix - Valleys Of Neptune

Kirk Hammett shows riffs from Master Of Puppets

How To Play ' Here Comes The Sun By The Beatles' Guitar Lesson With Jami...

Jimi Hendrix - Little Wing

Rare Footage of Hendrix on Dick Cavett Show

Def Leppard - Switch 625 (In Memorie Of Steve Clark)

Def Leppard - Mirror Mirror (Look Into My Eyes)

Kelly Valleau - Miss You - www.candyrat.com

John Lennon Imagine Guitar Lesson - Learn How To Play - Easy Acoustic

Guns N' Roses - Patience - Guitar Lesson with Michael Casswell

Monday, December 6, 2010

Help Me Launch My Debut Album ( free t-shirt! )

I am currently trying to get my first album up and in circulation. I know many of you like what i am doing and many of you wrote to me asking how you can help. Thank all of you for your interest. I am ready to record my first Blues album and the way things are in this economy, it is proving difficult to come up with enough funds to cover all of the costs of recording and production. I would appreciate any amount you can donate. Even a few bucks will go a long way and help move things along. And, if you can donate the amount of $30.00 i will send you a free myyellowstrat t-shirt! Just send me an e-mail with your name, address, and receipt number to frwyguy@yahoo.com ,and i will get it out to you the next buisness day! I wish you all a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year!

Friday, December 3, 2010

The High-Flying History of the Gibson Hummingbird Guitar

The hummingbird, one of nature’s truly miraculous creatures, sustains itself on nectar. The Gibson Hummingbird acoustic guitar, a marvel of the luthier’s art, produces sounds just as sweet and satisfying as that avian ambrosia.

Keith Richards, Jimmy Page, T. Rex’s Marc Bolan, John McLaughlin, Sheryl Crow and myriad of other players have all soaked in the model’s creative powers since its inception 50 years ago — an event celebrated this month by the unveiling of the Gibson 50th Anniversary 1960 Hummingbird. The lore of the Hummingbird began, of course, on the workbench, during a time generally understood to be the first golden era of Gibson’s electric guitar building. Nonetheless, the model was quite innovative among Gibson’s line of acoustic instruments, even compared to the archtop beauties developed for the company by the legendary instrument designer Lloyd Loar in the 1920s and ’30s.

The flattop Hummingbird was created to compete directly with pricier Martin dreadnought guitars. The square-shouldered dreadnought body type debuted in 1916 and took its name from the estimable British battleship the HMS Dreadnought. By the 1950s, the shape had become popular with bluegrass and country musicians, thanks to the even tones and projection of its big-bodied design. When the Gibson Hummingbird was unveiled, it was the company’s second most costly acoustic guitar, right behind the classic mustache-bridge Gibson J-200. Two years later, the introduction of the Gibson Dove made the Hummingbird the third most costly, but didn’t diminish its popularity. Hummingbirds are distinguished by their etched pickguards with a hummingbird design and their stately body style, as well as a mahogany back and sides, a series of split-parallelogram mother of pearl inlays on the neck and fretboards, a spruce top and a rosewood bridge. The model celebrated its 40th anniversary in 2000 by winning Acoustic Guitar magazine’s “Players’ Choice Award” in the dreadnought category. The editors cited the Hummingbird’s “very wide range of sounds, from gutsy and loud to sweet to soft” and proclaimed the guitar superb for all styles of playing, whether requiring chords or intricate solos.
Hummingbirds from the pre-Dove era of 1960 to ’62 are rare birds, indeed, and, when they can be found, sell for up to $5,000 if they’re in good condition. Over the years, a series of Hummingbird types have been produced. These include the Hummingbird Modern Classic, which is an electro-acoustic guitar; the True Vintage model, which drew on the blueprints of the original, like the brand new 50th Anniversary Hummingbird does; the Artist and Pro variations, which were Guitar Center exclusives; the Icon ’60s edition, which sported a natural finish, block inlays and an adjustable bridge; the Hummingbird KOA, which employs KOA wood in its construction, and the recent Sheryl Crow model, which is natural finish kin to the Modern Classic.
The Hummingbird’s legend as a popular instrument may well begin with Jimmy Page, nearly 10 years into its existence. Page played Gibson J-200s and Hummingbirds on such indelible tracks as “Babe I’m Gonna Leave You” and “Ramble On” on 1969’s Led Zeppelin and Led Zeppelin II, respectively, and “Gallows Pole” on the next year’s Led Zeppelin III. Although alt-country and Americana fans would argue that it was the late Gram Parsons who first notably wielded a Hummingbird in The Byrds, Flying Burrito Brothers and as a solo artist. On the ground floor of glam pop, Marc Bolan of T. Rex often used Hummingbirds, including Epiphone models, to lay a bedrock rhythm under his electric guitar licks. “Life’s a Gas,” from the classic 1971 album Electric Warrior, is an excellent example of this approach. And Page fans would debate this, but arguably the most blazing guitarist to ever employ a Hummingbird is fusion pioneer John McLaughlin, leader of the Mahavishnu Orchestra. Although he’s best known for blasting out grizzly power licks at near-lightspeed velocity through Marshall stacks with Mahavishnu, his acoustic playing packs the same frightening intensity. And it is often surprising. For example, McLaughlin’s trailblazing and plain loud pre-Mahavishnu performances on the first Tony Williams Lifetime album in 1971 were on a Hummingbird with a pick-up installed. Or, depending on your taste in guitar heroes, the foundation of the Hummingbird mystique may have been laid by Keith Richards. He has preferred the ’Bird as his acoustic guitar of choice since 1964, and the model has fueled such famous Rolling Stones cuts as “Street Fighting Man,” “Not Fade Away,” “Brown Sugar,” “Angie,” “Wild Horses” and “Jumping Jack Flash.” Add Sheryl Crow — who always carries her signature model on stage — to that mix, and the diversity of those players becomes an accurate vision of the Gibson Hummingbird’s versatility.
Made at Gibson Guitar’s acoustic guitar building operation in Bozeman, Montana, the new Gibson 50th Anniversary 1960 Hummingbird, is in all respects but age, a classic guitar. These Hummingbirds are made to the period-correct specs of the True Vintage in a gorgeous Dark Heritage Cherry 1960 sunburst finish, vintage body back bracings, gold keystone kluson tuning machines, a custom mother-of-pearl “50” inlay on the headstock, a gold painted 50th Anniversary pickguard, gloss finish and a “50th Anniversary” engraved truss-rod cover. Only 200 are being produced.

That foundation model is kicked up a notch for high-end collectors with Custom Shop Limited Edition Hummingbird 50th Anniversary Models in production runs of only 50 guitars each. The 50th Anniversary Hummingbird Custom Exotic Rosewood model is made with back and sides of highly figured exotic virgin rosewood hand selected by Master Luthier Ren Ferguson, with hide-glued top bracing and an 18k gold headstock inlay, while the 50th Anniversary Hummingbird Custom “AAA” Koa model has back and sides made from Hawaiian Koa wood with a special honeyburst finish to blend with KOA, hide-glued top bracing, and an 18k gold headstock. The headstocks insure that these Hummingbirds will be the most valuable models ever produced and follow a new trend of using gold in high-end guitar and amplifier construction.

One more tribute to the Hummingbird’s durability is its popularity, typically scoring the fifth-highest sales in Gibson’s acoustic guitar line, and the variety of ’Birds still in the Gibson Company catalog. These include the basic Hummingbird, the True Vintage, the Custom KOA, the Pro and an Epiphone Hummingbird. All of these instruments reflect the enduring standards set down five decades ago.

Busy Week!

Thank goodness it is Friday! Last night i was off practice, and planned on doing some internet stuff, but right at 5:00 the internet went completely out, but the cable television was fine. So, finally, at 8:30 it came back and i ripped into the internet like a crazed animal and hardly looked up for a couple of hours. Got alot done in a relatively short time. Every once in a while i would look around and my guitar was calling me a little, so i grabbed it and went over Kiss's Cold Gin. I am still trying to bring it all up to speed with the backing. It's almost there. The chorus and fills are the last to come in of course. Ace has some great chops, man. Working on Stevie Nick's Crazy On You, and Kiss's Deuce. Silent night (fingerstyle) for Christmas, (Posting soon on Youtube). Well, that's all i got for now. Have a great weekend!

Thursday, December 2, 2010

Dick Dale still riding the musical waves

Best known for his Blazing guitar runs, Dale has long been known as the "King of surf Guitar". But, now at age 73, some are calling him "Cancer Warrior". Check out this great story on a great guitarist from the sixties!

http://http://www.mercurynews.com/music/ci_16743860?nclick_check=1

Welcome!

Hey! Welcome to my blog! This is a place for guitarists, and musicians of all stripes. I will be adding articles, opinions, and music! Leave comments, and get involved.

About Me

My photo
Hollywood, California, United States
Guitarist