Archive for the ‘Electric Guitar’ Category.

The Electric Guitar

esp_ltd_ec100_quilted_maple.jpgAcoustic Guitars and their families a variety of music dating back thousands of years, but the idea of a guitar using electrical currents to amplify its sound had to wait until the decade of 1930 to begin to take root.

Necessity was perhaps the mother of invention, because the volume of the guitar, used previously in the blues and jazz, they could not compete with the new sounds of the big band and the cry of brass instruments. The first experiments by simply adding to the microphones guitar had only limited success, due in part to the quality and tone, in part, due to feedback that could happen as soon as it reached a reasonable amount.

The breakthrough came when Les Paul, a jazz guitarist, successfully tested with a collection system that could convert magnetic vibrations of the strings to an electrical signal that is amplified and sent to a speaker. Soon, he began to add to their guitarists vans hollow body guitars, but in reality there is no need for an electric guitar to a hollow organ, and that collection can detect very subtle vibrations and expand them anyway. Before long, Fender, Rickenbacker and, of course, Gibson is producing solid body electric guitars.

Innovations unique to the electric guitar

Electric guitars enabled many innovations that will define its sound. Most prominent among these was the fact that the volume and tone controls could be added to the electronics between the pickup and cable, which meant that the accomplished guitarist could adjust the tone and volume, while on stage.

Second and third vans were added at various points along the body to take advantage of the difference in tone at various points along the ropes, and they can be mixed together with multiple checks. The arm appeared tremolo, which allows notes bent down or up (before, which could only be bent upward pulling chain outside their natural line, therefore, is more strict). The tremolo arm was part of the early sound of rock ‘n’ roll, and could make a vibrato or create sound long, sustained wailing sounds associated with Jimi Hendrix.

Other sound effects, as the chorus, overdrive, vibrate, wah-wah, reverb and delay (echo) can also be controlled through pedals by the player, but add to the variety of sounds available. The gathering was also applied to bass guitar, and is now seen in the violins, mandolins, cellos and many other types of string instrument.

Music styles using Guitars

The music genres that use electric guitars are too numerous for this article, but its origins go back to the jazz and big band sound that became popular between the wars. Blues guitarists pioneered the “dirty” sound that later morph into heavy metal, and not rock and roll group would be complete without at least one electric guitar.

Bob Dylan once called “Judas” by a heckler when it changed its acoustics for an electric on stage, a significant moment in the electric folk.

The sixties saw major psychedelic pop bands and put the instrument to be used, and the disc, punk, ska and reggae music from the seventies used the instrument’s inherent rhythm, a lively and prosperous Africa is the sound of guitar once more innovative Present streams. Whenever a new technology has come along, especially the electronic revolution of the late 1970 and 1980, people who have written off the electric guitar, but shows no signs of losing popularity.


Charlie Buquette wrote this article about Yamaha Electric Guitars