Category Archives: art

On September 16, 2011 B.B King turned 86. He has been playing the blues since World War II and he is one of the greatest guitarists who have ever lived. This is the first part in a series that is being made here at Jamorama about the players who have influenced the way we play guitar.

BB was born on a plantation in Mississippi in 1925. His family was poor and as a youth he played guitar for spare change to help his family. Even at a young age he traveled from town to town refining a technique and style that would change the way people played guitar and make B. B. King a house hold name.

The first time B.B. King appeared to a large audience was in 1948 on a radio station in Memphis. This would become a regular set where King would play every week. This along with a gig at a popular restaurant and bar gave King some momentum and popularity.

BB King began to tour around the South then eventually nationally, allowing many people to hear his new style. On one of the many gigs King played over the years a fight erupted in the crowd. This fight led to a kerosene stove being knocked over and a wild fire raged. King along with patrons and staff ran from the building. However King had left his favorite guitar in the burning building. Ignoring the risk he ran back into the fire to retrieve his prided position. When the smoke died down King discovered that the men where fighting over a girl called Lucille. Since that day has named ever guitar he has owned ‘Lucille’ so he remembers never to get upset over a women.

Though BB King was popular until the late 60s his audience was still mainly black. This was until he was chosen to open for the Rolling Stones on a world tour. Also many other famous white musicians were openly proclaiming King’s brilliance. King’s introduction to the mainstream audience caused his popularity and record sales to soar.

BB King’s style and tone is easy to identify. His wild string bending and vibrato are distinctive and his gravelly voice cuts through recordings and adds character to his music. In contrast to many skilled guitarists he has a remarkable economy and restraint with his playing. King only plays for the song and doesn’t get involved in over indulgent extended solos. Also because of the length of his career BB King has been through many musical trends and styles. This has meant that his style is a collection of many genres and in a sense King has created his own style.

BB King has been inducted into the Rock and Roll and the Blues Hall of Fame. He has received a Grammy and many honorary doctorates including one from Yale. Even though he is 86 BB King still tours playing his songs to the world. His legacy to music and guitar playing cannot be overestimated and for that reason the music and the man will never be forgotten.

Ahhh! What a big influence BB king was, is and will be in every guitarists life!

Cheers Riley B. King!

Luis Tovar

There are many elements that determine the sound quality of any acoustic or electric guitar. Leaving off issues of pickups and other hardware, it basically comes down to the types of wood used and the finishes applied. In fact, some say that the final sound of any guitar can be estimated before it is built just by careful choice of wood, and that the finish of the guitar will have an effect on its sound.newsletter33 article determinesoundofguitar What determines the sound of a guitar?

While this is an oversimplification, it is for the most part, accurate. When making electric guitar bodies, woods are traditionally maple, ash, mahogany, alder and basswood, but others, such as koa, walnut and bubinga may also be used. For acoustics, the wood of conifers such as spruce are preferred for the tops, while rosewood and mahogany are most often used for the back, sides and neck. Maple and mahogany have a lot in common, both being medium-hard to hard timbers. Basswood, on the other hand, is relatively soft.

The typical “Les Paul” sound is created by a mahogany neck and body with a maple cap (often with dramatic figuring called flame or quilt, depending upon how the wood is sawn). The fingerboard is usually either rosewood (Brazilian or Indian) or ebony. These guitars can be quite heavy. Meanwhile the typical Fender Strat or Tele sound is the result of a maple neck and a body usually made of either ash or alder. A maple fingerboard will result in a slightly brighter tone than one made of rosewood, but it usually comes down to which wood a guitar player prefers, as rosewood looks and feels quite different than maple. Laminated bodies are also available, drawing on the sonic characteristics of both light and heavy woods.

A lighter weight wood such as alder or mahogany is used for the core and a dense piece of wood such as maple or zebrawood is laminated to the top. A perfect example of this is a Gibson ES-335. There have also been many forays into the use of man-made materials, such as carbon graphite and carbon-fiber composite to reduce weight and improve tonal stability. Once a guitar is built, it must be finished, meaning a clear, protective coating applied to the wood, often along with stains. In the 1920′s, nitrocellulose lacquer became prominent with guitar builders such as Martin and Gibson because of its relative ease of application and fast drying time.

Some manufacturers continue this tradition, while others, like Paul Reed Smith, may add a clear acrylic urethane top coat. Another option is to apply multiple coats of polyurethane. Fender has begun using acrylic lacquer in a high-gloss finish is used to capture the look and feel of guitars manufactured in the 1940s and 1950s. To obtain their signature high-gloss, jewel-like finishes on models like the American Series Stratocaster, the company uses a two-component polyurethane coating that resists moisture, chemicals, yellowing and damage from marring. For many of their colored finishes, the company uses specially formulated Sherwin-Williams acrylic lacquer, followed by three clear coats.

New low gloss satin finishes, which feel more organic and are less reflective onstage are beginning to become popular. Many companies, including Godin and PRS, already finish all or some of their guitar necks in a low gloss satin. Modern catalyzed polymer wood finishes have been developed to satisfy the factory’s need for expedient production and the consumer’s need for durability. These finishes are available in the same variety of colors and gloss as nitrocellulose lacquer.

Check out this video from Wicklund Guitars Youtube channel.

This video shows John Arnold, a professional classical and steel string acoustic guitarist, playing a fingerstyle version of “Yesterday” on five Wicklund guitars. The first is a birdseye maple OM, the 2nd is a claro walnut OM, the 3rd is a claro walnut Dreadnought, the 4th is an E. I. rosewood Dreadnought, and the 5th is a palo escrito OM. Have listen and see if you can note the difference between each guitars wood and its sound.

Posted by Ben Edwards.

The guitar that we see musicians use today has a long history. From the very beginnings of human culture between the Tigris and Euphrates Rivers, to smoked out bars in the inner cities of today, from the court entertainers of the great dynasties of Europe, to young girls and boys practicing their favorite song in their bedrooms today – the guitar has a long and colorful past.

The first incarnation of the guitar is believed to have come from Babylon (modern day Iraq). Clay plaques dating from more than 2000 years before Christ have been found that depict naked figures strumming guitar-like instruments. The story of the guitar is then silent for nearly 2000 years until evidence of a Roman instrument was unearthed in a tomb. It was made completely from wood and has the same basic shape that classical guitars still have today.

In the Medieval period the guitar developed with a round bodied sound hole and a fat neck. It is not known whether this instrument is of French or German origin. Side by side with this creation was a straight sided instrument that was found in the tombs of ancient English churches.

It is believed that the basic aspects of design were brought to Europe from the East by Moors who invaded Spain in 711. It is unsurprising then that Spain was the place that the guitar began its most critical stage of development. The ‘Vihuela’ developed 12 steel frets and musicians began writing tablature for people to play. Also an instrument related to the guitar, the ‘Lute’, was associated with the oppressive regime of the Moors. So playing the guitar and the music related to the guitar become part of the culture of resistance. This in a sense would be a precursor to what guitar music would come to represent in the 20th century.

In the 17th and 18th centuries the guitar moved in full force into Europe. It is known that King Louis XIV played and loved the guitar. He and many members of the European nobility popularized the guitar and internationalized guitar playing and guitar music.

The 19th century saw a universal guitar adopted with the same basic tuning system we use today. Also in that century the guitar moved out from Europe to America and the rest of the world.

The 20th century saw the biggest explosion of acceptance and use in the history of the guitar. Mass media made musical expression something anyone could watch and enjoy. Also large dance halls and popular musicians created a need for louder guitars. So the electric guitar began its evolution from the resonators of 1927 to the magnetic pickups that adorn nearly all electric guitars today.

The guitar rode a wave of popularity and became to most recognizable and commonly used instrument in music. Also the guitar is an excellent instrument for writing songs and expressing oneself. The instrument has many faces in modern music – from singer song writers with an acoustic guitar to wild metal guitarists, blasting out on their electric guitars.

Guitars and the people who have played them have spanned thousands of years and many different cultures. It is an excellent rewarding instrument to play and learn with many subtle styles and characteristics.

Let’s leave it there for today…

Cheers,

Luis Tovar

When it comes to hooking up your jam or practice room with inspiration art is a great way to go. We`ve already had a look at Michael Babyak and today its the turn of Paul Chase.

Paul Chase is an internationally known artist, author, innovator, visionary and guitarist. He is the founder and CEO of  Graphicguitars Inc., fine art guitar paintings, prints and posters. He received a Bachelors degree in Art and a Masters in Communications. He has taught art in high schools, vocational/technical school, and at the college level for over 30 years. Paul is a distant relative of the “other” famous American artist Georgia O’Keeffe (and they are both developed their art “roots” in hometown Sun Prairie, WI) and his large close up guitar images reflect her large close up flower series. Pauls art is available for purchase online here at Rock N Roll Vintage.

Check it out!

If you’re into alternate tunings and experimenting with new and interesting sounds on your guitar, then you’ll love the Harmonic Capo created by Bob Kilgore. Unlike a regular capo that presses the strings down at the desired fret effectively changing the placement of the nut, the Harmonic Capo gently rests on the strings.

newsletter26 gear bobkilgore hc Harmonic Capo

The effect is what you would get if you lightly placed your finger over the strings at a harmonic node and struck the strings. The most common and strongest harmonic nodes are at the 5th, 7th and 12th frets (and 17th if you can reach it).

Also, unlike conventional capos that allow you to only play in-front of where the capo is placed, the harmonic capo, allows you to play both in-front and behind the capo opening up a whole range of possibilities worth exploring.

The harmonic capo works in tandem with open tunings such as open C (Low to high: CGCGBE) open G tuning (low to high: DGDGBD) or open D tuning or DADGAD. With an open chord being played with no fingers being placed on the fretboard, this enables you to explore different melodic runs while adding in colorful harmonics throughout.

Of course, if you’re new to open tunings, it’s worth taking some time to familiarize yourself with the different shapes to produce chords of one tuning, before moving onto another. It might be helpful at this point to write down all the notes of the fretboard as they have changed with the tuning to get a better picture of what your working with.

newsletter26 gear harmonicapo Harmonic Capo

With all this in mind, use of a Harmonic Capo really benefits finger style playing but that shouldn’t really stop anyone, who is interested in exploring the possibilities the Harmonic Capo offers from having a go. If you’re intrigued to hear some examples, head over to Bob Kilgore’s site and watch a few of his videos. Check out the video below, a number of excerpts from his latest CD offering.

His playing is sure to inspire you to push your playing in a new direction, even if you return having decided that it’s not the path you wanna take.

Enjoy!

ab4e2097d32a3cfb2d407817c82c42dd Harmonic Capo

Posted by Dan Orr.