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Saturday, March 10, 2012
The Hot And Cold of Interview: Paul Weller Discusses Danelectros, Rickenbackers and His New Album, 'Sonik Kicks'
Like the narrator in "The Changingman," one of his best-known songs, Paul Weller's career is built on shifting sands.
He's been a punk and New Wave frontman at the vanguard of the late-'70s mod revival movement, a soul/R&B singer, a guitar deity and the "Mod Father," hero to the protagonists and antagonists of the drama-filled Britpop scene of the mid-'90s.
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Interviews
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Tuesday, December 6, 2011
Basics of How to Play Lead Guitar
When you progress with your beginner to intermediate guitar lessons and become more adept at playing, there will probably come a time when you become tired of being heard in the background as a rhythm guitar.
Tuesday, November 22, 2011
Learning to Play Guitar With Jamorama
Have you been searching for a better way to learn to play guitar or have guitar lessons or perhaps play a bass guitar solo? Tired of trying multiple avenues and getting nowhere fast?
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Learn How To Play Guitar - Jamorama
I've been playing guitar for about a year or so and I've got to say, it is now one of my favorite pastimes.
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Jamorama Review - Finally Learn to Play Guitar With Jamorama
Do you remember that guy who used to bring his guitar to school and play for all the girls at lunchtime?
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Monday, June 7, 2010
John Lennon Makes Gibson Guitar History
This interesting article addresses some of the key issues regarding Gibson Guitar. A careful reading of this material could make a big difference in how you think about Gibson Guitar. The more authentic information about Gibson Guitar you know, the more likely people are to consider you a Gibson Guitar expert. Read on for even more Gibson Guitar facts that you can share.Interested in a bit of John and George guitar trivia? Well then, read on about how John made guitar history with his Gibson J-160E. Early pictures of the Beatles in their infamous Cavern Club days portray a rather and rough band of Teddy Boys, sporting leather motor cycle jackets, tight jeans, and fifties style pompadour hair styles - not the iconic, clean cut mop-tops created by their manager, the late Brian Epstein. When Epstein, then a young music store retailer first heard the Beatles in 1962, their sound was as rough and unpolished as their instruments. With great vision, and as a condition to manage the group, the young Epstein made the brilliant decision to have the group replace their leather jackets and jeans with the now iconoclastic Beatle suits and neo-Arthurian hairstyle. Along with the wardrobe makeover, came a musical makeover, which meant not only a modified sound, but also new instruments.
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