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Guitar > Flatpicking Guitar Magazine's Podcast
Your first source for flatpicking, celebrity interviews, and flatpicking guitar information
1.) Podcast #17, featuring an interview with Adam Granger.
2.) Podcast #16, featuring an interview with Dix Bruce.
3.) Podcast #15, featuring an interview with Jack and Molly Tuttle.
4.) Podcast #14, featuring an interview with Jim Hurst.
5.) Podcast #13, featuring an interview with Andy Falco and Tony Watt.
6.) Podcast #12, featuring an interview with Pat Flynn and his new album.
7.) Podcast #11, featuring an interview with Jim Nunally and his new album.
8.) Podcast #10, featuring an interview with Wil Maring and Robert Bowlin
9.) Podcast #9, featuring an interview with Dan Miller and flatpicking guitarist Orrin Star
10.) Podcast #8, featuring an interview with Dan Miller and flatpicking guitarist Tim May
11.) Podcast #7, featuring flatpicking guitarist Mark Cosgrove and his new CD "Take Yer Medicine"!
12.) Podcast #6 A featured artist segment with James Alan Shelton and George Shuffler. Also a task for all Flatpicking Podcast fans!
13.) Podcast #5 A road trip to East Tennessee State University to interview Bluegrass Guitarists Tim Stafford and Mo Canada.
14.) Podcast #4 The Christmas Cast! With 2006 National Flatpick Champion Matt Arcara and Bluegrass/ Jazz guitarist John Carlini.
15.) Podcast #3 From the Bluegrass Weekend Guitarist David Grier stops in to talk and Bull Harmon talks about whats new with him.
16.) Podcast #2 With Guest Flatpicking Guitarist Tyler Grant and Grammy Award Winner Brad Davis
17.) Podcast #1 With Guest Dan Miller
Topics
A guitar is a musical instrument characterized by its visually dominant body and neck. Guitar strings are strung parallel to the neck, whose surface is covered by the fingerboard (fretboard). By depressing a string against the fingerboard, the effective length of a string can be altered, which in turn changes the frequency at which the string will vibrate when plucked. Guitarists typically use one hand to pluck the strings and the other to depress the strings against the fingerboard. The strings may be plucked using either fingers or a plectrum (guitar pick), thus creating the sound of notes or chords. The strings of a guitar produce little sound by themselves. Instead, their vibration must be amplified to audibly useful levels. In general, this amplication is achieved either mechanically or electronically, with the result being that there are two main categories of guitar: acoustic (mechanical amplification) and electric (electronic amplification).




