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Guitar > Chord Melody Guitar Music
Chord Melody Guitar Music
1.) William Kanengiser - Classical Guitar Mastery DVD
2.) Johnny Hiland - Bluegrass Guitar DVD
3.) Joe Pass - The Blue Side of Jazz DVD
4.) Eric Johnson - Total Electric Guitar DVD
5.) Danny Gatton - Strictly Rhythm Guitar
6.) Arlen Roth - Masters of The Stratocaster
7.) Adrian Legg - Fingerpicking and Open Tunings
8.) Ronnie Earl - Blues Guitar with Soul
9.) Arlen Roth - Playing In a 3 Piece Band
10.) Duke Robillard - Uptown Blues, Jazz Rock and Swing DVD
11.) Nils Lofgren - Electric and Acoustic Rock Guitar DVD
12.) Andy Summers Instructional Guitar DVD
13.) Jason Becker - The Legendary Guitar of Jason Becker DVD
14.) Lee Roy Parnell - The Art of Slide Guitar
15.) Brent Mason - Nashville Chops and Western Swing Guitar
16.) Duck Baker - Summertime Jazz Guitar Solo
17.) Juan Serrano - Flamenco Guitar Soleares
18.) Robin Trower - Classic Blues Rock Guitar
19.) Warren Haynes - Electric Blues & Slide Guitar
20.) Eric Johnson - The Fine Art of Guitar
21.) Tal Farlow - Legendary Guitar
22.) Jimmy Bruno - I'll Remember April
23.) Tuck Andress - Fingerstyle Mastery
24.) George Benson - Tenderly
25.) James Burton - Legendary Guitar
26.) William Kanengiser - Effortless Classical Guitar
27.) Buddy Guy - Teachin' The Blues
28.) Joe Pass - Solo Jazz Guitar
29.) Johnny Hiland - Chicken Pickin' Guitar
30.) Mick Taylor - Rock, Blues and Slide Guitar
31.) The Guitar of Brian Setzer
32.) Scotty Anderson - Red Hot Guitar!
33.) Danny Gatton - Telemaster!
34.) Steve Kaufman - Wildwood Flower
35.) Fred Sokolow - Sloop John B
36.) John Fahey - Joy To The World
37.) Aaron Gilmartin - Flamenco Guitar Alegrias
38.) Eliot Fisk - The Segovia Style
39.) Etta Baker - One Dime Blues
40.) John Abercrombie - Jazz Guitar Improvisation
41.) Johnny A - Oh Yeah!
42.) The Guitar of Chet Atkins
43.) Muriel Anderson - Guitar Techniques and Arrangements
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).




