An electric guitar is a type of guitar that uses pickups to convert the vibration of its into an electrical current, which is made louder with an instrument amplifier and a speaker.
How electric guitars work? electric-guitars-work-video.htm 1. Headstock 2. nut 3. machine heads 4. frets 5. truss rod 6. inlay 7. neck and fretboard 8. neck joint 9. body 10. pickups 11. electric control knobs; 12. bridge 13. pickguard
1931 The earliest electric guitars were made by the “Rickenbacker" company 1950 While one of the first solid-body guitars was invented by Les Paul, the first commercially successful solid-body electric guitar was the Fender Esquire
1952 As the market developed, Gibson produced the Les Paul 1954 Fender brought out the 3 pickup Stratocaster (known as Strat), a deluxe model. The next breakthrough was the work of Seth Lover and Walter Fuller who created the humbucking pickup. It grew out of the needs of Radio broadcast and recording where, as to this day, quieter is better.
1957 Gibson entered into regular production on Les Paul guitars At that point the essence of the modern electric guitar was in place.
1960s Some guitarists began exploring a wider range of tonal effects by distorting the sound of the instrument guitarist Jimmy Page of created unusual, psychedelic sound effects by playing the electric guitar with a violin bow and smacking the strings with the bow.
1970s Effects pedals proliferated 1980s and 1990s Digital and software effects became capable of replicating the analog effects used in the past. 2000s PCs with specially designed sound cards could be used as digital guitar effects processors. Although digital and software effects offer many advantages, many guitarists still use analog effects.
2002 Gibson announced the first digital guitar, which performs analog-to-digital conversion internally Amp maker Line 6 released the Variax guitar. It has an onboard computer capable of modifying the sound of the guitar to model the sound of many instruments.
Examples Jimi Hendrix John Lennon, Eric Clapton, Keith Richards DyTSY_gDIiGqwLQu8W2Cw&hl=en Mark Knopler
Turns the ordinary into extraordinary Examples:
Another example:
A Drawing Tablet is a computer input device that allows one to hand- draw images and graphics, similar to the way one draws images with a pencil and paper. These tablets may also be used to capture data of handwritten signatures.
Following is an example to another form of aesthetic expression – a Photoshop painting-like portrait. The input is a portrait photograph, which will be manipulated using Photoshop. The drawing tablet will be used to trace the face contours, as an additional layer, on top of the original photo. Then, some layers can be added with different colors and opacity to create the desired result.