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 ▼air guitar 2  Hurbzeyi 10/7/20(火) 1:43

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 ■題名 : air guitar 2
 ■名前 : Hurbzeyi <burtontecx@gmail.com>
 ■日付 : 10/7/20(火) 1:43
 ■Web : http://xhdpjr.info/
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You won't need an extra sets of strings (~$5USD for acoustic, ~$10USD for electric) at the time of purchase, but will be necessary soon after, since the strings should probably be changed about every 2 months or 30 to 40 hours of playing time (probably more often but that doesn't really matter as long as the player is comfortable). Old strings will start to lose their tone and become brittle. They will also show corrosion and discoloration. If you do not live that far away from the guitar shop, it's best to buy them only when needed. However, changing old strings is not an absolute necessity unless they break, so if your budget is that tight, don't buy too many packs. Also, the difference between the cheaper and more expensive strings is subtle at best, so as long as it is the right gauge, you are good to go. I personally prefer the sound of old strings, as new ones sound "tinny". Most people do not agree with me, however.Guitars can be temperamental. If you tune in a room with a set temperature and humidity, then take the guitar into another room that is hotter/colder and/or more/less humid, some guitars can go out of tune. This is because when wood is introduced into an environment where the humidity is different the wood will either absorb moisture or release moisture. When wood does this it swells or contracts in reaction to a high humidity environment or a low humidity environment respectively. This is most apparent in the neck and fretboard of a guitar and truss rod adjustments may need to be made accordingly. See adjustments in the appendices for more information. Additionally the metal strings act in a similar fashion but instead due to temperature, the cooler it is the more they contract and the hotter it is the more they expand. It is best to let the guitar acclimate itself in the room in which it will be played then make adjustments and re-tune it.In 1969 Emmett Chapman, who had no previous knowledge of DeArmond, Webster or any other tapping guitarists, discovered that he could tap on the strings with both hands, and that by raising the neck up could align the right hand's fingers with the frets as on the left, but from above the fretboard. This made scale-based melody lines just as easy to tap in the right hand as the left, and a new way of playing a stringed instrument was born. Chapman redesigned his home-made 9-string guitar to support his new playing method, and began selling his new instrument (The Chapman Stick) to others in 1974. In 1976 Chapman published his volume of collected lessons he used for teaching guitarists and Stick players as "Free Hands: A New Discipline of Fingers on Strings."Bending
━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━    通常モードに戻る  ┃  INDEX  ┃  ≪前へ  │  次へ≫    ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━                                 Page 64949