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Saturday, December 24, 2011
Taylor K14CE Electro Acoustic Guitar - Koa Series
Wednesday, December 14, 2011
Taylor K26ce Koa Series Grand Symphony Cutaway Acoustic-Electric Guitar Bundle with Leather Strap, Strings, String Winder, Pick Card, and Polishing Cloth
!±8±Taylor K26ce Koa Series Grand Symphony Cutaway Acoustic-Electric Guitar Bundle with Leather Strap, Strings, String Winder, Pick Card, and Polishing Cloth
Brand : TaylorRate :
Price : $3,999.00
Post Date : Dec 15, 2011 02:03:08
Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Bundle includes Taylor K26ce Koa Series Grand Symphony Cutaway Acoustic-Electric Guitar, Leather Strap, Strings, String Winder, Pick Card, and Polishing Cloth.
It's among the most striking of all tonewoods -- beautiful, distinctive tone, and yet, at times, so elusive. Producing the Koa Series is driven entirely by our ability to procure a consistent, quality-grade supply. The good news: Lately, Taylor has been able to acquire some of the nicest koa they've seen in a long, long time.
After a several-year hiatus, the Koa Series makes an impressive return, this time in both the Acoustic and Acoustic/Electric lines. Look for beautifully figured Koa backs, sides, and optional tops. The dramatic maple binding on the Acoustic/Electrics and elegant Ivoroid binding on the Acoustics complements the undulating Koa in its own unique way.
The Koa Series will remain available only while our supplies last.
Type/Shape 6-String Grand Symphony
Back & Sides Hawaiian Koa
Top Sitka Spruce
Soundhole Rosette Abalone
Neck Tropical American Mahogany
Fretboard Ebony with Binding
Fretboard Inlay Abalone Koa Series
Headstock Overlay Ebony
Binding Maple
Bridge Ebony
Nut & Saddle Tusq
Tuning Machines Gold-plated Taylor Tuners
Strings Elixir Medium Gauge Strings with NANOWEB Coating
Scale Length 25 1/2 Inches
Truss Rod Adjustable
Neck Width at Nut 1 3/4 Inches
Number of Frets 20
Fretboard Radius 15 Inches
Bracing CV - Sitka Bracing w/Relief rout
Finish Gloss
Color Options Natural
Sunburst Options None
Cutaway Venetian
Electronics Taylor Expression System
Left-Handed Available; No Charge
Body Width 16 Inches
Body Depth 4 5/8 Inches
Body Length 20 Inches
Overall Length 41 Inches
Monday, December 5, 2011
Ukulele - Hawaii's Most Famous Musical Instrument
Ukelele ( spelled ukelele in the UK, abbreviated to uke; pronounced yoo-kuh-ley-lee [American English] or oo-koo-ley-ley [original Hawaiian]) is a small, guitar-like lute with four to ten strings. Developed in the 1880s, the ukulele is the Hawaiian interpretation of the Portuguese braguinha.
Hawaii's most famous musical instrument produces big tone and sweet sound. Ukuleles usually come in 4 sizes: Soprano (or what Hawaiians refer to as Standard size), Concert, Tenor , and Baritone. The Solid Body Cutaway is a more recent innovation.
Ukuleles are typically made of wood, although there are some models made of plastic or a composite of plastic and wood. Expensive models are made from hardwood (e.g.mahogany, kulawood, spruce, and sequoia), the most expensive of which are made from koa tree.
A typical ukulele has a figure 8 shape like that of a small acoustic guitar. There are also other interesting shape variations such as oval (called pineapple ukulele), boat paddle, and square (usually made from an old wooden cigar box).
History
Ukulele was brought to the Hawaiians by Portuguese immigrants. To celebrate their arrival on August 23, 1879, Joao Fernandes played Portuguese folk songs on the wharf using a braguinha borrowed from a friend. Hawaiians who witnessed him on the dock where so impressed not only with his music, but also with the speed of his fingers: it seemed like they danced across the fingerboard. Hence, they called the instrument "ukulele," meaning "jumping flea."
(Queen Lili'uokalani, the last monarch of Hawaii, gave a different version to the origins of "ukulele". She thought ukulele meant "the gift that came here," from uku meaning "the gift" and lele meaning "to come.")
There were 419 immigrants aboard the ship Ravenscrag, but three people would be the first to establish ukulele shops. They were Manuel Nunes, Augustine Dias, and Joao Fernandes.
Within 10 years after the arrival of the Portuguese, the ukulele became Hawaii's most popular instrument. It is said that Joao Fernandes was a key behind this, as he spent a lot of time playing around Honolulu with his instrument.
Ukelele: A royal endorsement
It was also from Fernandes that King Kalakaua first heard
the music from the ukulele, but he learned to play it from Augusto Diaz. He encouraged that it was played during royal gatherings. A patron of arts, King Kalakaua's enthusiasm over ukulele made it more acceptable to people of Hawaii. It was played by Hawaiian from all walks of life--- from taro farmers to fishermen to royalties. Other royalties who learned how to play included Queen Emma, Queen Lili'uokalani, Prince Leleihoku, and Princess Likelike.
In 1915, ukulele's popularity moved to the mainland beginning in San Francisco during the Panama Pacific International Exposition. As a result, ukulele sales increased. In addition to its sweet sound,
From US the mainland, ukulele moved to the UK and to the rest of the world. The ukulele even became an icon of the Jazz Age.
Tuesday, November 29, 2011
"Cannonball Rag" acoustic guitar solo
Thursday, November 24, 2011
Luna 23 Inch High-Tide Koa Concert Ukulele
!±8± Luna 23 Inch High-Tide Koa Concert Ukulele
Luna Guitars Ukulele Concert Koa High-Tide With Preamp.
Friday, September 23, 2011
Taylor Guitars DN4 Dreadnought Acoustic Guitar
!±8± Taylor Guitars DN4 Dreadnought Acoustic Guitar
Post Date : Sep 23, 2011 10:46:14 | Usually ships in 24 hours
The heralded Dreadnought is the most traditional of all acoustics. By definition, it's a battleship of a guitar and the Taylor DN4 pays tribute to that legacy--and then some. The look and tone of this ovangkol and Sitka spruce acoustic guitar combination rival almost any other in the high-end guitar world. Yet Taylor's ability to affordably source this beautiful, rosewood-like tonewood keeps it decidedly within reach.
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Taylor's Dreadnought
The original Dreadnought acoustic guitar appeared early in the 20th Century, and its no-frills, no-nonsense shape made it a logical namesake of the huge battleships of that day. Most subsequent Dreadnoughts, including Taylor's, have been derivative of that early design. In 1997, however, Bob Taylor re-designed the Taylor Dreadnought by softening the curves at the top and bottom and generally refining its overall shape. In 2003, gloss-finish Dreadnoughts also underwent bracing refinements that substantially increased their overall volume and bass response, without sacrificing Taylor's signature balance and clarity. Dreadnought six-strings shine as "plectrum" or "rhythm" guitars because they respond well to flatpicking or light-to-heavy strumming.
Features ebony wood fretboard and bridge. |
Made from Sitka and Ovangkol
The top is made from Sitka Spruce, a dense, straight-grained wood that has the highest strength and elasticity-to-weight ratio among available tonewoods. It's these attributes that make Sitka Spruce an ideal material not only for soundboards, but also for internal bracing. The Sitka top will produce a tone slightly brighter tone than Engelmann Spruce.
The back and sides of the DN4 are made from ovangkol, an attractive hardwood indigenous to tropical West Africa. Usually, its coloration runs from yellow-brown to a mottled olive-brown to dark brown, and it features stripes that run from gray to almost black. When it has significant purple coloration, however, ovangkols variegation and grain pattern closely resemble East Indian rosewood. It also shares some tonal characteristics with rosewood, but boasts the livelier "sparkle" found in such medium-density hardwoods as mahogany, walnut, and koa.
Solid sitka spruce top is joined with ovangkol sides and back for a tone similar to rosewood, but with the livelier sparkle of mahogany. |
Construction
Taylor takes pride in using the finest quality woods for their guitars, like ebony for every fretboard they make. The tone woods for the DN4 were quartersawn and carefully book-matched before being sorted, dried, and prepared by Bob Taylor and his experienced team of luthiers. The DN4s pearl inlay and binding work was also done by hand, providing care and "touch" that no machine can give. Taylor believes that precision matters, which is why they rely on laser cutters and computer-aided milling machines to consistently hit minute tolerances that were impossible a decade ago.
Balance and Bracing
A balanced tone is critical to a quality recorded sound. Guitars that are too heavily weighted towards a particular end of the tonal spectrum (too "bassy," for example) tend to be tougher to record. While the Dreadnought shape has more volume or bass than other shapes, the overall balance on the DN4 is not compromised.
Most Dreadnought players prefer a flatpicking, heavy-strumming guitar, able to put out some serious volume and beefy bass frequencies. Dreads have more bracing mass, so they shine as "plectrum" or "rhythm" guitars. Revoicing in 2003 (500 Series and up) created a completely new Taylor Dreadnought: one that is louder, with deeper bass frequencies, yet manages to maintain the clarity and balance of the trademark Taylor tone.
Features small pearl inlays. |
Straight Necks Matter
Don't all guitars have straight necks? The answer is usually yes, but the real question is will they stay that way? Since its inception, the acoustic guitar had a major design flaw. The fretboard lacked sufficient support to remain truly straight because of top movement caused by changes in humidity. All guitars experience this phenomenon--often resulting in a slight bump at the 14th fret--but not all guitars respond to it in the same way.
Introduced in 1999 and a standard feature since 2001, the patented New Technology (NT) neck was designed by Bob Taylor and his team to accomplish the primary goal of building a straighter, more stable guitar neck. While some necks may bend in the face of humidity and other factors, the NT Neck stays stable and straight.
Adjustability is another major NT advantage. Since the NT Neck angle is created by spacers and requires no glue, adjustment simply requires a repairperson with a new set of spacers and about five spare minutes. Altering the neck angle of a traditional neck assembly could require invasive surgery to remove wood and relocate the bridge.
The bottom line: The NT Neck on the DN4 means a stable, easy-to-adjust neck that stands up to the pressures all acoustic guitars face.
Tuners Precise, gleaming tuners add appealing form to an important function, while the type of strings used can alter the feel and the tone of your guitar. Taylor pays careful attention to both, using tuners and strings that are optimized for the DN4 guitar. Together, they are among the keys to an easy-playing, incredible-sounding Taylor.