ACOUSTIC BASS GUITAR DEAN

Lyle Lovett Step Inside This House Rock Music CD Review

Step Inside This House is the latest release from Rock Star Lyle Lovett, and I can only think of one word to describe this CD… AWESOME!

This one grabs your attention right from the very beginning with Bears and doesn't let go until the very last note of the very last song Texas River Song, which is another great track by the way.

These days it’s a very rare CD on which every single song is good or better than the one before it. This CD is certainly one of those rare CDs.

If you’re a Lyle Lovett fan, or just a fan of Rock music this is a CD your collection simply should not be without.

While the entire CD is really very good the truly standout tunes are track 3 - disc 1 - Step Inside This House, track 5 - disc 2 - Babes In The Woods, and track 10 - disc 2 - Texas River Song.

My Bonus Pick, and the one that got Sore [...as in "Stuck On REpeat"] is track 1 - Disc 1 - Bears. It’s a great track!

Step Inside This House Release Notes:

Lyle Lovett originally released Step Inside This House on September 22, 1998 on the MCA Records label.

CD Track List Follows:

DISC 1: 1. Bears 2. Lungs 3. Step Inside This House 4. Memphis Midnight / Memphis Morning 5. I've Had Enough 6. Teach Me About Love 7. Sleepwalking 8. Ballad Of The Snow Leopard & The Tanqueray Cowboy 9. More Pretty Girls Than One 10. West Texas Highway 11. Rollin' By DISC 2: 1. Texas Trilogy: Daybreak 2. Texas Trilogy: Train Ride 3. Texas Trilogy: Bosque County Romance 4. Flyin' Shoes 5. Babes In The Woods 6. Highway Kind 7. Lonely In Love 8. If I Needed You 9. I'll Come Knockin' 10. Texas River Song

Personnel: Lyle Lovett (vocals, acoustic guitar); Don Potter (acoustic guitar); Dean Parks (electric guitar); Jerry Douglas (Weissenborn guitar, dobro); Paul Franklin (pedal steel guitar); Sam Bush (mandolin); Stuart Duncan (fiddle); John Hagen (cello); Matt Rollings (piano); Viktor Krauss, Leland Sklar (bass); Russ Kunkel (drums); Luis Conte (percussion); Alison Krauss, David Ball, DesChamps Hood (background vocals). Recorded at Conway Studios, Los Angeles, California.

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ACOUSTIC BASS GUITAR

ACOUSTIC BASS GUITAR KIT

Learn to Play Acoustic Guitar Fast and Easy, the Jamorama Multimedia Acoustic Guitar Lessons

So, you would love to learn to play the guitar? Then why not learn to play guitar online. Yes you heard me right learn online! Who said you had to pay ridiculously high rates to a teacher when you can learn it yourself. No more trying to fit in lessons when they don't suit you because you can do it at home at any time that suits you. No dealing with transportation, babysitting, illness, cancellations and so on.
 
You maybe someone who doesn't have the money for lessons so this could be a great opportunity for you also. Most people who learn this way love the fact that they can do it at any time of the day. No traveling required or times to juggle. If you're a mum with little kids then it can be done when they are in bed. In this day and age most people's lives are very fast paced and there is often little time for going back and forth to lessons.
If this sounds like you then why not take the plunge and do something that you have always wanted to do in the privacy of your own home and for a minimal amount of money.

With the development of the World Wide Web, music teachers have gone online to offer lessons to adults in the comfort and convenience of their own homes. 
 
In This article you will learn the importance of learning how to play acoustic guitar by a very famous guitar player and teacher, Ben Edward.
 
Ben Edward is a highly respected guitar teacher. He is the former lead guitarist for the popular down-under band "DegreesK", who he toured with internationally.

Before joining the band he gained a Bachelor of Education. His passion for teaching others, especially guitar, sparked him to develop Jamorama - The Ultimate Guitar Learning Kit and now the Jamorama Acoustic Guitar Learning Kit .

 He designed Jamorama Acoustic Guitar to be a complete learning system, and the easiest to follow guitar learning method available. It comes jam-packed with information. 

He teaches guitar fluency and teaches you how to use your ear to bring you to the stage where you can play virtually any guitar song that you hear. He uses well known songs to guide your learning right from the start! He has made each song very easy for you to learn by breaking them down into small parts, so you can practice each part individually and then put it all together. 

 
Jamorama Acoustic Guitar is packed full of quality step-by-step lessons, video files, games and other resources to get YOU results fast! .  

Ben has integrated 153 video lessons and 26 high quality Acoustic Jam Tracks for you to play along with! You can turn the guitar track off and play along with our percussionist and bass guitarist or you can leave the guitar track playing and try and keep up.

All in all, Jamorama Acoustic Guitar contains 259 pages of information in 153 step-by-step acoustic video lessons in two high quality books that take you on a journey from beginner to advanced in your guitar playing. That includes high-quality video lessons, Acoustic Jam Tracks, hundreds of lines of tablature, and my hugely popular software learning games.

To read more about What Ben Edwards has provided and done for you to make this as easy as possible to learn to play the guitar and also more about Jamorama Acoustic Guitar kit, please visit.. . http://tinyurl.com/4nzs5r,

http://tinyurl.com/4nxand. 

 

Advantages of Learning to Play the Guitar Online:

 

1. A beginner may forget about textbooks and magazines because online learning will provide a beginner the exact guitar lessons and have audio visual images that allow a person to see and hear the tones he will follow.

2. A person will be provided with high quality tablature. Online lessons will teach a person how to read TAB. This will allow a person to easily pick up the guitar TAB, and read it faster than learning from textbooks or magazines.

3. Online lessons about the same as hiring a personal guitar instructor. There are techniques and methods a person may develop in his continuing learning about the guitar.

4. It will provide a person unlimited access to the guitar lesson. A person may choose when he wants to access his lessons.

5. Online lessons will help a person develop his own technique of playing the guitar. He will be able to execute soloing styles and he may apply these when playing.

6. A person may save more money because of the free access that an online guitar lesson offers. Hiring a personal instructor may be expensive especially if he is a slow learner.

7. A person will learn the correct way to use finger style techniques and realize that he will have more knowledge of picking and strumming.

8. A person may learn how to write his own songs and be creative with the notes of his composition.

About the Author

Jacqueline Gharibian has reviewed lots of jamorama guitar lessons and courses.

ACOUSTIC BASS GUITAR HARD CASE

Boiling Guitar Strings…Have You Tried String Soup Lately?

Have you ever heard of boiling your guitar strings? I can remember the first time a bass player came up to me and said, “I boiled my strings today.†I would have paid good money to see the expression on my face when that was said. Since that time, I heard from countless players, particularly bass players, who boil their strings. Is it fair to say that many players are actually aspiring to be chefs? Or, maybe they are just really hungry and feel the need to cook up a batch of round wound soup!

The practice of boiling strings is not a new concept to players who live on a budget and need to spark new life into their strings. At first this might seem silly. Why not just go out and buy a new set? If you are a bass player who owns a couple of five string basses, then you know that four or five sets of strings will cost a Hamilton or two out of your wallet. If your tone preference is towards the bright and crispy clean end of the spectrum, it will take some string maintenance to keep it there. This is particularly true if you frequently are bringing on the funk with a full blown slap-a-thon every time you play. The list price on a package of premium cryogenic bass strings has some bass players thinking about how they can save money and yet, keep their tone. One answer has been boiling the strings. Does it actually work? Let’s journey into the subject a bit.

The Good, The Bad, and The Boiled
What happens when you place strings into a pot of boiling water? In short, here is a list of some positive things that can happen to the string:

1. If there is oil build-up on the strings, the higher temperature of water will change the viscous of oil. The oil will start to break-up and flow away from the string into the rest of the water.

2. If there salt from your previous sweaty playing on the strings, then the salt will dissolve and become aqueous with the boiling water.

3. If there is any dirt in between windings, there is an opportunity for it to break-up and possibly dissolve.

4. Micro metal shavings from normal fret wear will expand due to high temp and possibly dislodge themselves from windings.

5. Expansion. Overall the high temperature of the water will cause the strings to expand at molecular level. Every metal has a coefficient of thermal expansion (CTE) associated with it. This means the metal expands, or contracts with regards to temperature. In the case of wound strings, the windings will expand as they are made of metal. Anything caught in between the windings will get an opportunity to get squeezed out as the windings expand in the high temperature water.

Of course, there are some down sides to boiling. Here is a list of some bad things that can happen when you boil the strings:

1. Higher temperatures are often used to stress relieve any stresses built up in metal. If the string is exposed to high temperature, there will be changes with in the various stress sites of the string. This will have an effect on tuning and possibly create “dead spots†in the string that deaden the sound.

2. Calcium and mineral deposits from hard tap water can work their way into the inner core of a wound string. To get the best results, use de-ionized water if you are going to boil.

3. Brittle strings. Some strings have been known to become more brittle after boiling them. The process of taking the string to a higher temp (212°F) may have an effect on the string’s elasticity if the alloy quality was marginal to begin with it all.

4. Dirty pan. Obviously you don’t want to use a pan with left over spaghetti sauce still in it. You will end up with string marinara, and your fellow musicians will start calling you meatball. The real issue here is the question of a clean pan still having soap scum and mineral deposits in it. If you use such a pan, the soap and mineral deposits will end up on the strings. As a precaution, using a little bit of alcohol and a paper towel to wipe out the pan would help matters.

Conclusion
There are some merits to boiling strings as well as pitfalls. If you are on a shoestring budget and do not wish to shell out the bucks for new strings on a frequent basis, then boiling might be your calling. Hopefully, we have given you a good number of pros and cons to make the right decision that best fits your needs.

About the Author

Professor StringTM is a leading expert in the musical string business. He leads a development group that specializes in guitar and bass string research for musicians. You can visit their site at http://www.professorstring.com.

NYLON ACOUSTIC BASS GUITAR STRINGS

Interesting Facts About Guitars

The guitar (violao) is a musical instrument that utilizes strings to produce sound. Usually, guitar is made with six strings, but four, seven, eight, ten and twelve string guitars are not rare.

Guitar (violao) is considered as an instrument in many forms of music like blues, country, flamenco, rock and even pop. Acoustically playing, the guitar involves production of the tone by vibration of the string and modulation by the hollow body. Electronic manipulation can also be done on the tone using an amplifier.

Combinations of various woods, with either nylon or steel strings are used for the construction of guitars. The person who makes and repairs string instruments like guitar is called a luthier.

History and development of string instruments similar to guitar (violao) can be traced back to at least 5,000 years. In those days, when synthetic material was not available for making guitars, a guitar was defined as `a long, fretted neck, flat wooden soundboard, ribs, and a flat back instrument, most often with incurved sides`.

There are two major types of guitars:

Acoustic guitar (violao): A soundboard (present in the front of the guitar body in the form of a piece of wood) is used to produce the sound from this kind of guitars. No external arrangement or device is needed to produce sound. This makes the acoustic guitar quieter than other commonly found band or orchestra instruments and often an external amplifier is used to make the guitar sound audible and to match the sound of other band instruments. The latest range of acoustic guitars come with a host of pick-ups for amplifying and modifying the raw guitar sound.

Within the acoustic guitar type, the sub-categories include: Classical guitars; Flamenco guitars; Steel string guitars (include the flat top or `folk` guitar); Twelve string guitars; Arch-top guitars; Renaissance or Baroque guitars; Resonator, resophonic or Dobro guitars; Russian guitars; Acoustic bass guitars; Tenor guitars; Harp guitars; Extended range guitars; Guitar battente.

Electric guitars: Electric guitar bodies are solid, semi-hollow or hollow. The sound produced is little and low without amplification. An amplifier forms an integral part of electric guitars. Vibrations of steel strings converted into electric signals by electromagnetic pick-ups are fed in to an amplifier using a cable or radio transmitter. The sound is often modified either using electronic devices or through distortion of valves naturally. The pick-ups here are of two types: single line or double line, each can be either active or passive. Electric guitar sound is most commonly used in jazz, rock-n-roll and blues style of music.

Construction of the guitar (violao) is based on whether the player is left-handed or right-handed. Usually, players use their dominant hand to pluck the strings. For most of the people, it is the right hand. The other hand of the player is on the frets for depressing and gripping guitar strings.

The various major guitar components include: headstock, nut, fretboard, frets, truss rod, inlays, neck, heel or neck joint, strings, guitar body and pickups.

There are certain accessories that might be helpful while playing a guitar (violao). Accessories like: Plectrum - also called the guitar pick, is used for picking the strings. It is made of a plastic like hard material; Slides - used for creating glissando effect in blues and rock genre of music. Neck of a bottle, knife blade or round metal bar, any of these can be used as a slide; Copatasto - it is used for changing pitch of open strings.

About the Author

This article can also be accessed in portuguese language from the Article section of page www.polomercantil.com.br/violao.php
Roberto Sedycias works as IT consultant for www.PoloMercantil.com.br