Unexpect

Have you ever been surfing online, just looking for something a little, uhm’–out of the ordinary to take a gander at, and you accidentally find it? Well, that is what happened when I ran across the band Unexpect. Okay, let’s start with the disclaimer. Personally, this isn’t exactly my type of music per say, because it sounds a little like fantasy role playing put to a musical score. And for some reason, I think that is a little over the top for my taste. I mean, it felt more like what you might expect to catch at some fancy theatre, complete with costumes, fog generators, and a wicked cool light show spitting red and purple rays about the gathering of cult followers in the first row. Although, I like to sample music in the complete dark so I am undistracted by visuals, so that may have colored my perception of this band just a little here. But, I found myself reaching for the small bag of crystal dice on my shelf and rolling the two ten sided die to make sure that one of the growlers didn’t get an injury from straining his throat singing. He’s lucky, all my rolls were spot on, but I digress. I’ve often wondered how some singers train to keep that up–especially those who do regular performance for death metal acts. I mean, do they have high cost medical insurance to cover that sort of thing in case you strain your vocal chords? And is it just me or does everyone else have a problem understanding what is being barked out by people who sing like that? Under normal circumstances, when I run across a band that does that, I’m not certain exactly what the appeal is. But, this is one of the few bands that actually works it in quite smoothly into their act.

The performance is superb, tight, and amazingly different from anything I’ve ever heard before. I mean, you will be hard pressed to find a band that takes you as far out on a limb as Unexpect will do. When they ask you to borrow your head for the evening, they aren’t kidding. Just be sure to ask for it back when the evening is over. As I was listening along, I was greatly impressed with the vast array of instruments and voices utilized to engage the mind. The somewhat orchestral voicings and classical theme were a nice blend, but the guitar work and what sounded to me to be a violin at times really stole the show. Especially that guitar effect that sounded something like plugging an analog pedal in backwards into an old stereo, overloading the circuits, and running that sound through a Mooger Fooger ring modulator. Okay, the guitar players will know what i’m talking about when they hear it. *chuckle* So, check out this band and be sure to write me and let me know your thoughts about Unexpect. Oh, and my lawyers inform me that I have to say that you’ve been warned, Rock On!

To experience Unexpect for yourself, visit:
http://www.myspace.com/unexpect

Corey loves to hear from new fans of the site and even some old fans that have been reading his reviews for a while. Be sure to pop in to the Contact Us section of the site and send him a quick note to let him know what you think of the site, what band he should review next, or to ask some deep nagging question that keeps you up late nights surfing the web in search of an answer.

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A Few Interesting Ideas from Michael Angelo Batio

MICHAEL ANGELO BATIO:

In this three part lesson, Michael Angelo Batio takes us through how to harmonize the A harmonic minor scale, applying the Phrygian and Aolean Modes, and some thoughts on his approach to writing songs.

MICHAEL ANGELO BATIO: Harmonizing the A harmonic scale

MICHAEL ANGELO BATIO: Interesting Mode Study

MICHAEL ANGELO BATIO: GUITAR WORLD LESSON

To find out more about Michael Angelo Batio, please visit:
http://www.angelo.com/

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A Closer Look at Michael Angel Batio

  We all dream of it: a two car garage, a job we absolutely hate, and even looking forward to coming home at night to flop down in front of the boob tube to waste what remains of those few precious moments we refer to as life.  If we are lucky, we’ve even got a nagging mother-in-law and a couple of obnoxious screaming brats to keep us further entertained.  And if we are really lucky, we might have a decent amp, a nice guitar, and a few effects pedals to enjoy behind closed doors.  You know, that special place you go to crank it to 11 so that you can’t even hear the ringing in your own ears anymore?  But, if you are Michael Angelo Batio, your home studio and rig is likely a little more over the top than the average player’s.

MICHAEL ANGELO BATIO’S HOME STUDIO

  Let’s face it, you don’t get to be one of the world’s most famous shredders by being normal.  No, you throw out the whole 9 to 5 desk and/or cement mixing job and put most of your time and effort into trying to figure out what properly harmonizes with some crazy mode of the major something scale in 5/4 time, while kicking your bass player around to help keep focus during band practice.  Okay, I don’t actually advocate picking on your bass player, but bassists know it’s part of the job if they have been around the industry long enough.

  Now, being a world class shredder gives Michael Angelo the right to use a little creative license when–uhm’ well, Interpreting!  Yeah, that’s it, Interpreting the work of a late legendary guitarist like Randy Rhodes.

MICHAEL ANGELO BATIO’S INTERPRETATION OF RANDY RHODES WORK

  That was perhaps a little over the top in spots, but amazing nevertheless.  So, while you are stuck at work trying to figure out how to stick it to the man, just remember that Michael Angelo is somewhere out there rocking hard.
 
  Would you like to be a world class shredder, but just don’t have the desire to practice day in and day out?  Now you can pawn your old guitar for good this time, because the iAirGuitar is finally here.  Get your hands on a copy for your iPhone and iPod Touch today.  Visit:

  www.iairguitar.com

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Gene Simmons and the Fallen Towers of Music Babylon!

In a recent controversial exchange with music industry commentator Bob Lefsetz, a defiant Gene Simmons made a plea to bands and the music
industry corporate structure to urge both to realize the dependency that they share on one another in his grand vision of how to rebuild the music industry.  The moment was truly touching, but isn’t it a little late for corporate executives like Gene to be realizing how important the bands actually are to the success of the music industry?

See this segment taken from: Gene Simmons and Bob Lefsetz battle at Canadian Music Week 2009:

Instead of imparting anything truly significant to explain how he
planned to carry out his grand scheme to rebuild the fallen towers of
music Babylon, Simmons danced around with witty analogies and used
clever distractions to try to convince the audience that Lefsetz didn’t
have anything of substance to offer up to compete with Simmons’
superiority complex or his looks.  Personally, I’d have to disagree with
Gene and admit that Bob made a couple valid points–especially when it
came to his example of a Canadian band who had made a name for
themselves without relying on the help of a major label.  These sorts of
examples start to beg the question of how much longer major labels will
even remain relevant in a music industry that is undergoing serious
changes with every new technological advancement.  Gene should have
thought to encourage the suits to change policy and be more friendly to
artists 20-years ago, back when artists had little choice but to play
along.  Simply adjusting the industry rhetoric to make it sound like the
bands count this time around, doesn’t explain in the least how sticking
with a major label will actually help the artists, if even Gene
recognizes that the major labels are struggling to keep from losing
money hand over fist.

Earlier in the debate, As Lefsetz addressed the long history of how
bands have been abused at the hands of major labels in the past, I was
reminded of a story outlining some of the problems with the music
industry entitled, “The Problem With Music,”
by Steve Albini.  The article is a little dated, but still a must read
for anyone looking to get a sense of why there is so much distrust
between artists and record labels.

http://www.negativland.com/albini.html

 To get another perspective on the matter, I contacted my good friend
and fellow online radio announcer Derrick Heffner (Exec. VP of Roadie
Rage, Inc.)  And it was not too long into our discussion before
something important about this debate began to surface.

 ”Although I agree with Gene when it comes to the issue of product
branding, Gene has to realize that the problem of internet piracy isn’t
going away.  What is unclear about his business model is how he plans to
take another band to world class status and yet help that band to
generate a decent profit before their albums get leaked for free all
over the internet.  Remember, the issue of internet piracy caused him to
blame fans for the downfall of the music industry not long ago,” Derrick
said.

 After a little digging around, I ran across a couple of statements
by Gene along those very lines of thought.

[Simmons raged: "In all seriousness - and it's unfortunate - but the
record industry is dead; it's six feet under the ground and
unfortunately, the fans
have done this. They've decided to download and file share and there's
no record industry around. We're gonna wait till everyone settles down
and becomes
civilized and as soon as the record industry pops its head then we'll
record new material."]

Excerpt taken from: Kiss Blame Fans For Industry Downturn, June 16th, 2008

http://www.xfm.co.uk/news/2008/exclusive-kiss-blame-fans-for-industry-downturn

“There is nothing in me that wants to go in there and do new music. How
are you going to deliver it? How are you going to get paid for it if
people can
just get it for free? I will be putting out a Gene Simmons box set
called “Monster” — a collection of 150 unreleased songs. KISS will have
another box
set of unreleased music in the next year.

The record industry doesn’t have a f*cking clue how to make money. It’s
only their fault for letting foxes get into the henhouse and then
wondering why
there’s no eggs or chickens. Every little college kid, every
freshly-scrubbed little kid’s face should have been sued off the face of
the earth. They should
have taken their houses and cars and nipped it right there in the
beginning. Those kids are putting 100,000 to a million people out of
work. How can you
pick on them? They’ve got freckles. That’s a crook. He may as well be
wearing a bandit’s mask.

Doesn’t affect me. But imagine being a new band with dreams of getting
on stage and putting out your own record. Forget it.”

Excerpt taken from an interview with Billboard Q&A’s Antony Bruno on
November 12th, 2007.

http://www.billboard.biz/bbbiz/search/article_display.jsp?vnu_content_id=1003671447

 But, something is amiss here.  Gene told Lefsetz and the fans back
at the debate that he intended on taking a band or two from Canada all
the way to world class status.  Which is a sharp contrast from his last
statement about the chances of a new band making it above.  Now, if Gene
had said that he was going to take a band all the way prior to the
emergence of the whole problem with internet piracy, I wouldn’t have a
reason to doubt his ability to pull it off.  But, I suppose only time
will tell if he can make it happen from within an industry he has
characterized as being “six feet under”.

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The Guitarist You Want to Be

  Playing the guitar is easy, it’s becoming the guitar player you want to be that is the hard part.  Most people can reasonably learn to play a few chords, crank out a little lead piece, or make it over a hump or two in the learning process.  But, when they see the mountain that they must climb in order to be truly great on the guitar, it can sometimes be down right discouraging.  Even though I have been playing for the better part of the last 20-years, I still run across guys who blow my mind with their ability to play.  Honestly, it can send me into seclusion for days and sometimes weeks.  It’s no secret to anyone that I have a weakness for sound.  And I’ve been known to sit in my room for hours tweaking knobs, adjusting hand positions, and working out what ever subtle changes need to be made to get my guitar playing from where it is to where I want it to be.   But, the crazy thing about it all, is that the most important lessons I’ve learned about guitar playing, I didn’t get from a teacher or out of some book.  Rather, the most important things I learned about guitar playing came from embracing my own struggles on the guitar and taking the time to understand more precisely how I was relating to my instrument and/or how I was failing to relate to my instrument.

  How exactly does one relate to their guitar?  You can walk into a room of guitar players and you will often find that there is usually one guy in the pack who is head and shoulders above the rest.  And that guy isn’t going to tell you why he is better.  His lips are sealed, if he even understands why he is ahead of the pack himself.  But, I’m going to explain the big secret.  It’s not that he necessarily practices longer than you do.  The difference is summed up in a few key areas that automatically sets him apart from being another average guitar player.  And if you can start to develop these areas in your own playing, you will start to see massive results also because all these areas improve the overall relationship that you share with your axe.

1.   Confidence

  How you feel when you play effects how you express yourself on your axe 100%.  If you condition yourself to feel like a lousy guitarist, you will express a lousy performance when you play.  If you want a piece to come alive when you play it, then start to express that energy in yourself before you even pick up your guitar.  This is why two guys can play the same chords, the same riff, and use the same gear and sound completely different from one another.  When I pick up my axe, it is because I intend to play and let the musician inside me take the reigns.  If you just sit their and act sluggish, it will come through in your playing.  If you let the emotion course through your veins and feel what you want to express, eventually, you will notice a dramatic change in your playing.  The music that comes out when you play is simply an extension of who you believe you are on the inside.  Often people mistake confidence for attitude, and so a lot of musicians imagine that if they develop an irritating attitude this will make them a better player.  Usually, it just makes them irritating.  I always like to think of Satriani and his attitude, because he is almost always projecting a pleasant positive attitude, he exudes confidence with his playing, and he gives you the impression that he is having loads of fun.  It’s what truly great guitar is all about.  And when he plays, you hear what is truly inside him reaching out to you.  When you can encapsulate the value of that in your playing, you’re already a step ahead of the average guitar player.

2.   Awareness

  I see it all the time, guitarists who learn a technique, but never take the time to examine what the technique is all about.  If you want to achieve a higher level of playing, you have to become aware of what you are playing and aware of what it is that you must do to make the changes in your playing that need to take place to get you to that next level.  It’s not uncommon for me to take a three hour lesson and study one aspect of my playing, such as how I am executing a piece.  Making sure my picking hand and my fretting hand are cooperating harmoniously, making sure i am nailing notes solidly, and making sure that I am catching all the subtle pauses in the timing that give a piece that extra special feel are all important to making massive improvements and rising above the rut of being an average guitar player.

3.   Troubleshooting

  There is simply going to come a point when your teachers aren’t going to be able to help you over that next hump and the struggle will be between you and your guitar alone.  Trust me, that is a glorious day to have greet you.  Because it means that you are finally at a point when you can do some genuine learning on your own and maybe even a little much needed pioneering.  Your most creative work on guitar is still future to your current state, if you will allow the learning process to continue.  But, if you always look to teachers for every answer, you are just robbing yourself of some of the most important learning experiences around.  Of course, I think teachers are important to have.  A teacher can introduce you to concepts and ideas you may not be aware of and they can get you over many initial humps in the domain of common knowledge.  And they might even have some valuable uncommon knowledge to impart to you as well.  But, if you never take the time to develop a sense of how to get yourself over humps in the road with your playing, you will soon hit a brick wall that you nor your teachers will be able to help you over.  Because your teacher can only help you as far as they understand how to help you themselves.  It wasn’t until I started teaching other guitar players how to play that i began to see more clearly why certain techniques were better than others.  Why certain parts of music theory worked to get me what I wanted and others not so well.  In explaining these things to other people, I was actually helping myself more than I was helping them.  Because it forced me to have to think out why things worked the way that they do.  So, I encourage you to teach others what you know on the guitar any chance you get.  The more you explain what you know, the more familiar you will become with what you do and do not understand about the guitar.  This will in turn give you a sense of direction to help you see what areas need work.

4.   Make Mistakes

  I’m a big believer in making lots of valuable mistakes.  Yes, you heard that right.  Mistakes are opportunities for the door of real learning to open up to a guitarist.  If you are afraid of making mistakes, then you have a limiting belief that is holding your playing back unnecessarily.  The trick with mistakes is to be willing to examine the mistake, understand why it is happening, and to reason your way around the problem.  And whatever you do, make sure to write down the process and what you learned from the investigation.  It’s often a good idea to keep information like that on file so that you can refer back to it from time to time and chart your own progress.  Because having a general checklist of things to pay attention to while trying to help yourself through a mistake is handy to have around the next time you are thrown for a loop.

5.   Exploration

  I’m all for people sitting down and learning to play their favorite bands song note for note with a perfect ability to recreate the work of another great guitarist.  And in all honesty, this is where true genius begins even for a lot of exceptional guitar players.  Unfortunately, it’s where it ends for a lot of exceptional guitar players as well who never reach their full potential.  The true innovators and masters of the guitar don’t spend their lives following in other people’s footsteps.  Rather, they spend more time looking for ideas that have not been overused already.  For some this means finding a new chord progression that has an unusual flavor.  For others, it’s learning a new way to bend the guitar string to get a unique sound out of it.  For others it means dropping their B string down to an A and exploring an entirely new way of tuning the guitar and learning music theory for that tuning all over again.  When you take a step off the beaten path and start playing around in unfamiliar territory on the guitar, you are undoubtedly going to run into a plethora of roadblocks along the way.  You might learn a new cool sounding chord, but have no idea how to use it in conjunction with other chords.  In fact, you might even find yourself on a college campus flipping through old music theory books or talking it over with some professor in his 60′s who has an expertise in jazz.  And that’s just to get a grip on what you have discovered and to find a few useful ways to apply it.  But, the key to exploration is to learn for the purpose of developing something new and fresh to add to your playing style to escape sounding average.

  By focusing on these five areas, you will develop a much deeper relationship with your guitar than you started out with.  These areas help you to identify what it is your guitar is capable of and more importantly what it is capable of in your hands.  So, I hope this has helped to shed some light on how one becomes the guitar player they want to be.

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How Technology is Killing the Music Industry

  No matter how hard the RIA tries to put an end to online music piracy, the truth is that the RIA has accomplished nothing.  Internet piracy is just a symptom of a more serious problem.  That more serious problem is that technology itself has advanced to the point where the RIA and the courts can not keep up with the overwhelming number of violations happening every second of every day.  Any child can take a CD, put it in their computer, copy it, and distribute it to hundreds of thousands of people across the Internet in the matter of seconds.  The hope of the RIA and the courts is that if they make examples of enough people at the hands of the law, then maybe people will be scared enough to stop pirating music online.  Yeah, fat chance!  All that is doing is provoking people to pirate music more and more out of spite.  The bottom line is that the average person does not like it when an organization like the RIA leans on the court system in an attempt to bully people with the law.  And the simple fact is that there are just not enough resources available to keep the problem at bay.

  Technology messes with the industry in other key ways.  In past decades, it used to be that you had to trade in your records for 8-Track tapes, your 8-Track tapes for cassettes, and your Cassettes for CD’s.  The music industry was able to rake in billions every time you shelled out hundreds of dollars to rebuy your music library on the latest storage devices.  Now, with everything digital and the ability to store thousands of songs on one or two high memory capacity storage devices cheaply, the need to purchase your music library over and over again every decade or so is simply no longer necessary.

  To make matters worse, many bands do their own recording, mixing, mastering, and out source labeling and packaging for pennies on the dollar.  Thus making major studios and recording labels more and more irrelevant with every passing day.  Then many of these bands give their CD’s away for free, making it harder for established major label bands to sell their music at the high prices they got by on just a few years ago.  It is our easy access to highly useful technology that has made all this possible.  Unfortunately, it is this same technology that is making the business model the music industry has relied on in previous decades as obsolete as black and white television.

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Monsanto and the Global Health Crisis

  Whether you realize it or not, you are a lab rat in a sick human experiment being conducted by the Monsanto and other like minded companies.  For years, Monsanto and friends have been tampering with the food supply.  A little genetic modification here and a little genetic modification there, and before you know it, even congress is playing along.  all at your expense!  GMO is the modern cyanide in the Cool Ade, intentionally forced into the food supply, and the end result is that we are rapidly approaching a health care crisis unlike anything this planet has ever experienced before.

  The question is how much tampering with the food supply can the human race truly endure before the population really starts dying off in droves?  By the time Monsanto figures that out, it will probably be too late to reverse the damage they have done to our food supply.  I mean, how does one unravel the genetic mess they have introduced into the food supply?  Was their original goal to try to make the population of entire regions genetically sterile, thus forcing a reduction in population growth in key areas around the globe?  Or, is their goal to simply make us sick and dependent with hideous genetically induced disease, so that the pharmaceutical companies can make billions off the suffering they engineer into the populace as we slowly die off?  Whatever their agenda happens to be, I don’t buy for one second that their intentions are good.

  Companies that tamper with the global food supply simply do not have the right to risk the lives of people on such a mass scale like that.  If something goes wrong, the degree of genocide that could potentially result would be unmatched even by the likes of Hitler.  Companies who tamper with the global food supply are doing nothing short of waging war on the human race itself.  And our useless government refuses to protect us from the likes of such depraved organizations.  If we do not act now and put an end to this insanity, our children will also suffer the consequences as a result of our negligence.  If Monsanto wants to tamper with the food supply, let them and their children eat their abominable GMO products.  It’s time to say no to GMO!

  DISCLAIMER: Corey is a huge conspiracy nut who spends most of his time locked away in a padded room babbling about the fictitious monsters under his bed when he was a little child.  We encourage you to be cautious and to not believe anything he says, unless you already know what he is saying to be true.  Corey is not a genetic engineer, nor is he a medical professional, and his words have not been evaluated by the FDA, the AMA, or any of the incarnations of Doctor Who.  But, despite all that, this GMO crap really needs to stop before someone gets hurt.

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Arpeggios and Sweep Picking

  To be a true shredder, you have to understand the whole concept of arpeggios and sweep picking.  And, there is always the fact that sweeping arpeggios sound awesome.  This first video that I include below, draws on your knowledge of diatonic progressions.  And even though Siggi may not be as smooth as many other guitar teachers, I think the ideas he is demonstrating in his video are quite useful for those trying to break into the whole arpeggio domain.

SIGGI MERTENS: ARPEGGIOS

  Okay, that chord that Siggi was struggling to identify is actually a minor 7 flat 5 chord, or otherwise known as a half diminished chord in the diatonic progression.   Remember, the diatonic progression is

Major 7th, minor 7th, minor 7th, Major 7th, Dominant, minor 7th, and minor 7th/flat 5

  As a guitar player, you want to be extremely familiar with this progression, and Siggi’s incorporating this in his lesson on arpeggios is a great way to reinforce the study of the diatonic progression.

  To clean up your arpeggios, it is a good idea to use a metronome to help slow things down and gradually build your playing back up to speed over time.  So, if you do not own a metronome, I highly recommend picking one up.  Using a metronome can take months and even years of frustration out of your playing, because it helps you to execute exercises properly in time.
  This next video by Tom Hess is far more advanced than the last, in that it aims to focus in on how to approach sweeping a specific arpeggio.  Tom stresses the importance of paying attention to what your picking hand is doing as he walks you through this superb exercise.

TOM HESS: SWEEP PICKING GUITAR MASTER CLASS

  Tired of working up a sweat when playing guitar?  Check out the new iAirGuitar for the iPhone and iPod Touch.  Visit:

  www.iairguitar.com

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Operatika (Power Symphony)


  Normally, I’m used to bands like Operatika having a male singer fronting the group.  Forget that!  Definitely better sounding with a woman fronting the band.  Seriously, you’re going to want to give the volume knob on your stereo a turn to that Spinal Tap #11 for Slava Popova’s memorable vocals.  I should also note that Bill Visser’s stellar performance on guitar is, shall we say, fast, furious, melodic, and flawless.  I’d hate to be doing his daily metronome work out.  I bet he plays guitar in his sleep just to keep his fingers in the zone like that.   So, for those of you who are into that over the top metal symphony sound, Operatika is definitely the band you should be checking out.

To check out Operatika for yourself, please visit:
http://profile.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=user.viewProfile&friendID=11579189

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I Need More Sustain, Darn It!

  One aspect of guitar playing that can make the difference between a mediocre sound and an incredible sound is the issue of sustain.  There is nothing more frustrating than to hear another guitarist get these notes that seem to ring out for ever maintaining a lot of body, only to learn that your own rig produces notes that die off after just a few short seconds.  It is at about this point that a lot of guys run out to their local guitar shop looking for a sustainer pedal or other device, only to find out that the improvements to the duration that notes ring out are minimal at best through the use of many conventional products on the market.

  So, how does one solve this problem with sustain?  After a bit of analysis of the problem, a lot of guitarists learn that a guitar with a through neck design, rather than a bolt on neck, can significantly improve the duration of sustain.  But, still the improvements don’t seem to get the overall sound where it needs to be–especially when it comes to getting the note to fade out into a nice hollow sounding harmonic.  It is at about this point when you are left wondering if you have to have a team of guitar techs to really reach those longer duration sustained notes.
  Something you should stop to realize is that the idea behind getting longer sustain is a simple matter of physics.  As long as the guitar string vibrates, the note will continue to sustain.  And that was the insight behind a little device called an Ebow.  As you hold the Ebow over a string, it would continue to vibrate the string by way of electromagnetic influences on the string.  And though the Ebow made it possible to dramatically increase the sustain of a note, the fact that it was a hand held device makes the Ebow a little impractical to use.  What was needed was a hands free device that could give you lots of sustain.  That device is known as a sustainiac and you’re going to love what it is able to do to help your sound.  The following two videos demonstrate the sustainiac in action.

JACKSON DK2S WITH SUSTAINIAC DEMO

FERNANDES SUSTAINER DEMO

  Of course, if you are a real gear head, you can always modify your own electric guitar to incorporate a sustainiac system.   It’s not something I would do myself, because I am a klutz with tools and electronics.  But, for those of you who are more mechanically and electronically inclined, it might prove to be a rewarding DYI project to modify an old electric guitar in your arsenal in order to have the luxury of a sustainiac system on board.

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