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Prepared guitar - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Prepared guitar

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

a prepared guitar
a prepared guitar

A prepared guitar is a guitar which has had its timbre altered by placing various objects on or between the instrument's strings, including other extended techniques. This practice is sometimes called tabletop guitar, because many prepared guitarists do not hold the instrument in the usual manner, but instead place the guitar on a table in order to manipulate it.

Contents

[edit] History

Though rarely classified as a "preparation", but more as an extended technique, the slide guitar technique, used since at least the early 1900s, deserves mention here. Playing a guitar with a metal or glass slide subtly, but fundamentally, changes the character of the instrument: for example, one can play a true glissando with a slide, but this is otherwise impossible on a fretted instrument.

However, with prepared guitars one of the key goals in preparing the instrument is changing its timbre -- the fundamental quality of the sound. This is typically achieved by placing objects on or under the strings. The objects can have a tone of their own, like for instance a pencil spring, but can also cause strange string resonance effects or behave like a seesaw and create echoing effects after being struck and swinging like a balance.

[edit] Keith Rowe

Main article: Keith Rowe

The method of actually preparing the guitar was developed in the late 1960s by Keith Rowe, in imitation of John Cage's prepared piano. Rowe developed various prepared guitar techniques: placing the guitar flat on a table and manipulating the strings, body and pickups in unorthodox ways to produce sounds described as dark, brooding, compelling, expansive and alien. He has been known to employ objects such as a library card, rubber eraser, springs, hand-held electric fans, alligator clips, and common office supplies in playing the guitar.

[edit] Fred Frith

Main article: Fred Frith
Main article: Guitar Solos (album)

Another pioneer was Fred Frith. In 1974 he released a solo album called Guitar Solos. The album comprises eight tracks of unaccompanied and improvised music played on prepared guitars by Frith. The album was recorded using a modified 1936 Gibson K-11. Frith added an extra pickup over the strings at the nut, enabling him to amplify sound from both sides of the fretted note. He then split the fretboard in two with a capo, effectively giving him two guitars, each amplified separately, that he could play independently with each hand. To split the sounds further he attached alligator clips at various positions on the strings. The net result was a guitar with multiple sound sources that could be channeled to a mixer and distributed across the stereo soundscape.

[edit] Other prepared guitarists

In the 1980s Glenn Branca, Sonic Youth and other experimental art rockers also utilized prepared guitars, as have classical guitarists such as the Elgart/Yates Duo, who have also written a pamphlet on the subject: Prepared Guitar Techniques. More recent composers for the prepared guitar include Nikita Koshkin, using cork, matches and foam mutes and Phillipe Drogoz using wire and knitting needles.

[edit] Custom made instruments

Fred Frith was one of the first guitarists to work with with self-made instruments, such as one made of an old door with tuning pegs, strings and pickups on it.

Beginning in the 1970s, guitarist and luthier Hans Reichel made some unusual guitars with third bridge-like qualities.

Bradford Reed (pencilina), Glenn Branca, Fred Frith and the band Neptune also made other individually different types of experimental third bridge guitars.


[edit] See also

[edit] Prepared guitar luthiers

[edit] Famous prepared guitar players

in alphabetic order:

[edit] Literature

  • Prepared Guitar Techniques - Matthew Elgart/Peter Yates (Elgart/Yates Guitar Duo) ISBN 0-939297-88-4, California Guitar Archives, 1990 [1]

[edit] External links



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