Está atualmente a visualizar o Portugal versão do sítio.
Gostaria de mudar para o seu sítio local?
Última edição


Free Sample Issue
Experimente uma amostra GRATUITA de Acoustic
Experimente uma amostra GRATUITA

Acoustic Magazine January 2016 Edição anterior

English
8 Comentários   •  English   •   Music (Practical & Playing)
You never stop learning, do you? During the course of everyday conversations, the remarks of a couple of guys who are far more knowledgeable about acoustic guitars than I am really got me thinking about the importance of tonewoods and how we all seem to gravitate to certain configurations. Rosewood and spruce is the first combo that springs to mind, quickly followed by mahogany and spruce, and then maybe mahogany and cedar.
The point made to me was that a quality acoustic guitar’s tone is more about the craftsman behind the instrument than the wood. “It’s about the chef, not the ingredients,” was how it was succinctly put to me. Yes, of course I’m aware that how an instrument is crafted has a massive impact on how well it performs, but I’m not sure I’d ever really considered the ‘chef’ to be the determining factor.
As I thought about this, I was reminded of time I spent with Bob Taylor of Taylor Guitars – a man who has contributed as much as anybody to the high standards and quality of acoustic guitars today. When discussing with him the reducing stocks of available tonewoods and how his company was approaching the problem, he took me down the corridor and showed me a guitar hanging on the wall among some his greatest creations. The guitar had been built by Bob’s hands from a pallet retrieved from a skip on the compound. His point was to prove, again, it’s more about the chef than the ingredients. The lesson? Maybe we get too hung up on what a guitar is made from, rather than from who has built it.
Steve Harvey
Editor
read more read less
Acoustic Preview Pages Acoustic Preview Pages Acoustic Preview Pages Acoustic Preview Pages Acoustic Preview Pages Acoustic Preview Pages Acoustic Preview Pages Acoustic Preview Pages

Acoustic

January 2016 You never stop learning, do you? During the course of everyday conversations, the remarks of a couple of guys who are far more knowledgeable about acoustic guitars than I am really got me thinking about the importance of tonewoods and how we all seem to gravitate to certain configurations. Rosewood and spruce is the first combo that springs to mind, quickly followed by mahogany and spruce, and then maybe mahogany and cedar. The point made to me was that a quality acoustic guitar’s tone is more about the craftsman behind the instrument than the wood. “It’s about the chef, not the ingredients,” was how it was succinctly put to me. Yes, of course I’m aware that how an instrument is crafted has a massive impact on how well it performs, but I’m not sure I’d ever really considered the ‘chef’ to be the determining factor. As I thought about this, I was reminded of time I spent with Bob Taylor of Taylor Guitars – a man who has contributed as much as anybody to the high standards and quality of acoustic guitars today. When discussing with him the reducing stocks of available tonewoods and how his company was approaching the problem, he took me down the corridor and showed me a guitar hanging on the wall among some his greatest creations. The guitar had been built by Bob’s hands from a pallet retrieved from a skip on the compound. His point was to prove, again, it’s more about the chef than the ingredients. The lesson? Maybe we get too hung up on what a guitar is made from, rather than from who has built it. Steve Harvey Editor


SELECCIONAR FORMATO:
Acesso imediato

Ofertas digitais disponíveis:

Edição digital única January 2016
 
2,49 / issue
Esta edição e outras edições anteriores não estão incluídas numa Acoustic inscrição. As assinaturas incluem a edição regular mais recente e os novos números lançados durante sua assinatura e começam a partir de
Infelizmente, este título já não publica novas edições. Ainda é possível comprar edições anteriores ou ver outros títulos que possam interessar-lhe.
As poupanças são calculadas com base na compra comparável de edições únicas durante um período de subscrição anual e podem variar em relação aos montantes anunciados. Os cálculos destinam-se apenas a fins ilustrativos. As assinaturas digitais incluem a última edição e todas as edições regulares lançadas durante a sua assinatura, salvo indicação em contrário. O período escolhido será renovado automaticamente, exceto se for cancelado na área A minha conta até 24 horas antes do fim da assinatura atual.

Issue Cover

Acoustic  |  January 2016  


You never stop learning, do you? During the course of everyday conversations, the remarks of a couple of guys who are far more knowledgeable about acoustic guitars than I am really got me thinking about the importance of tonewoods and how we all seem to gravitate to certain configurations. Rosewood and spruce is the first combo that springs to mind, quickly followed by mahogany and spruce, and then maybe mahogany and cedar.
The point made to me was that a quality acoustic guitar’s tone is more about the craftsman behind the instrument than the wood. “It’s about the chef, not the ingredients,” was how it was succinctly put to me. Yes, of course I’m aware that how an instrument is crafted has a massive impact on how well it performs, but I’m not sure I’d ever really considered the ‘chef’ to be the determining factor.
As I thought about this, I was reminded of time I spent with Bob Taylor of Taylor Guitars – a man who has contributed as much as anybody to the high standards and quality of acoustic guitars today. When discussing with him the reducing stocks of available tonewoods and how his company was approaching the problem, he took me down the corridor and showed me a guitar hanging on the wall among some his greatest creations. The guitar had been built by Bob’s hands from a pallet retrieved from a skip on the compound. His point was to prove, again, it’s more about the chef than the ingredients. The lesson? Maybe we get too hung up on what a guitar is made from, rather than from who has built it.
Steve Harvey
Editor
ler mais ler menos
Acoustic Magazine is the UK's No.1 magazine for acoustic music. It features exclusive interviews with the biggest artists as well as expert columns from respected acoustic musicians. Acoustic Magazine also includes reviews of products and gear ranging from £100 to £20,000 from the world's most well-known brands as well as elite bespoke luthiers and tips, techniques and advice for players for every level. You'll also find advice on purchasing your own acoustic guitar.

Como subscritor, receberá as seguintes vantagens


•  Um desconto no PVP da sua revista
•  A sua revista entregue no seu dispositivo todos os meses
•  Nunca perderá uma edição
•  Está protegido contra aumentos de preços que possam ocorrer no final do ano

Receberá 13 edições durante um ano Acoustic assinatura da revista.

Nota: As edições digitais não incluem os artigos de capa ou os suplementos que se encontram nos exemplares impressos.

Sua compra aqui no Pocketmags.com pode ser lida em qualquer uma das seguintes plataformas.


Pode ler aqui no sítio Web ou descarregar a aplicação para a sua plataforma, mas não se esqueça de iniciar sessão com o seu nome de utilizador e palavra-passe Pocketmags.

Apple Pocketmags Online Pocketmags Google Pocketmags
O aplicativo Pocketmags funciona em todos os dispositivos iPad e iPhone com iOS 13.0 ou superior, Android 8.0 ou superior e Fire Tablet (Gen 3) ou superior. Nosso leitor web funciona com qualquer navegador compatível com HTML5, para PC e Mac recomendamos Chrome ou Firefox.

Para iOS, recomendamos qualquer dispositivo que possa executar o iOS mais recente para melhor desempenho e estabilidade. Modelos anteriores com especificações mais baixas de processador e RAM podem apresentar renderização de página mais lenta e travamentos ocasionais de aplicativos que estão fora de nosso controle.
4,8
/5
Com base em 8 Comentários de clientes
5
7
4
0
3
1
2
0
1
0
Ver críticas

Play radio ideas

Always full of good and interesting examples Revisto 23 julho 2019

Thoroughly entertaining

Great read for music fans Revisto 16 julho 2019

For all enthusiasts

Great read for all those acoustic fans Revisto 27 junho 2019

Lots of tips

Particularly useful for the beginner Revisto 30 janeiro 2018

Artigos desta edição


Segue-se uma seleção de artigos em Acoustic January 2016.

Free Sample Issue
Experimente uma amostra GRATUITA de Acoustic