Gardiner Houlgate’s first auction of the decade takes place on March 11 and 12, with a plethora of vintage, player-grade and left-field guitars and amplifiers available.
The acclaimed producer and songwriter returns with his fourth album, featuring live instrumentation, vintage Martin’s and a lap-steel with built-in fuzz.
We sit down with alt-rock extraordinaire, Dandy Warhols lead guitarist and Pete International Airport founder Peter Holmström to talk truss-rod fear, his signature pedal and the gear that goes into creating his distinctive sound.
How do you make something that’s achingly cool even cooler? Throw rock’s most famous upholsterer and some crazy octave-fuzz fireworks into the mix, of course.
Towering amp stacks are rapidly going the way of the dodo, but players with pedalboard amps and micro-heads are looking for compact and lightweight speaker solutions. Honeyboy might just have the answer.
British-made Grimshaw guitars of the early 60s could hold their own with many of the USA-made instruments of the time, but this SS Deluxe model needs a little TLC.
The Led Zeppelin icon’s influence on rock guitar is impossible to overstate, but at the core of his signature style were some classic blues fundamentals.
When Pink Floyd started out in the psychedelic mid 1960s, they were playing clubs, led by Syd Barrett on guitar. But once David Gilmour took over, they evolved into a stadium-rock band and began crafting extravagant concept albums. Now one of the biggest-selling acts of all time, you can bet they knew how to write an interesting chord sequence.
Now that you’ve mastered the basics of the pentatonic scale, it’s time to look at the masters themselves to see how the most legendary blues players utilise the shapes we’ve learned in their own playing. First up, it’s Old Slowhand.
Gardiner Houlgate’s first auction of the decade takes place on March 11 and 12, with a plethora of vintage, player-grade and left-field guitars and amplifiers available.
The acclaimed producer and songwriter returns with his fourth album, featuring live instrumentation, vintage Martin’s and a lap-steel with built-in fuzz.
We sit down with alt-rock extraordinaire, Dandy Warhols lead guitarist and Pete International Airport founder Peter Holmström to talk truss-rod fear, his signature pedal and the gear that goes into creating his distinctive sound.
How do you make something that’s achingly cool even cooler? Throw rock’s most famous upholsterer and some crazy octave-fuzz fireworks into the mix, of course.
Towering amp stacks are rapidly going the way of the dodo, but players with pedalboard amps and micro-heads are looking for compact and lightweight speaker solutions. Honeyboy might just have the answer.
British-made Grimshaw guitars of the early 60s could hold their own with many of the USA-made instruments of the time, but this SS Deluxe model needs a little TLC.
The Led Zeppelin icon’s influence on rock guitar is impossible to overstate, but at the core of his signature style were some classic blues fundamentals.
When Pink Floyd started out in the psychedelic mid 1960s, they were playing clubs, led by Syd Barrett on guitar. But once David Gilmour took over, they evolved into a stadium-rock band and began crafting extravagant concept albums. Now one of the biggest-selling acts of all time, you can bet they knew how to write an interesting chord sequence.
Now that you’ve mastered the basics of the pentatonic scale, it’s time to look at the masters themselves to see how the most legendary blues players utilise the shapes we’ve learned in their own playing. First up, it’s Old Slowhand.
The Fender Electric XII might be the one 12-string design that’s cooler than a Rickenbacker. Now it’s back in this keenly priced incarnation from Baja California.
Reviving a beloved vintage brand with a high cool-per-quid quotient, the new Harmony line’s retro-modern marriage delivers some surprisingly upmarket features.
The pursuit of your next guitar needn’t be a tale of star-crossed love. Meet Romeo, Eastman’s new thinline hollowbody design that promises more twang and spank than your average humbucker-loaded archtop.
From a Canadian luthier with a background in furniture design, this unique guitar is brimming over with engineering innovations – but what on earth is it going to sound like?