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Sunday, August 3, 2008

JAGUAR AUDIO INTERCONNECT CABLES W/ DIELECTRIC-BIAS SYSTEM (2 METER) (PAIR)

Cable show with RCA termination.

Breakthrough Dielectric-Bias System

Chris Martens loves the sound of AudioQuest Jaguar Interconnect Cables with Dielectric-Bias System (DBS). "The round, percussive tone of Pat Metheny's guitar and the gentle slap of Ignacio Berroa's bongos sounded so eerily holographic that I almost felt as if I could get up, walk across the listening room, and touch the instruments," he writes in AVguide Monthly.

Batteries on an interconnect? AudioQuest introduces an astonishingly simple solution to a universally acknowledged problem.

The effect of dielectric (or insulation) on cable performance is universally acknowledged. No insulation, other than a vacuum, is perfect. All insulation conducts some tiny degree of electricity in the presence of an electrical field, and this effect can cause distortion and signal loss.




An electric guitar relies on an amplifier that helps to manipulate the tone of the instrument electronically. An electric guitar uses what you call pickups to change the vibration of the strings into an electrical current, which is then amplified. The electrical signal that emits from the guitar may be altered electronically before it passes into the amplifier. This makes the final sound. Some electric guitars have the ability to sound like an acoustic guitar with the flip of a switch.

The majority of electric guitars have bodies that are solid and do not have a sound hole. Electric guitars instead have "pickups". Pick-ups are basically small microphones that capture the sound of the strings and then the sound is amplified.

The electric guitar was initially used in jazz music and is now used in many other genres of music such as rock and roll, blues, country, new-age and modern classical music. Some hybrids of electric and acoustic guitars are currently available. There are some very exotic guitars available as well. There are guitars with two three or even four necks.

In summary, to learn to play an electric guitar is not different from playing an acoustic guitar. If you can play an acoustic guitar, you can play an electric guitar. The advantage of the electric guitar is that you don't have to press on the fret as strong as the acoustic guitar to get a clear sound; therefore, normally for a beginner is easier to learn to play an electric guitar than the acoustic one. Although the cost of an electric guitar is much higher than an ordinary acoustic guitar, because I addition to the cost of the guitar itself, you need additional equipment like amplifiers and electric accessories.

Learn To Play Electric Guitar

The invention of the electric guitar has influenced much of the music of the twentieth century and popular culture. Due to all the possibilities to get special sounds and due to the fact that is easier to learn to play an electric guitar that an acoustic one, the electric guitar has become one of the most popular musical instruments nowadays not only for aficionados but for professionals as well.

The bodies of most electric guitars are typically made of wood. It is rare to find a piece of hardwood that is wide enough to create the entire guitar so it is hard to find a guitar made of one piece of wood. Most guitars are created with two pieces of wood and have a seam going down the center of the body. Maple, ash, mahogany, basswood, alder, and poplar wood are commonly used to create the body of an electric guitar. Many guitar bodies consist of cheap wood such as ash glued on top of a wood such as maple. Guitars that are made in this way are called "flame tops". Some electric guitars are made of such materials as carbon composites, aluminum alloys, or a plastic material such as poly carbonate.



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