T he joke in This Is Spinal Tap about an amp that “goes to 11” has particular resonance for anybody who’s ever picked up a ...
In the grand scheme of things, Mark’s Guitar Exchange specializes in one thing: guitar stuff. But in the guitar scheme of things, this shop, with one location in Point Loma and one in Chula Vista, ...
Despite the downtown setbacks over the past five years, shop owner Tom Diggins is confident that the central business ...
There is a rock band playing gigs around Lake Minnetonka this summer that, when they take the stage, the crowd is a bit skeptical. The drummer is 12. The guitarist and singer is ...
Lloyd Baggs has come full circle back to guitar design as a bespoke platform for his latest pickup system – the result could ...
Singer-songwriter Ian Fisher told us about his love for his Larrivee BT-03. Ian Fisher: I can’t do without my Larrivee BT-03. I spent years touring around by train and plane in Europe with the ...
Fender’s EVP of Product Justin Norvell explains what convinced Fender to change its mindset on where its guitars are built – ...
Music shop owner Sheena Crowley ran an online fundraiser to keep the rock legend's famous Fender Stratocaster at home ...
Your phone is already a versatile do-everything-convergence-tool, and it's about to become a pocket guitar capturing studio, ...
Many of the guitars are "quirky and irreplaceable with sentimental value," according to the studio's co-owner.
For musicians, traveling without one's instrument has always been an exercise in deprivation. Our writer visits a place in Montana that's solved this problem.
We explore the curious anatomy of Queen guitarist Brian May's guitar, which includes knitting needles and wood from a 300-year-old fireplace.