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The Selmer-Maccaferri Guitar is an unusual acoustic guitar best known as the favored instrument of Django Reinhardt. Early models have a large, D-shaped soundhole (the "grande bouche," or "big mouth"), which was shaped specifically to accommodate...
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The Russian guitar, a seven-string acoustic guitar tuned to the Open G tuning, arrived in the beginning of the 19th century in Russia, most probably as a development of the kobza and the baroque lute. It is known in Russia as the semistrunnaya...
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A resonator guitar or resophonic guitar is an acoustic guitar whose sound is produced by one or more metal resonators rather than by a wooden guitar belly.
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/6/6b/Triconegravir1_big.jpg/200px-
A modern...
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When applied to musical instruments, the term Requinto is used in both Spanish and Portuguese to mean a smaller, higher-pitched version of another instrument. Therefore not every instrument with the name requinto is a guitar, this article however...
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Rainsong is an acoustic guitar manufacturer currently based in Woodinville, Washington, and originally based in Kihei, Maui, Hawaii. The company makes high-end graphite bodied acoustics and acoustic electrics, with current and past graphite body...
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The Portuguese guitar was developed based on the English guitar, which was created in England in the late 18th century out of a Renaissance instrument called cittern.
The English guitar became known as such since the middle of the 19th century....
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Parlor guitar usually refers to smaller-bodied guitars that had peak popularity between the late 19th century until the 1950's. The defining feature in terms of classification is the size of the instrument, defined as smaller than that of a concert...
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The Ovation Guitar Company, a holding of Kaman Music Corporation, is a guitar manufacturing company based in Bloomfield, Connecticut, USA. Ovation primarily manufactures acoustic guitars.
Ovation guitars are differentiated by their composite...
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Orville by Gibson (also known simply as Orville) was the Japanese brand of Gibson guitars for the Japanese market during the 1980's and the 1990's.
History
During the 1970s and the 1980s, some Japanese manufacturers, such as Tokai Guitars,...
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The Ibanez Artwood (AW) series refers to a series of acoustic guitars highlighted by the use of unusual woods such as quilted and flamed maple, walnut, and bubinga. Also notable is the use of solid wood tops in each model. Many guitars in the series...
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The harp guitar is a musical instrument combining features found in the guitar and the harp. Originally manufactured as a "novelty" instrument, the harp strings are used as bass or drone strings, adding to the harmonic texture. Hybrid styles are...
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The guitar battente (chitarra battente) is an important string instrument in Italian popular music. The chitarra battente is smaller than a classical guitar, now usually played with four or five metal strings and used mainly in Calabria to accompany...
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The Gibson L-5 guitar was first produced in 1922 by Gibson Guitar Corporation, then of Kalamazoo, Michigan, under the direction of master luthier Lloyd Loar, and has been in production ever since. It was considered the premier rhythm guitar in the...
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The Gibson J-45 is an acoustic guitar model manufactured by the Gibson Guitar Corporation. It is part of Gibson's round-shoulder, dreadnought acoustic "jumbo" line, begun in 1934 with the Gibson Jumbo Flattop to compete with C.F. Martin & Company's...
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Gibson J-200 (Super Jumbo 200) is an acoustic guitar model produced by the Gibson Guitar Corporation.
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The Gibson Super Jumbo 200 is one the world's...
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