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NAMM 2020 Day 3 Gallery

Get close-up looks at new tone toys from Walrus, Eventide, Collings, Mythos, Orange, and more.

IsoAcoustics Stage 1 Board

Here's what tone fiends the Tedeschi Trucks Band and Eric Johnson are currently using under amps and monitors. Making its NAMM debut in an impressive demonstration, the IsoAcoustics Stage 1 Board portable isolation platform is a light-but-heavy-duty resin board with round, proprietary isolator cushions on the bottom. Drop anything from a small combo to stacked 4x12s on top, and the amps are isolated from the stage surface. The result is a clearer, more articulate tone with richer mids and improved bass. That's achieved by eliminating vibrations that smear sound when the amp and floor—especially a hollow stage—react to each other. Skeptical? IsoAcoustics have been leaders in pro audio isolation, especially for studio monitors, for 18 years, and the product was inspired by John Mayer, who was fed up by vibrational interference with his amp's sound. It's 99 bucks.

This unusual bass instrument is strung with just two flatwound strings, each with its own fretting surface that’s bent 135 degrees away from one another.

All photos by Madison Thorn

While this forgotten, oddball instrument was designed with multidextrous guitarists in mind, it never quite took off—making it a rare, vintage treasure.

At Fanny’s House of Music, you never know what strange or fascinating relics you might find. Guitorgan? Been there, sold that. A Hawaiian tremoloa fretless zither? We’ve had two.

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For Pink Floyd fans, the visuals give away that this is David Gilmour along with his longtime bassist Guy Pratt and drummer Adam Betts, who appear on Gilmour’s new Luck and Strange, navigating the band’s classic “Time.”

Photo by Emma Wannie/MSGE

The incendiary giant of psychedelic guitar concludes his 21-date world tour this weekend in New York City. In this photo essay, PG’s editorial director reports on the opening date of the sonic architect of Pink Floyd’s historic five-concert run at MSG.

NEW YORK CITY–There’s a low, sustained tone that David Gilmour extracts from his Stratocaster at the beginning of Pink Floyd’s “Sorrow.” It’s the intimidating growl of a robotic tiger­–or, more realistically, a blend of low-string sustain, snarling overdrive from a Big Muff, and delay that saturates the air and seems to expand into every bit of open space. It’s almost overpowering in its intensity, but it is also deeply beautiful.

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D'Addario's new Bridge Pin Puller and Tour-Grade Peg Winder are designed to make string changes a breeze.

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On this episode of the 100 Guitarists podcast, we’re talking about our favorite Lukather tracks, from his best rhythm parts to his most rippin’ solos. And even though he spends most of his playing time with the biggest names, we’ve managed to call up a few deep cuts.

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