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Ernie Ball Music Man Unveils the Ryan "Fluff" Bruce Signature StingRay

Ernie Ball Music Man Unveils the Ryan "Fluff" Bruce Signature StingRay

The Ryan “Fluff” Bruce Artist Series StingRay guitar will be offered in limited quantities and in two exclusive finishes. Aqua Sparkle is limited to 25 units and is available exclusively in the Ernie Ball Music Man Vault. Tealy Dan is limited to 25 units and is available exclusively from Sweetwater.


Features 

  • Mahogany body for added weight and sustain
  • Hardtail bridge for added resonance
  • Dual-voice Fishman Ryan “Fluff” Bruce signature humbucking pickup
  • Volume-only push-pull potentiometer for two distinct humbucking sounds
  • Custom neck plate
  • Certificate of Authenticity
  • Mono Case

Ernie Ball Music Man: Ryan "Fluff" Bruce Artist Series StingRay Guitar

Visit them online at www.ernieball.com and www.music-man.com.

In this promotional photo of the Waikiki Trio, the standing guitarist is playing a Martin 0-42, and the seated guitarist is playing a Martin 0-18K.

Photo courtesy of the C.F. Martin & Co., Inc. Archive

Pacific Island pluckers had a hand in developing the beloved dreadnought acoustics, and changed the course of American guitar music.

In 1906, a devastating earthquake and three days of raging fires leveled 80 percent of San Francisco. Nine years later, to honor the opening of the Panama Canal and signal that San Francisco was back, the city held the Panama-Pacific International Exposition.

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Featuring a slim Headlock system, water-resistant shell, and spacious front pocket. Available in classic Black and Ash, as well as new colors Moonlight Blue, Amazon Green, and Burnt Orange.

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Why Randy Rhoads Makes Chris Shiflett Cry
- YouTube

Your esteemed hosts of the 100 Guitarists podcast have been listening to Randy Rhoads’s body of work since they learned the word “pentatonic.” His short discography with Ozzy Osbourne has been emblazoned on both of our fingertips, and we’ve each put in our hours working out everything from the “Crazy Train” riff to the fingerpicked intro to “Diary of a Madman.” But in our extended Premier Guitar fam, we have an expert who’s been studying Randy’s licks since longer than either of us have been alive.

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Always the drummer, Grohl thinks of the Foos’ approach to guitar parts as different limbs. Shiflett handles the 8th-note movement, Grohl pounds on the backbeats, and Smear simply crushes the downbeat. The result has shaped stadium rock for decades.

For the first time, Dave Grohl, Pat Smear, and Chris Shiflett discuss their shared 6-string history, breakdown some Foos riffs, and give insight on 30 years of rock and roll.

Over the past 30 years, Foo Fighters have become one of the most influential and important bands in rock and roll. Through countless gigs from clubs and theaters to arenas and stadiums, the trio of Dave Grohl, Pat Smear, and Chris Shiflett have developed a vocabulary that at this point comes together naturally. It’s a shared language that is always present but rarely (if ever) discussed. Until now.

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