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A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z 0-9

Guitar Organ
In the mid-1960s, manufacturers began building effects like distortions or phase shifters into certain models. But nothing was as ambitious as the Guitar organ. At least three manufacturers actually got to the point of releasing these instruments, the most high profile of these being from Vox in the UK. The first of these appeared in 1966 as the Vox Model V251, a combination of the Vox Continental organ and Vox Phantom solidbody guitar. The fingerboard's frets are wired to a set of organ tone generators, so that when a string is depressed, it touches a fret which completes a circuit and triggers the appropriate note. Although the basic idea was sound, it quickly became apparent that the amount of wood required to be removed from the guitar body in order to squeeze in the organ circuitry resulted in a poor-sounding electric guitar. In the late 1960s, Texas-based Musiconics International introduced the world to the Guitorgan, which was based upon a design by Bob Murrell. In this case, the organ circuitry was built into a Japanese Univox "Effie," a semi-hollowbody guitar which cut down on the weight. The guitar bodies had enough room in which the organ circuitry could be placed. About 3,000 Guitorgans were eventually built. The idea briefly resurfaced again in 1976 as the Godwin Organ (notice that the word "guitar" was not used), but while the organ sound was quite good, the guitar sound still lacked the punch players expected of these instruments. Thus, until the birth of the guitar synthesizer, the idea of combining a keyboard instrument with a guitar was shelved.

G-Cadillac Tailpiece

Gaffer Tape

Gain

Gain/Fader Riding

Gain Before Feedback

Gain Reduction

Gain Stage

Gain Structure

Gap

GAS

Gate

Gauge

Gauss

GB

G Brand

Gear Acquisition Syndrome

GearFest

GearFestive

General MIDI Lite

General Pause

Generational Loss

Genlock

German Carve

Germanium

Gesture

GFI

GHz, Gigahertz

GiB

Gibibyte

Gibson L5 Archtop

Gibson Style O

Gig

Gigabit

Gigabyte

Gigaflop

GigaFLOPS

Gig Bag

Glass Armonica

Glass Master

Glide

Glissando

Global

General MIDI (GM)

GM2

GM Reset

GNU

GoBo

Gold-lip Pearl

Golden Ratio

Gold Master/Golden Master

Golpeador

Gooseneck

GOP

GPI

Grab It and Go

Grace Note

Grain

Grand Central Dispatch

Grand Rights

Grand Staff

Granular Synthesis

Graphic Equalizer

Graphics Controller

Graphics Processing Unit (GPU)

Graphic User Interface

Graphite

Graticule

Green Book

Gretsch Ronnie Lee Model

Grid

Grid Mode

Grille

Grille Cloth

Ground

Ground Bass

Ground Lift

Ground Loop

Ground Wound

Group

Group Delay

GSIF

Guard Band

GUI

Guide Track

Guild Thunderbird S200

Guitar

Guitarist

Guitar Organ

Guitarron

Guitorgan

     
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