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Maret 31, 2013

BRAND GITAR TERPOPULER HASIL POLLING JAN-MARET 2013

 
Fender / Squier
  16 (27%)
 
Gibson / Epiphone
  12 (20%)
 
Ibanez / Gio
  13 (22%)
 
Yamaha
  5 (8%)
 
Washburn
  5 (8%)
 
PRS / PRS SE
  8 (13%)
 
Jackson
  7 (11%)
 
ESP / LTD
  5 (8%)
 
Schecter / SGR
  8 (13%)
 
Music Man / Sterling
  6 (10%)
 
Artrock
  5 (8%)
 
Radix
  2 (3%)
 
Merek Lain
  6 (10%)
 

Votes so far: 59 

Well... Ternyata guys, brand Fender, Gibson, Ibanez beserta eselonnya masih memimpin hasil polling brand gitar yang menjadi incaran gitaris di tahun 2013 ini, especially dari jangka 1 Januari - 31 Maret. Bukan berarti brand gitar yang lain itu buruk/jelek, semua kembali ke selera dan minat masing2 gitaris. Keep Moving On Indonesian Guitars!

Terima kasih banyak untuk kamu yang sudah ikutan polling ini, the next polling will be here soon!!

Maret 27, 2013

Pixxy Lixxx : Guitarist, Host, Presenter, Announcer & Entertainer

youtube logo

Well, kalo kamu adalah seseorang yang mengaku sebagai gitaris, atau setidaknya sedang berusaha mempelajari instrumen musik yang satu ini, tidak ada salahnya untuk mencoba belajar dengan cara online.
Yap,, jaman sekarang untuk taking lessons tidak harus datang ke tempat les, belajar di kelas, bla bla bla...Sucks.

Kamu bisa belajar lewat berbagai macam video tutorial yang semakin baik kualitasnya dari waktu ke waktu. Mungkin dari DVD kepingan atau yang paling gampang adalah YouTube. Yap, YouTube! adalah cara yang paling mudah untuk mempelajari teknik bermain gitar, tutorial merawat gitar, cara mengupgrade gitar,  memperbaiki, sampai cara membuat gitar elektrik maupun akustik, lengkap!!!

Tapi ada satu channel disana yang menyita perhatian saya, he's a kind guy, cara dia menjelaskan sesuatu tuh berbeda dengan yang lain, kocak, seru, dan tekniknya juga mantap, profesional. Well, saya juga seorang radio dj, apabila kamu adalah seorang gitaris dan juga radio dj, mungkin bisa belajar juga dari orang satu ini. Learning how to talking, presenting a video show, being a good host, and entertaining people. haha,, mencoba apa salahnya, coba aja kulik dia di YouTube.

check it out :
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rcWtHEHa_FE
or
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rcWtHEHa_FE


I'm not promoting him, i just like his videos, LoL.
Cheers,
@febriano84

Maret 21, 2013

ADIKSIGITAR REVIEW : EROSS CHANDRA SIGNATURE SQUIER TELE


Eross Telecaster Signatures

Let's have a quickie preview about this good versatile guitar. This badboy made in Indonesia of course, and one of the signature series from Indonesian guitarist, a member of Sheila On 7 band from Jogjakarta.

Gitar ini dapat memberikan nuansa sound dari Classic Telecaster of the 50's, dan tersedia dalam 2 pilihan warna yaitu : Butterscotch dan Dessert Sand finish. Sedikit berbeda dari telecaster kebanyakan yang terbuat dari kayu alder, Eross tele ini justru terbuat dari kayu Pine Wood, dimana Eross juga ingin mengembalikan sound original dari Real Telecaster yang pada awal produksinya juga terbuat dari kayu Pine. Tone dan karakter dari gitar ini sangat versatile dan dapat digunakan di jenis musik apapun, string clarity yang sangat terjaga, dinamika respon midrange dan high end yang mantap, twanky yang khas serta dalam keadaan full distorsi sekalipun tetap dapat menjaga strings definition yang baik. 

Foto Eros
Specification :
  • "C" Shape maple neck
  • Pine wood bodies
  • Knurled chrome control knobs
  • Vintage tinted neck
  • Maple fingerboard
  • Black dot fingerboard inlays
  • Classic tele bridges
  • 3 way PU switcher
  • Gold squier logo
  • Original barrel switch tip
  • Synthetic bone nut
  • 21 medium frets
  • Singel coil on bridge and neck PU
  • Eross Chandra signature of the back of the headstock

Headstock backside




STOP PLAYING, START BUYING !

Maret 18, 2013

Adiksigitar Tips : CARA MENSETTING KETINGGIAN PICKUP GITARMU

ADJUSTING PASSIVE HUMBUCKERS

 

 

Adjusting for Balance

photo depicting screw pole adjustment

Balance in this case refers to consistent string-to-string volume. Ideally, with a balanced pickup, one can strum all six (or seven or eight) strings and hear each note ring out with even volume through an amplifier. Balanced string-to-string output is good. It makes our chords sound fuller, our runs and leads more consistent, and helps the guitar respond more evenly, like a higher-quality instrument.
 
Some guitars happily exhibit this trait acoustically, but even those that don’t can be adjusted so that they do through an amp, and that’s really what matters, right?

String-to-string balance is manipulated via the screw poles in the top of the pickup. Again, designs vary, but they all function about the same.

• If the pickup has flat-head screw poles, we’ll need a flat-head screwdriver.
• If the pickup has Philips-head screw poles, we’ll need a Philips screwdriver.
• If the pickup has hex key poles, we’ll need a hex key of the appropriate size.
• If the pickup has two rows of screw poles, or twice as many crammed into one row (I’m looking at you, Carvin), we’ll need a little extra patience.
• If the pickup just has two rows of non-adjustable slug poles, we need some better pickups.

The screw poles are named so because they are screws; they are screws because they’re meant to turn, and turning them is how we adjust the string-to-string balance of the pickup. Kind of like putting on pants before putting on shoes, I find it’s best to begin with this step so as to avoid messing up other adjustments we will have already made by doing it later.

So, plug in your guitar and turn them.

Tweak them just enough that the strings all sound like they’re ringing out at the same volume when each one is plucked individually. It’s fine to use a guitar amp to monitor this and trust your ears, but I prefer to use something that gives me a visual readout of the string volume (like an audio workstation or any other piece of equipment with a dB meter) as I make adjustments. I pluck a string, note what the dB meter reads, and adjust the screw pole until it matches the meter readings of the rest of the strings. This way I ensure that my adjustments are accurate and my results are not affected by any compression inherent in a particular amplifier.

image depicting the output difference in two contrasting waveforms

The blue waveform on top was recorded prior to adjustment. Note how much smaller the output differential (highlighted area) is on the green waveform, which was recorded after adjustment.

If the screw poles in the pickup were already adjusted by someone else or are all wonky for whatever reason, “reset” them by screwing them all back to a position where they’re slightly higher than level with the surface of the pickup bobbin. This way there’s plenty of room to adjust up, but also a little bit of room to adjust down without sinking the poles too far below the surface of the bobbin (which looks weird and can collect gunk over time). The goal is to find a mean depth for all the screw poles, so that none of them wind up too high or too low relative to the function of the guitar when finished.

Adjusting for Output

photo depicting pickup height adjustment 
Once we’ve balanced the poles for string-to-string volume, we can adjust the overall height of the pickup for the desired output level. Output refers to the strength of the guitar’s signal from the pickups. More output = a hotter signal. This typically equates to more volume in a clean setup and more overdrive in a dirty one. Raising the pickup increases the output and lowering the pickup decreases it.

There are other incremental tonal changes that accompany this adjustment. These can range in intensity between different pickup models, but generally speaking, a pickup will sound brighter and dirtier closer to the strings and rounder, darker, and woodier further away from the strings.

I find also that pickups set lower are more responsive to picking dynamics. Whether this is a product of decreased median output and hence, more headroom, or if the lower pickup position physically provides them with a larger “window” through which can detect finer detail in string velocity, I don’t know. Whatever. It works. Practical knowledge FTW.

Additional Considerations

While 95% of what you need to worry about during pickup adjustment is covered above, there are a few ancillary factors to be mindful of, specifically: clearance, sustain, and pickup-to-pickup balance.

photo depicting grooves in p-90 pickup from string contact
Note the grooves worn into the P-90 housing from string contact

Pickups can be raised up pretty close to the strings without actually making contact while we’re testing out the adjustment, but actual playing conditions do vary and we may find that palm mutes or heavy picking causes the string to choke out some against the pickup. This is decidedly… undesirable. It sounds bad and can cause the strings to wear grooves into the tops of your pickups over time. If this happens, lower that puppy down a hair to get it out of the way.

Photo illustrating optimal pickup height
This medium-output (9 kΩ) bridge pickup is nice and close to deliver a good punch, but a higher-output pickup would probably need to be lowered to prevent string-pull.

Passive pickups can also exert a small amount of magnetic pull on electric guitar strings. If the pickup magnet is particularly strong or set too near the strings, it can act as a dampening force on them, reducing sustain, and in extreme cases, actually cause the strings to sound out of tune. The latter is rare, and the former is usually an easy fix, so if you find that your guitar seemed to “sing” more before you adjusted the pickups, try lowering them down a little bit.

photo of guitar
See the subtle emphasis on the bridge pickup in this picture? That’s known in the industry as “bad photography.”

The last thing to consider is the output ratio between bridge and neck pickups. This presents something of a balancing act between getting the pickup height just right for each of them so they sound their best individually while keeping their output as complimentary as possible. I find that I prefer a slightly hotter bridge pickup compared to the neck pickup and adjust their height accordingly, but tastes differ on what makes a good ratio between bridge and neck pickup output, so again, trust your ears.

(Indonesian) THE POINT IS :

Pergunakan sekrup diatas pickup pasifmu hanya untuk "menyeimbangkan" sound output dari senar per senar. Apabila sound output/volume setiap senarnya dirasa sudah seimbang dan kamu masih belum mendapatkan output yang lebih HOT/besar baru gunakan 2 sekrup yang berasa disamping atas/bawah pickup pasifmu untuk menyesuaikannya dengan seleramu.

  • 6 Sekrup diatas pickup = untuk balancing output level per senar,

  • 2 Sekrup di samping = untuk menambah/mengurangi output level keseluruhan pickup.

Tapi ingat, apabila pickup terlalu dekat dengan senar, dapat menyebabkan senar menabrak permukaan pickup/noisey , mengurangi sustain serta dapat membuat senar menjadi out of tune. 

BE A BALANCED GUITARIST !! :P


Maret 16, 2013

ADISKGITAR PREVIEW : The Legacy Continues On GIBSON L6-S

Gibson L6S Reissued

The Gibson L6S is part of a very select group of guitars: the lesser-known Gibson’s. Renowned as pioneers of the electric guitar, such a huge number of Gibson models have become ‘classics’ that it is a far less common occurrence to discover a model that is no longer made. The Gibson L6S, however, is just such a beast.

Designed in 1972 by Bill Lawrence, the plan was to create a guitar capable of the widest possible range of tones, but with the simplest possible controls and electronics. With a slim line design, based on the L5S, and looking a bit like a wider Les Paul, the Gibson L6S won itself some very well known fans, in the shape of Carlos Santana.
Dawson Music - Gibson L6S Ad.

Solid maple Body and Neck

Unusually for an electric guitar, the Gibson L6S features a body made of solid Grade-A maple. Matching this with slim profile, glued-in neck of the same material has the effect of delivering a chiming quality to the guitar’s tone, with exceptional sustain. The single cutaway provides easy access to the L6S’ 22 frets. An Antique Lacquer nitrocellulose finish adds to the vintage look of the guitar, whilst allowing the body to resonate more fully. A classic Tune-o-matic bridge keeps things all stable and in tune at the bottom end of the guitar, whilst Grover Kidney Button tuners take care of business at the other end of the fretboard.

Coil tapped pickups, with six way switching

The Gibson L6S’ real strength lies in its electronics, however. Two humbuckers feature, a 490R in the neck position and a 498T at the bridge, delivering more gain. These will deliver a wide array of tones on their own, but L6S has a few more tricks up its sleeve. The two pickups can be coil-tapped (splitting them into single coil pickups) and selected in various configurations via a six-way selector switch. This is teamed with a master volume and bass and treble roll-off EQ pots, making the Gibson L6S a real guitar tone chameleon.
If you like it, go get one guys!
haha..berapa duit ya kalo diRp-in?! :P
click here.

Maret 14, 2013

GOLDEN GODS 2013 METAL HAMMER BY ORANGE AMPS.

Orange Amp Metal Hammer Event Logo

 

Motörhead are to headline the eleventh annual Orange Amplification Metal Hammer Golden God Awards 2013. 

Lemmy and co are set to bring the noise to the IndigO2 on 17 June, as Metal Hammer celebrates the finest metal from the last 12 months. Anyone familiar with the Indig02 will know that this it's not exactly the largest venue in the world, and with tickets to the event up for grabs, the Awards represent a rare opportunity to see Motörhead up close and personal. 

"Motörhead are nothing less than gods among us," says Alexander Milas, editor of Metal Hammer. "Their sound and image are as iconic as they are inimitable, and we're genuinely honoured to have them at the Golden Gods this year. It's gonna be loud!"

The awards are reader-voted, and you can make your voice heard over at the official Golden Gods website - by voting, you're putting your name in the hat to win tickets to the Awards in June.

Categories include best new band, breakthrough act, best UK band and the Dimebag Darrell Shredder award.
For more information, visit the official Metal Hammer website.

Adiksigitar Preview : MXR Slash's Octave Fuzz Pedals

MXR Slash Sig Pedal

MXR Slash Octave Fuzz signature pedal unveiled

Jim Dunlop has unveiled a new Slash signature pedal, the MXR Slash Octave Fuzz, and you can see it in action in the video above.

The analogue pedal features separate Sub Octave and Octave Up Fuzz 'voices', the first of which can be run dry or switched into the 70s-style 'shag' fuzz circuit. 

There's also the option to run the pedal as a straight fuzz unit and to separately blend both the Sub Octave and Octave Up effects into your tone via dedicated control knobs. 

In addition, the MXR Slash Octave Fuzz pedal comes emblazoned in the by now customary Slash 'R N Fn' R' graphics and features true-bypass switching. There's no word on exact price or arrival date yet.

Adiksigitar Preview : DEAN CUSTOM 550 FLOYD Limited !

  • Very Limited - Only 100 will be produced!
  • Arched Mahogany Top
  • Mahogany Body
  • 25.5" Scale
  • 1 11/16 Nut
  • Thru Maple C Neck
  • Ebony Fingerboard
  • Pearl Custom Inlays
  • Grover Tuners
  • Black Hardware
  • Floyd Rose 1000 Bridge
  • EMG 81 Bridge Pickup
  • EMG 85 Neck Pickup
  • Classic Black or Metallic White Finish 
FEATURES

Although the Custom 550 is made from separate components that include a maple through-body neck, an elegantly arched mahogany top and a comfortably contoured mahogany body, it feels like one continuous, solid piece of wood, thanks to its smooth neck-to-body transition and glossy Classic Black or Metallic White finish. Expertly crafted in Korea, the Custom 550 features a 24-fret neck with a 25 1/2–inch scale, 1 11/16–inch nut width, slim C-shaped profile and ebony fingerboard with pearl dot inlays and a stylized pearl V at the 12th fret. Single-layer white ivoroid binding surrounds the fingerboard, while the headstock features five-layer multi-ply white-and-black binding. 

All of the 550’s hardware is finished in black, including the Grover mini tuners, master volume and master tone knobs, and Floyd Rose 1000 vibrato bridge/locking nut, providing “none more black” styling with the Classic Black finish and attractive two-tone contrast with the Metallic White finish. The pickups are the time-honored and true combination of an EMG 81 bridge humbucker and EMG 85 neck humbucker. Controls are as simple and straightforward as it gets, with a three-position blade pickup-selector switch and no push/pull coil tapping, phase switches or other shenanigans. The output jack is mounted on the side, keeping the guitar cord out of harm’s way. 

PERFORMANCE

The combination of active EMG humbucking pickups, maple neck-through-body design and mahogany “wings” gives the Custom 550 an attractive balance of aggressive attack, tight bass, and warm, sustaining midrange. While its note definition is quite articulate, the guitar’s tone never gets harsh or shrill. This 550 really thrives when played through an amp set to extremely high levels of gain, where chords retain character and single-note lines cut through as if a mixing engineer were riding the faders in your favor. But it also delivers sweet, robust clean tones and delightfully raunchy overdrive textures with plenty of balls and bite.
The Dean arrived in perfect tuning and stayed in tune even after the Floyd was subjected to 15 minutes of dive bombs and flutter flicks. The relatively flat medium jumbo frets provide a “fretless wonder” feel but with enough meat to dig into when bending notes without losing sustain, and the deep, contoured cutaways provide comfortable access all the way up the neck to the 24th fret. The easy-access compartment for the EMG pickups’ single nine-volt battery pops open with a flick of the finger, allowing you to change batteries in seconds, with no tools.

JUAL SANTAI : ARTROCK LES PAUL RLP 200 GOLD TOP

Hello gitaris, all across Indonesia or the world,,haha
Sesuai judul diatas, saya mau jual santai gitar elektrik Artrock RLP 200 Les Paul Gold Top Made In Indonesia.

Pemakaian normal, no dings, no straches, mulus.
Untuk review/spek bisa klik link ini.

Soal harga/nego bisa ngobrol langsung di 0856-472-7181-7 ato twitter @febriano84 or pin 212adfa7.
thanks alot guys.

Maret 06, 2013

Adiksigitar Tips : Panduan Memilih Pickups : Aktif Atau Pasif ??

EMG pickup aktif

Active pickups

An active pickup uses fewer turns of a heavier gauge wire, where a passive pickup would use more windings of a lighter gauge wire. Since the active uses that method of winding, that yields a lower output, but a more broad frequency response. Since that ouput is low, the pickup is boosted by a preamp built inside the pickup. This kicks up the output to around 1.5 to 2 volts for most models. That means that they will hit the amp harder and cause it to distort a bit more. That’s where the idea that active pickups are really high output. Technically speaking, they aren’t. The high output comes from the preamp, not the winding of the pickup.
James Hetfield EMG aktif

Another aspect to active pickups is that the preamp needs a battery to function. Both of the major active pickup makers use 9V batteries with the ability to go up to 27V (using 3 9V batteries). More volts will give you increased headroom. There is a difference in using 18V as opposed to 9V, but the jump to 27V didn’t seem to yield any significant change. However, the argument is that they chew through batteries. While it is true that they do need a new battery, let’s look at the numbers. With one pickup, you’ll get 3000 hours of battery life. That equals out to a little over 8 hours of playing a day every day for a year, including a leap year. If you have dual active pickups, you’d have to play 4 hours a day every day for a year. Those numbers are for the EMG systems. Seymour Duncan’s Blackouts use a little more juice, but you’ll still get a lot of use before a battery goes dead on you. I replace my battery every 6 months.

BareKnuckle Apache Pasif

Passive pickups

Passive pickups don’t need a battery because they have no preamp inside. The current goes from your pickup, to the switch, to the pots, to the jack, and finally goes to the amp. And after more moving around finally ends up at the speaker where you finally hear it. On a note, amps boost the current from guitars way up to be able to make sound. So the guitar is sending current to the amp, the amp sends no current to the guitar. Still, ground your amp properly or you might end up medium well done.

So now you want to know how they sound. Up until recently, all active pickups were sealed and instead of pole pieces, they use bars of metal. However, EMG recently did a new set which combined the pole piece/bar. You might wonder why that matters. Well it equates to a different sound. Passive pickups with the pole pieces (some passives, such as the BL 500XL and SD SH-13 used a bar setup instead of individual pieces, occasionally referred to as a blade style) have a pluckier, more percussive tone. Actives used a bar which is not as percussive sounding, making for a smoother type tone. With the new pickup, you get the percussive tone but with the clarity and focused tone of the active pickup.
BreKnuckle Warpig Pasif

Passive pickups do sound a bit more natural, a more open type tone. They work well in a variety of areas and good ones are clear under high gain. They don’t have the sort of compressed tone that actives do. Think big AC/DC type rhythm chords. Active pickups can’t get that sort of open and airy sound to them. So if a more natural sound is what you want, passives are what you’ll want. Active pickups do have a more compressed type tone to them and yes, the preamp colors the tone a bit. However, they do not sound the same in all guitars. Different woods, different hardware, and different construction (solid, semi hollow, neck through) will have an effect on the overall tone. Anyone who tells you they all sound the same has either not tried actives or is making a generalized statement based on things they’ve heard others say.

Intinya, jenis musik yang kamu mainkan juga dapat menentukan jenis pickup yang akan kamu gunakan. Berbagai macam forum, musisi dan gitaris dapat menyimpulkan bahwa kedua jenis pickup ini sama2 memiliki karakternya sendiri, pickup pasif (tanpa baterai) memiliki karakter sound yang wide, open, versatile, less feedback, "emosional", hampir dapat digunakan untuk seluruh jenis musik yang ada di muka bumi ini serta yang lebih disukai oleh para gitaris adalah, perbedaan jenis kayu dapat menciptakan karakter tonal yang juga bevariasi.
Sedangkan pickup aktif (menggunakan baterai biasanya 9Volts) memiliki karakter yang cenderung high gain, high output, karakter yang khas, dipakai di gitar dengan kayu apapun, neck apapun cenderung menghasilkan sound yang sama dan "flat", serta butuh perhatian ekstra untuk baterainya.. Pickup aktif lebih menunjukkan taringnya especially apabila dibawa untuk memainkan jenis musik metal dengan distorsinya yang menderu-deru. 
 
So guys, kira2 kamu mau pilih yang mana?!!