Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Misa Kitara is a digital MIDI controller and musical instrument developed in 2011 and discontinued in 2013. It allows for a guitar player to produce a synthesized sound using techniques and motions referential to guitar playing. It is built in the shape of an electric guitar, complete with a full twenty-four fret neck.
Second guitarist Misa joined the band in April, and Bridear had their first live that same month at Spiral Factory. [2] Kimi, Haru, and Kai were previously in a band together, while Mitsuru and Misa were recruited from a website specifically for finding musicians. [2] The demo "Pray/Another Name" was released in August 2012. [3]
In 2011, 4DD2 Adam Milner joined ranks with the band on electric guitar and Kitara (Misa Digital instrument). In 2012, Grendel released the "Timewave : Zero" album. [4] This album is both a return to their signature sound and taking on various influences from contemporary EDM styles, such as Trance, Complex Electro and House.
He calls his $299 Bluetooth-connected brainchild a "digital rhythm guitar," and its raison d'etre is to let anyone to feel the thrill of playing music. Magic Instruments' digital guitar makes it ...
Bassist Misa tried to keep the song sounding simple. [9] Kobato tried to make "Brightest Star" sound like a call-and-response exercise with the audience. When Tōno showed Kobato the demo of the song, she imagined a very poppy song, but wanted to include darker lyrics, and tried to express the feelings of both sides of humanity through her singing.
Media-accelerated Global Information Carrier (MaGIC) is an audio over Ethernet protocol developed by Gibson Guitar Corporation in partnership with 3COM. It allows bidirectional transmission of multichannel audio data, control data, and instrument power. Revision 1.0 was introduced in 1999; the most current revision 3.0c was released in 2003. [1]
The You Rock Guitar, introduced in 2010 by You Rock Digital, combines a MIDI guitar controller/recorder with a patented touch-sensitive fingerboard and an on-board synthesizer. The instrument supports not only strumming and picking, but also tapping and sliding techniques, and provides a whammy bar for pitch bending and a modulation.
The SynthAxe. The SynthAxe is a fretted, guitar-like MIDI controller, created by Bill Aitken, Mike Dixon, and Tony Sedivy and manufactured in England in 1985. It is a musical instrument that uses electronic synthesizers to produce sound and is controlled through the use of an arm resembling the neck of a guitar in form and in use.