|  02-21-2018, 09:35 AM | #2 | 
	| Unfrozen Caveman Lawyer 
				 
				Join Date: Oct 2002 Location: Crowsnest Pass      | 
				  
 
			
			                               Why my guitar gently weeps                       
                                         The slow, secret death of the six-string electric. And why you should care.                      
https://www.washingtonpost.com/graph...=.416b397ec90a
 In the past decade, electric guitar sales have plummeted, from about  1.5 million sold annually to just over 1 million. The two biggest  companies, Gibson and Fender, are in debt, and a third, PRS Guitars, had  to cut staff and expand production of cheaper guitars. In April,  Moody’s downgraded Guitar Center, the largest chain retailer, as it  faces $1.6 billion in debt. And at Sweetwater.com, the online retailer, a  brand-new, interest-free Fender can be had for as little as $8 a month.
 In 1979, Tascam’s Portastudio 144 arrived on the market, allowing  anybody with a microphone and a patch cord to record with multiple  tracks. (Bruce Springsteen used a Portastudio for 1982’s “Nebraska.”) In 1981, Oberheim introduced the DMX drum machine, revolutionizing hip-hop.
 
 And starting in 2010, the industry witnessed a milestone that would have  been unthinkable during the hair-metal era: Acoustic models began to  outsell electric.
 
 Fender’s chief executive, Andy Mooney.
 
 He says that the company has a strategy designed to reach  millennials. The key, Mooney says, is to get more beginners to stick  with an instrument they often abandon within a year. To that end, in  July the company will launch a subscription-based service it says will  change the way new guitarists learn to play through a series of online  tools.
 
 Juszkiewicz says that one day, the self-tuning guitars will be  recognized as a great innovation, comparing them with the advent of the  television remote control.
 
				 Last edited by troutman; 02-21-2018 at 09:42 AM.
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