Gibson Hoping To Hit Right Note With Self-Tuning Guitar According to
Afp.google.com, the world's first self-tuning guitar was unveiled to the public in London Monday -- an instrument that automatically detects when a string has fallen out of pitch and corrects it.
The Gibson Robot Guitar was unveiled to the public in the British capital by Mike Peters, lead singer and guitarist from THE ALARM, the biggest band to come out of Wales in the 1980s and famous for rock anthem 'Sixty-Eight Guns'.
Guitar-maker Gibson, based in Nashville, Tennessee, promise that the instrument, whose technology has been 10 years in the making, will "change the guitar world forever" when it goes on sale around the world on Friday.
It will retail in Britain for 1,400 pounds (1,970 euros, 2,900 dollars). Ten first run limited editions in the Blue Silverburst Les Paul model will be available in each Gibson store worldwide. The regular model hits the shops in the new year.
In an interview on the firm's website, inventor Chris Adams, who hit on the idea after becoming frustrated by constant manual tuning, described it as the "Mercedes of guitars".
He said the self-tuning device was already being used by guitarists such as Billy Corgan, from
THE SMASHING PUMPKINS, and Matt Bellamy, from MUSE, while
THE WHO strummer Pete Townshend was intrigued.
Fans of Gibson guitars include Slash from
GUNS N' ROSES, LED ZEPPELIN's Jimmy Page, Lenny Kravitz, Eric Clapton, Paul Weller and Paul McCartney.