 | |  |
| EBow PlusEbow Electronic Bow for Guitar | 
enlarge
| Brand: EBow Category: Musical Instruments
List Price: $135.00 Buy New: $94.93 You Save: $40.07 (30%)
Buy New from $94.93
Avg. Customer Rating:   (2 reviews) Sales Rank: 1159
Color: gray Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.5 Dimensions (in): 4 x 2 x 4
MPN: PLUSEBOW Model: PLUSEBOW UPC: 835783001001 EAN: 0835783001001 ASIN: B0002GXBXU
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
|
| Features:
| | Includes: Instruction Tape | | | Printed Instructions | | | Carry Pouch |
|
| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description The EBow is a hand-held electronic bow for guitar. The small battery-powered unit replaces the pick in the right hand letting the guitarist mimic strings, horns, and woodwinds with unbelievable sensitivity. The EBow produces a powerful infinite sustain, rich in harmonics for incredible guitar sounds.
|
| Customer Reviews:
  ebow is a symphony August 4, 2006 8 out of 8 found this review helpful
First, I've been playing guitar for 41 years now. I've been around. In fact, I had the very first ebow.It usually required you to pluck the string slightly and the ebow would continue IF you had it positioned just right. THIS version is effortless, has harmonics and can emulate everything from strings to brass depending how you position it. If you remember Queen's very first albums saying they did not use synthesizers, this is how they made some of their sweet sustains. The list of who uses this item is a virtual Who's Who of rock/ Easy to learn, easy to use.
  Fun Toy!!! February 4, 2005 4 out of 33 found this review helpful
The Jellifish is the first radically new thing I've seen for guitar since the Ebow. I love innovative musical tools, and the Jellifish delivers. I am a guitar instructor and teach over 50 students a week from beginner to very advanced. I have had all of my students purchase the Jellifish because in order to get the Chorus! Pluck! and Bow! sounds you must master 3 picking styles that every guitarist should know how to use regardless. Specifically, a fluid, sweep picking technique will produce a lush chorusing effect that is a cross somewhere between a 12-string and a chorus pedal. Alternate picking, when done properly from the wrist, will produce the Pluck! effect, which somewhat sounds like a hammered dulcimer. And circular picking -- done from the thumb and forefinger -- will obtain a bowed effect that is very nice on slower, scalar patterns, but can also be used on arpeggios. 100 years from now, the Jellifish won't be novel, because every guitarist will use this the same as they do capos and slides. Minimal proficiency with this device is de rigueur for any serious student of the instrument.
|
|
|
 Powered by Associate-O-Matic
|  | |