Bob Weir's guitar playing made an indelible contribution to the Grateful Dead. It may have been even more radical than you think.
In the summer of 1968, three years into the Grateful Dead’s existence, the band fired singer and rhythm guitarist Bob Weir.
T-Bone Walker may have been the first true hero of modern electric blues, but he stood upon the shoulders of jazz and blues ...
​Introducing the Blues King Studio, a fresh face in Epiphone’s acoustic lineup, taking major cues from the L-00 lineage. This ...
I was outside taking a set break during a gig with my band Saturday night, when several members of the group saw the same ...
Fender Play TV is a unique application that leverages the advanced technology of Samsung TVs to provide an immersive learning experience. With a high-definition display and an impressive sound system, ...
Richard Philip Henry John Benson was not a normal person. In the mid-90s, he was a hunk Italian prog guitarist in nuts-tight ...
Soho Sessions is the sound of Rinciari cutting loose and putting his own stamp on the classics, with the help of his one-of-a ...
Kolkata’s resident guitar god, along with Mainak ‘Bumpy’ Nag Choudhury, Pervez Qadir and Sananda Dutta, performed at 5 Mad ...
This year's scores up for Oscar consideration have one thing in common: the composers were asked to begin writing before the ...
A North Texas guitarist recently set his sights on producing what he believes to be the first complete recording of an ...
A memorial for the late Bob Weir, a founding member of the Grateful Dead, rests in front of the band’s former house in San ...