A hybrid guitar is an electric guitar with the ability to produce a signal with the tonal quality of an acoustic guitar in addition to a typical electric signal from a magnetic pickup, allowing a wide tonal pallette. The signal from the two-pickup systems can be blended on board, or (sometimes on the same instrument) fed separately to two different effect and amplification lines.

Wolf Mail playing a MG hybrid guitar in Germany

Hybrid guitars typically use a piezoelectric pickup to generate the acoustic-like signal, the same type of pickup used in most electro-acoustic guitars. Such pickups can produce a reasonable facsimile of acoustic tone even in solid bodied instruments. Aftermarket piezo pickups allow conventional electric guitars to be converted into hybrid guitars.[1]

Examples of solid-body hybrid guitars include the Ovation VXT,[2] Godin A6 Ultra, Peavey's Generation Custom EXP Quilt Top w/ Piezo Series and Tom Anderson Guitarworks Crowdster Plus One and Two. They are similar to silent guitars, except that the latter do not have magnetic pickups. Hollow-body hybrid guitars include the Hamer Duotone Custome,[3][failed verification] Michael Kelly hybrid,[4] Taylor T5 and, Epiphone ULTRA-339, Ibanez Montage[5] Crafter SA, PRS Hollowbody II Piezo.[6] These resemble semi-acoustic guitars with additional piezo pickups. The Yamaha AEX1500 [7] is a hybrid archtop guitar.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Fishman Powerbridge". Archived from the original on 2010-10-22. Retrieved 2010-10-08.
  2. ^ Ovation VXT
  3. ^ Hamer guitars
  4. ^ Michael Kelly Hybrid
  5. ^ "Ibanez Montage". Archived from the original on 2010-09-09. Retrieved 2010-10-09.
  6. ^ PRS SE Hollowbody II Piezo review
  7. ^ Yamaha AEX1500
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