video,youtube_link,musiccaps_caption,youtube_published,youtube_channel,youtube_description,musiccaps_names,musiccaps_aspects,musiccaps_author,youtube_id,musiccaps_rowid https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cQX-WgT0ACQ&start=20&end=30,"{""label"":""Andy McKee explains fanned frets (Multi-scale Geometry) - Piermont, NY 3/3/09 (7/10)"",""href"":""https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cQX-WgT0ACQ&start=20&end=30""}","A guitarist is tuning his guitar making string noises, peg sounds and fretboard noises. The audio is very bad with a boomy low end. The conversation is engaging and keeps the crowds occupied as the guitarist gets ready for the next song.",2009-04-11T05:55:32Z,Rael0505,"While preparing for Shanghai (as requested by someone in the audience), Andy McKee broke a string and began talking about his tour in Asia while restringing. Towards the end of the video he explains why the frets on his guitar are crooked, a question a lot of people are wondering. Basically, the fanned frets on his new Greenfield guitar are both comfortable ergonomically and provide more accurate intonation. And although he doesn't mention it in this video, fan frets handle dropped tunings much better than regular frets do (and since Andy plays in so many different alternate tunings, fanned frets must be a dream come true). Thicker strings are naturally designed for a wider scale length - I would say all guitars should be built this way, and for a lot of handmade instruments with more than 6 strings, they are mandatory. You can see him play Shanghai in the next video, linked below: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uuUeAwnTYzA&fmt=18","[""Tapping (guitar technique)"", ""Guitar"", ""Music"", ""Musical instrument"", ""Plucked string instrument""]","[""guitarist talks"", ""tuning notes"", ""tuning pegs"", ""guitar master class"", ""guitar solo"", ""live concert"", ""live audience"", ""soloist"", ""random notes"", ""laughing"", ""bad audio quality"", ""engaging crowds"", ""performer"", ""famous guitarist"", ""tuning legs"", ""fretboard sounds"", ""no fixed tempo"", ""bad audio quality"", ""ambient crowd noises""]",1,cQX-WgT0ACQ,3705 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gpEU6RafUf0&start=30&end=40,"{""label"":""Boss DD-7 Digital Delay Modulate (chorus phaser) Strat Squier Deluxe Boss CH-1"",""href"":""https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gpEU6RafUf0&start=30&end=40""}","The song track is an instrumental. The tempo is medium, with a guitarist demonstrating a guitar effects reverb pedal by playing related instrumental phrases. The song is trippy and exciting. The audio quality is poor as it’s an amateur home recording .",2011-12-30T20:18:39Z,MurphyMario13,"Boss DD7 Modulate setting very versatile setting , you can have a chorus if you cut the repeat. Very close to Boss CH-1 Super Chorus Squier stratocaster deluxe Daphnee blue Amp peavey 6505 plus clean channel with compressor Marshall ED1 Boss Digital Delay DD-7 Pedal Demo","[""Effects unit"", ""Guitar"", ""Music"", ""Musical instrument"", ""Chorus effect"", ""Plucked string instrument""]","[""guitar solo"", ""delay guitar effects pedal"", ""guitar demo"", ""amateur recording"", ""online tutorial"", ""walkthrough video"", ""home studio setup"", ""instrumental music"", ""groovy rhythm"", ""trippy"", ""exciting"", ""emotional"", ""passionate"", ""youthful"", ""bad audio quality"", ""guitar pedal demonstration"", ""home music video"", ""soloist"", ""medium tempo""]",1,gpEU6RafUf0,4056