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You can head to Amazon now to get the Marshall Major IV On-Ear Bluetooth Headphones for just $70, down from their usual price ...
Crystal Bridges recently celebrated the first graduating class of the University of Arkansas School of Art’s Master of Art ...
As we struggle to resist summer’s heat in lazy afternoons under the shade of a backyard elm, our thoughts may drift to our ...
Denis O’Brien, the Irish businessman who founded telecommunications company Digicel, is among members of a Caribbean ...
Talented student-athletes from every school on the island were recognised at the 39th Denton Hurdle Memorial Awards on ...
That said, it’s hard to give an exact account of the Amps. They were a rambunctious, ornery lot. Kim Deal is the first to admit this. “I was super usey in those days, so I can’t remember all ...
Tammy and the Amps played their first show on June 17 at Stache’s in Columbus, Ohio. Kyle Siegrist, owner of Lost Weekend Records was there. Kyle Siegrist: They weren’t even on the bill.
Perry Margouleff and Dirk Ziff have donated musical instruments played by Keith Richards, Neil Young, Les Paul, and Chet Atkins to the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Nick Paumgarten reports.
The late Alexander Dumble built only a handful of meticulously crafted, much-sought-after amplifiers every year – and they ended up in the backlines of many of the greatest guitarists of all time.
I think that's a shame, because Orange has generally been very faithful to its decades-long history of iconic, orange-colored amps.
In 1962, high import taxes made it impossible for Jim Marshall, a music-store owner in London, to meet demand for popular American-made Fender amplifiers, and he set out to create his own.
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