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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Between the Strings--- Behind the scenes
If you play guitar, You'll love this book.
Think of your first guit-fiddle and remember the nuances it carries with the tunes. The little quips and tricks of procedure you had to preform in order for it to sound just right. Remember how you jammed out in your parents basement imagining yourself as a rock star; "Thank you New Jersey!" you stand up and shout, like...
Published on July 18, 2004 by Dave McAlinden

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21 of 22 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars very inspiring, but...
I'm amazed that this is just about the only anthology of guitarists talking about their beloved instruments and how it changed their lives.

There are a lot of inspiring, uplifting stories in this book, and in many places it makes for a very good read. Very famous renowned guitarists and their colleagues/teachers lovingly and reverently recall their...
Published on February 11, 2005 by ChefBum


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21 of 22 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars very inspiring, but..., February 11, 2005
By 
ChefBum "chefbum" (Fremont,, CA United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Between the Strings: The Secret Lives of Guitars (Paperback)
I'm amazed that this is just about the only anthology of guitarists talking about their beloved instruments and how it changed their lives.

There are a lot of inspiring, uplifting stories in this book, and in many places it makes for a very good read. Very famous renowned guitarists and their colleagues/teachers lovingly and reverently recall their experiences in learning and growing with the instrument and their love of music.

Particularly heartwarming were the short stories on Segovia, Segovia's students, and Jose Feliciano.

Each short story is usually quite short-- as short as a page or two, ten pages tops. So, there are literally dozens of short stories in this book that are easily accessible.

My only caveat with this book as a guitar anthology is a significant one, however. I'd say that 50-60% of these stories are by artists who are devout or born-again Christians. So while this book appears to be a mainstream guitarists' anthology, it is virtually a Christian guitarists' book.

For those readers who are not Christian, I think many of them will be turned off (or tune out) the many stories involving guitars but really centering around the authors' Christianity and how 'God told me to give this guitar away'.

Still, there are quite a few non-religious, often humorous stories of being broke, struggling, having lost/stolen/broken/miraculously recovered instruments and other tales of discovery and enlightenment that make this book worthwhile.

There really is something special about the guitar and the people who play it.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Between the Strings--- Behind the scenes, July 18, 2004
By 
This review is from: Between the Strings: The Secret Lives of Guitars (Paperback)
If you play guitar, You'll love this book.
Think of your first guit-fiddle and remember the nuances it carries with the tunes. The little quips and tricks of procedure you had to preform in order for it to sound just right. Remember how you jammed out in your parents basement imagining yourself as a rock star; "Thank you New Jersey!" you stand up and shout, like and idiot, just as your girlfriend walks in the room. Did you ever take your axe to a park bench and pretended to be an old blues traveler crying through the strings; the sullen half of your broken heart blown like dust off the fret board? Think of all the times you couldn't sleep and just sat in the dim lights of your living room with a glass of whine and played yourself off to a sunset, a dawn, or a surreal and tranquil place that no one else could go but you. This is the bedrock of Between the Strings- the self made memories, yes, behind the scenes of great musicians as a segue to all who are great musicians in their hearts.
John August Schroeter purveys, in this page-turner, that even the best inspiration is just a catalyst for your own imagination. It could be a name carved on a guitar you bought in a pawnshop that triggers you to write a song that lasts forever. Or a girl named Lucille who inadvertently almost set fire to it. For those who love, and/or live to play the guitar, know- its always going to be a part of you if not it "being" you and you it.
I highly recommend picking this one up and reading two hundred times... because each time you read each story, you get a little bit more as well as feeling all the more inspired to be more inspired to start creating.
A real treat.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Bring some cleanex - You will shed a tear or two, July 7, 2004
By 
"pepevergara" (California - United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Between the Strings: The Secret Lives of Guitars (Paperback)
Wonderful book. Easy to read. Every story is short (maximum 5 pages), but they are written in a very sensitive way. From classical to steel string to electric, all guitars are covered. The important thing is that many personalities described the love afffair with their first guitar. Others tell about the guitar love of their life. I learned a lot from this book. I am a guitar player and maker. Every sentence of this book taught me somthing. If you play or make guitar, you must read this book.
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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars From All About Jazz.com, May 30, 2005
This review is from: Between the Strings: The Secret Lives of Guitars (Paperback)
Perhaps it's because the guitar is the most popular instrument around - played by everyone from talented professionals in a variety of genres to amateur dabblers at campfires around the world, that it is considered so deeply individual. There are so many guitar-makers stamping their own personal imprint on guitar design, that the variations on the singular theme of the guitar seem endless. From size of body to type of wood, from thickness of frets and neck to material used for the nuts and saddle, the permutations and combinations to create an instrument that becomes intensely personal are, indeed, infinite.

Maybe it's because of this that guitar players from around the world sometimes spend their whole lives looking for that perfect instrument, the one that fits them as if it were an extension to their own body, allowing them to coax new sounds that may entertain others but, in the final analysis, more importantly pleases them first and foremost. And it seems as though everyone has a story to tell about their instrument. John August Schroeter, founding publisher of Fingerstyle Guitar Magazine and producer of audiophile acoustic guitar recordings, has, with Between the Strings: The Secret Lives of Guitars , created a love letter to the instrument, a book that anyone who has felt an attachment to the instrument will read with pleasure and complete understanding, while those who haven't yet found their instrument will read with the hope that their time will, most certainly, come. And for those who don't play the guitar, the book sheds some light on exactly why a specific instrument is such a personal thing; why a guitar is not just a guitar.

With articles written by players from around the world and a breadth of genres, the book tells stories of guitars lost, guitars found; guitars stolen and then returned; guitars given and guitars received; guitars built and guitars, sadly, destroyed. With articles written by guitarists well-known and lesser-known, including Charlie Daniels, Adrian Belew, Robbie Robertson, Will Ackerman, Chet Atkins, George Thorogood, Eliot Fisk, Earl Klugh, Frank Gambale, Pat Martino, Les Paul and many, many others, as well as guitar makers including Alicia Adams and George Lowden - over one hundred anecdotes in all - the book covers a breadth of genres and a wealth of belief systems. Schroeter organizes the book so that there is a logical flow. The articles are grouped into distinct, albeit unnamed, sections so that throughout the 350-page collection, there is a sense of development, a sense of narrative.

"'Between the Strings' is a book for every person, professional or amateur, who has held an instrument in their hands, realizing that they are something greater for it, that the whole is truly greater than the sum of the parts."

The numbers of quotable lines from the book are far too many to go into, but one of the best articles, one that truly expresses the deeper meaning an instrument can have for a person, is that of "American Pie" composer Don McLean. "A long, long time ago, in the days of black and white, a person could fall in love with their instrument?and when the dream of ownership at last gave way to reality, that union of guitar and player was duly celebrated. In those days there were no instructional videos or collections of guitar tablature. If you wanted to learn those songs you had to learn them from other people. You had to learn them from fleeting glimpses on a small, black and white television screen, where you saw something being done that you heard on record a million times, but could figure out how it was done. All this contributed to a tremendous amount of imagination, and that imagination is what yielded the relationship. And when that relationship came to fruition, when you were finally able to afford that castle in the sky guitar, it was a magical moment."

Through the course of these one hundred stories, there are many magical moments. From Spencer Bohren's tale of a treasured guitar stolen, and then returned by a weeping, penitent thief who had never stolen before, but had "wanted one of those big ol' Gibsons since I was a little boy," to Robbie Robertson's tale of his treasured Fender Telecaster being stolen, only to be replaced, without asking, by a "booster," a thief who would "steal to order," to Pat Martino's now well-known story of losing his memory and abilities due to an aneurysm, only to rebuild his prodigious talent through listening to his own recordings, the book manages to convey just how important the relationship, shared between the player and the instrument, truly is. From Adrian Belew's humourous anecdote of making an ugly second-hand Fender Stratocaster even uglier, but at the same time more personal, to how Peter Frampton lost his treasured '54 black Gibson Les Paul Black Beauty to a plane crash only to have Gibson eventually offer to build a replacement, these are stories that are more than simple anecdotes; they are positively spiritual.

Between the Strings: The Secret Lives of Guitars is a book for every person, professional or amateur, who has held an instrument in their hands, realizing that they are something greater for it, that the whole is truly greater than the sum of the parts. For guitarists it's a confirmation; for the non-guitarist it's a window into the soul of a relationship that is truly special. While players of other instruments have, no doubt, similar stories, the broad reach of the guitar makes it truly unique, because the guitar is an instrument that can be within the reach of everyone. Some of the guitars described with affection in this collection are fifteen-dollar starter guitars; others are custom-made models worth thousands of dollars. But common to all is a love, a passion, a dedication that makes Between the Strings: The Secret Lives of Guitars an entertaining, educational and thoroughly compelling read.

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Best guitar book I've ever read, June 7, 2006
By 
Capt. M. (Rhode Island, USA) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Between the Strings: The Secret Lives of Guitars (Paperback)
A book that initially appears to be about guitarists and their instruments. Shortly into it, it becomes a wonderland of mystical powers and life-changing events brought about by wood and steel. Some of these stories are almost unbelievable they are so profound. I've played guitar for over thirty years and have never read anything related to the guitar that is as powerful as this stuff (maybe excluding my first Beatles tab book). Buy it without a second thought.
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5.0 out of 5 stars If only the instruments could speak., October 8, 2004
By 
Brett Lemke (www.maximumink.com) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Between the Strings: The Secret Lives of Guitars (Paperback)
Between The Strings is a compilation of individual stories featuring an interesting hodgepodge of musicians and celebrities sharing tales of the individual guitars that formed their dreams and shaped their lives. Ranging from Kill Bill/Kung Fu actor David Carradine's home-patched summer-of-love sunburst Gibson acoustic, to folk-rocker Janis Ian's 30+ year absence from her father's 1948 Martin D-18, to the National resonator an anonymous fan gave to John Hammond that was passed along to Blues Legend Johnny Shines who owned it until his death, the founding publisher of Guitar Fingerstyle magazine focuses the reader on the uniquely symbiotic relationship between humans and their instruments. The times of struggles, pennilessness, and hardship that accompany the stories of the many musicians featured in this volume are forgotten momentarily; they have a chance to tell the reader/fan of their favorite axe with the vivid image in their minds of the day they strummed the first chord. All content copyright www.maximumink.com
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Between the Strings: The Secret Lives of Guitars
Between the Strings: The Secret Lives of Guitars by John Schroeter (Paperback - Apr. 2004)
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