
update: My How To Make a GuitarCam Mount™ tutorial video is now live! www.youtube.com Also read about how I invented it, and even buy one @ my blog: johnclarkemusic.com I made a guitar cam mount out of a piece of aluminum stripping, a c-clamp, and and little camera and attached it to the headstock. This is my first tune using the guitar cam. I can now record every time I play with ease...like a guitar diary. This could change my life!! ;-). If enough people are interested I'll do a little tutorial on how to build the guitar cam mount...super cheap. Or, if any has any mounting ideas, I'd love to hear them. I really love this perspective...Its like I'm seeing through the eyes of the guitar. The camera's movement reacts to the way the guitar is played. I just had a trippy thought: the guitar has a "body," a "neck" and a head or "headstock." These are the actual common use names of the parts of the guitar. Now with a camera attached the guitar has eyes!! If you get the camera attached firmly enough so that it picks up all the vibrations, you'll essentially transfer musical energy into visual energy. The vibration of the strings causes the whole guitar to vibrate. Sound travels much more efficiently through solids. If the camera is firmly attached, it will pick up the vibrations of the guitar and the movements of the performer. Although the sound vibrations are much too small and fast for us actually see, it is interesting to think about the vibrations of the camera as a <b>...</b>
Modern
Spanish
Guitar
cam