When I was ten, my dad put a bass guitar in my hands. Having been a musician himself, playing in a variety of bands in his youth through his twenties, he was interested in in playing with some ...
Now, Loog is adding a brand-new category to its collection: a $299 portable instrument that looks like a keyboard but sounds more like a piano. It spans three octaves and weighs 3.6 pounds, and to ...
First conceived as a master’s thesis at New York University and then spending time as a 2011 Kickstarter funded at quadruple its initial goal, the Loog guitar is now the banner product at NYC-based ...
For more than 10 years, Loog Guitars has been making learning to play a guitar a less daunting task for youngsters. Now the company has teamed up with Fender for a pint-sized Telecaster and ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission. But the thing is, a ...
Loog is a company known for manufacturing fantastic starter instruments for kids, with the company's diminutive electric guitar making our list of the best audio-related gifts back in 2019. Now it's ...
Musicians may be interested in a new guitar equipped with a built-in amplifier and companion smartphone application called the LOOG. The new guitar is the company’s fourth Kickstarter campaign and ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission. Credit: Loog Loog, the ...
The latest project from music education company Loog Guitars isn't a three-stringed Gibson classic to go with its pint-sized Fender Strat or Tele electrics, but a 37-key portable piano for kids of all ...
Learning guitar can be a daunting task. While shredding on Guitar Hero has made the instrument even more popular with kids, mastering six strings and developing finger dexterity, muscle memory for ...
The Loog began as Atijas’s thesis project as a student at NYU, and when he wanted to turn his prototype into a proper product, he turned to — where else? — the crowdfunders on Kickstarter.com. Atijas ...