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  1. George Van Eps began playing banjo when he was eleven years old. After hearing Eddie Lang on the radio, he put down the banjo and devoted himself to guitar. [3] By the age of thirteen, in 1926, he was performing on the radio.

  2. George Van Eps was a jazz guitarist legend. He was the one who, as far back in the 1930s, pioneered a harmonically complex chordal/lead style. This style was later eclipsed by single-string idioms like Charlie Christian and Django reinhardt.

  3. George Van Eps was a quiet legend among jazz guitarists, one who as far back as the 1930s pioneered a harmonically sophisticated chordal/lead style that was eclipsed in influence by the single-string idioms of Charlie Christian and Django Reinhardt.

  4. 7 de ago. de 2012 · George Van Eps was a quiet legend among jazz guitarists, one who as far back as the 1930s pioneered a harmonically sophisticated chordal/lead style that was eclipsed in influence by the single-string idioms of Charlie Christian and Django Reinhardt.

  5. 14 de abr. de 2020 · George Van Eps was an innovative guitarist and inventor, also known as the "father of the 7-string guitar". His pianistic approach to the guitar utilized harmonized scales and inner moving voices to create entire chord solos, which had previously not been done.

  6. George Van Eps. The son of banjoist Fred Van Eps, he was a talented and respected jazz guitarist. Read Full Biography. STREAM OR BUY: Active. 1930s - 1990s. Born. August 7, 1913 in Plainfield, NJ. Died.

  7. 7 de dic. de 1998 · George Van Eps, a guitarist who played with some of the biggest names in jazz and pioneered the seven-string guitar, died on Nov. 29 at Hoag Memorial Hospital Presbyterian in Newport Beach,...