• Home
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • RSS
June 5, Friday, 2026
  • Login
CELEBRITY LAND!
  • Home
  • Royalty
  • Royalty
  • Music
  • Entertainment
  • Celebrities
  • Artists
  • Videos
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Royalty
  • Royalty
  • Music
  • Entertainment
  • Celebrities
  • Artists
  • Videos
No Result
View All Result
Celebrity Land
No Result
View All Result
Home Music

Revolutionary modular electric guitars change music

Story Center by Story Center
January 26, 2026
Reading Time: 8 mins read
0
Shark's guitars can be customized with a range of body styles, necks, a removable nut, and a wild selection of electronics

RELATED POSTS

New Music Friday: LENCHO x Peso Pluma, Ozuna, Mariposa, Taylor Swift, and more

SiM unveil new song ‘FREEZE ME UP’ as opening theme for upcoming anime “BLACK TORCH”

Taylor Swift Releases Toy Story Song “I Knew It, I Knew You”

We’re coming up on the 100th anniversary of the electric guitar, and it’s been fascinating to hear how this simple instrument has altered the landscape of music in that time. It’s mostly just wire, wood, and a wee bit of electronics that doesn’t even need power.

As music has evolved, guitarists’ need to be able to shape their tone to create new sounds has grown. That’s why musicians get all excited about the latest gear that promise to unlock more and different facets of tone, whether it’s in a pedal, amp, or a pickup.

Shark Guitars, out of Antalya, Turkey, is the latest brand on my radar trying to shake things up with a whole new approach to the instrument. The company’s building a modular guitar with swappable parts, and onboard electronics like you’ve never seen before.

Shark says its ‘Ocean Environment’ platform lets players mix and match a wide range of its guitar bodies, necks, bridges, nuts, and effects. That’s true for when you’re customizing your build, and also once it’s in your hands. The brand promises these components will always fit together reliably, thanks to the use of precision-machined titanium.

Shark’s guitars can be customized with a range of body styles, necks, a removable nut, and a wild selection of electronics

Shark Instruments

The platform and product catalog have been in the works since 2018, when founding partner and guitarist Cem Koksal started the company with an eye on the high-end electric guitar market. Shark has racked up six patents through its R&D process, opened a factory in Turkey that can craft 120 instruments a month, and has now opened its online store to accept custom orders.

ADVERTISEMENT

Using the 3D custom guitar builder tool to specify your requirements gives you a sense of just how remarkable Shark’s venture is. You can choose from four different body styles, and pair it with a wide range of necks – including a fretless option. Since the neck is modular, you can simply remove it for easy packing when you’re hitting the road.

You can also get multiple necks with different profiles and fretboard configurations to go on the same guitar, and snap on whichever you need for a performance or recording session. That’s nuts.

The platform also includes a plug-and-play pickup system: you can mount any pickup you like without the need for soldering, at the height you prefer. Each pickup module can be swapped out at a moment’s notice, without the need for tools or even any configuration.

Any pickup can be mounted on a Shark module without soldering, and dropped into the guitar instantly
Any pickup can be mounted on a Shark module without soldering, and dropped into the guitar instantly

Shark Instruments

You can adjust the gain based on your pickups, so your output volume stays level between them. That means you can drop in a twangy single-coil alongside a burly humbucker, and they’ll work together as if they’ve been wired to do so from the start.

Shark Pickup Module | No Soldering, Any Pickup, Instant Swap | Shark Guitars | Guitar v2.0

What you can’t see from the front is an extensive electronics system – accessible on a rear panel – that manages your pickups, signal processing, and onboard effects. You can use its resistor and
capacitor adjustment system to shape the pickup tone and fine-tune their loudness compensation via DIP switches. That allows for a lot more control over tonal variations, well beyond what you can do with standard volume and tone knobs.

Shark's electric guitars feature modular components and advanced electronics like you've never seen before on an axe
Shark’s electric guitars feature modular components and advanced electronics like you’ve never seen before on an axe

Shark Instruments

There are two versions of this electronics system. The higher-end one supports ‘FX Cards’ – compact cartridge-like devices that each act as individual effects pedals with all the control you’d get from a regular pedal.

Three cards can go into a guitar at any one time, and they can be controlled via four front-mounted buttons, and tweaked using eight knobs. Shark already offers 12 of these in analog and digital flavors, including overdrive, distortion, boost, fuzz, speaker simulation, and delay and reverb. Having these right on your guitar means fewer cables and less weighty gear to deal with – which can be especially nice if you’re touring extensively.

The rear panel features slots for FX Cards, effects knobs, and pickup tone shaping controls
The rear panel features slots for FX Cards, effects knobs, and pickup tone shaping controls

Shark Instruments

Shark also makes a removable titanium nut that allows for quick neck changes and fretboard maintenance without restringing. This works with the tremolo and body-neck joint to allow you to free the neck for when you want to swap it for another, pack your gear and transport it safely, or get your hands dirty with fretboard maintenance tasks.

The modular bit isn’t just a neat party trick. It also means Shark instruments can be disassembled and packed into manageable luggage, without worrying about the neck snapping in two in flight cargo hold. You can also carry spares – like an entire extra neck and ready-to-go backup pickups – more easily than ever before.

There have been other attempts to craft modular axes; Savannah, Georgia-based Reddick Guitars has fixed pickup configurations and control systems mounted on blocks that you can swap in and out of a guitar body. But Shark has taken the concept much further than any brand before it.

The company’s creations will set you back by somewhere between US$4,000 and $6,000, depending on the components you choose. That’ll likely attract professional players and seasoned enthusiasts initially, at which point it’ll compete against major legacy brands that have been around for decades. What Shark has going for it though, is a clear-eyed view into the future.

Check out the brand and fiddle with the 3D guitar builder tool on Shark’s site.

‘ The preceding article may include information circulated by third parties ’

‘ Some details of this article were extracted from the following source newatlas.com ’

Tags: custom electric guitarelectric guitar anniversaryfretless guitar optionfuture of guitar playingguitar effects cardsguitar tone shapinghigh end electric guitarsinnovative guitar technologymodular electric guitaronboard guitar effectsplug and play guitar pickupsprecision machined titanium guitarremovable guitar neckShark Guitarsswappable guitar parts
Story Center

Story Center

Related Posts

New Music Friday: LENCHO x Peso Pluma, Ozuna, Mariposa, Taylor Swift, and more
Music

New Music Friday: LENCHO x Peso Pluma, Ozuna, Mariposa, Taylor Swift, and more

June 5, 2026
SiM unveil new song 'FREEZE ME UP' as opening theme for upcoming anime "BLACK TORCH"
Music

SiM unveil new song ‘FREEZE ME UP’ as opening theme for upcoming anime “BLACK TORCH”

June 5, 2026
Taylor Swift Releases Toy Story Song "I Knew It, I Knew You"
Music

Taylor Swift Releases Toy Story Song “I Knew It, I Knew You”

June 5, 2026
Instagram details the features in its new ‘Plus’ subscription
Music

Instagram details the features in its new ‘Plus’ subscription

June 5, 2026
Get the App QR Code
Music

Toy Story 5: Taylor Swift’s ‘I Knew It, I Knew You’ song review

June 5, 2026
Best New Music This Week Poll: Taylor Swift, Role Model, Lizzo & More
Music

Best New Music This Week Poll: Taylor Swift, Role Model, Lizzo & More

June 5, 2026
Next Post
MLB: JUL 30 Braves at Royals

3 Royals players who could literally be chasing themselves out of the lineup

Warner Bros/Courtesy Everett Collection Clint Eastwood and Matt Damon on the 'Invictus' set in 2009

Matt Damon reveals how Clint Eastwood shut him down while directing: 'You wanna waste everybody's time?'

Recommended Stories

Kenan Thompson Says He ‘Definitely’ Thinks About Leaving ‘SNL’: ‘It’s Gonna Suck’

Kenan Thompson Says He ‘Definitely’ Thinks About Leaving ‘SNL’: ‘It’s Gonna Suck’

January 31, 2026
39 Hollywood Secrets Revealed By Insiders

39 Hollywood Secrets Revealed By Insiders

November 2, 2025
<p>Warner Bros&period; Pictures</p>

Paul Thomas Anderson Reveals One Franchise He Wish He Could’ve Directed Film For

September 24, 2025
Plugin Install : Popular Post Widget need JNews - View Counter to be installed

Ads

ADVERTISEMENT

Recent News

Marlon Wayans; Melissa BarreraCredit: Brianna Bryson/FilmMagic; Bruce Glikas/FilmMagic

Marlon Wayans wishes he knew fired “Scream” star Melissa Barrera wanted role in “Scary Movie”: ‘Maybe Part 7!’

June 5, 2026
RealityTea

Reality TV Star Admits Getting Engaged and Sleeping With Someone Else the Next Day

June 5, 2026
Family Entertainment Thrives As Legoland Invests In Growth

Family Entertainment Thrives As Legoland Invests In Growth

June 5, 2026

Categories

  • Artists
  • Celebrities
  • Entertainment
  • Gossip
  • Horoscopes
  • Music
  • Royalty
  • Videos

Contact Us

  • Privacy & Policy
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • DMCA Compliance
  • Terms and Conditions

© 2020 Celebrity.Land

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Royalty

© 2020 Celebrity.Land