The Met in NYC has an amazing guitar exhibit (until July 4, 2011).<p>Guitar Heroes: Legendary Craftsmen from Italy to New York<p><a href="http://blog.metmuseum.org/guitarheroes/" rel="nofollow">http://blog.metmuseum.org/guitarheroes/</a>
You can also play all 10 notes at once: hold down keys 1-0. You'll notice a nice 'bug' if you hold.<p>Here's a common progression. Hold down all the notes then move to the next chord in whatever rhythm you like:<p>qeti ryi tuo qeti<p>If you start off using your left hand for 'qe' and your right for 'ti' you'll find you can move through the progression easily.<p>A messy example (I just started playing around):
<a href="http://goo.gl/doodle/e4PVd" rel="nofollow">http://goo.gl/doodle/e4PVd</a><p>(Oh, and turn off quickfind in Firefox or use another browser, annoying as hell).
It's amazing how far the logos have evolved. I used to work with the original doodler of the logos and I always thought his work was great, but the dedicated doodle team lead by Ryan and under Marissa's wing have made them 10x better. Designing logos that engage the audience is brilliant. Kudos to the new doodle team.
Symphony No. 8 of Beethoven (use keyboard numbers):<p>908234092830498230948203984023<p>984092384092834092384098230940<p>293423129192837917823793128372<p>891793821973821297897318297831<p>293178239781292398409238409283<p>409238409823094012972978312901<p>782379312837289179382197382129<p>789731829783129317823978129239<p>840923840928340923840982309401<p>297297831290178237931283728917<p>938219738212978973182978312931<p>782397812923984092384092834092<p>384098230940129729783129098230<p>940129729783129098230940129729<p>783129098230940129729783129098<p>23094012972978312555454