VON FLOYD
The Ultimate Guitarist's Toolkit
There is a seven-year-old standing in a music store right now, staring at a guitar hanging on a wall like it's the most beautiful thing he has ever seen in his life. He doesn't know what it costs. He doesn't know what a chord is. He just knows something happened to him the moment he saw it.
And there is a guitarist in a rehearsal space right now — band on the verge of something real, album half-written, tour being planned — who knows exactly what a chord is, what a session costs, what a setlist needs to do, and how little margin there is for guesswork at this level.
Von Floyd was built for both of them.
Named after two of the greatest guitarists in the history of the instrument — Stevie Ray Vaughan and David Gilmour. One Texas blues. One cosmic progressive rock. Two completely different worlds that both understood the same thing: the guitar is not an instrument. It is a language. You either spend your life learning to speak it, or you spend your life wishing you had.
This toolkit was not written by someone who read about guitar. It was built by a man who plays guitar and bass — who understands this discipline the way you only can when you've felt it in your hands and heard it in your chest. Someone who knows the romance of it and the business of it. The feeling of a perfect take and the reality of what it costs to get there.
Eight professional tools. Chord progressions with real music theory behind them. A lyric builder with a live rhyme engine. A full five-line staff notation system with Web Audio playback. A tablature editor that covers 6-string, 7-string, and bass — all tunings, all 24 frets, every technique. BPM, song structure, session planning. The tools a band actually needs. The tools a beginner actually needs. The same tools, because the discipline is the same at every level — only the calluses are different.
This is what PGMA is.
A corporation with no corporate identity. A man who thinks like a CEO and creates like an artist — because he is both, and he has always known those two things were never supposed to be enemies. A company built on Main Street philosophy, not Wall Street math. One that doesn't just say it believes in the free sharing of knowledge — it actually built the thing.
Mark Zuckerberg couldn't do it. Elon Musk couldn't do it. Bill Gates couldn't do it.
An artist with a laptop and a specific, unrepeatable skill set did.
Von Floyd is free. No account. No email. No strings. Walk in, pick up the guitar, and play.
You are our guest. Not a dollar sign.