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Flaneur

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Posts posted by Flaneur

  1. I'm getting properly excited for my upcoming Tele/jaguar/jazzmaster hybrid project. I've spent quite a bit of the afternoon eyeing them up online.

    Fender_Custom_Jazzmaster_50Relic-R47446-Blk-FrontBody.jpg

    110736d1327595626t-telemaster-time-image-2936821228-jpg

    24101d6a9b2f11e1989612313815112c_7.jpg

    Fender_Telemaster_R53262_P90Relic_2TSB_FrontBody_BlkPgd.jpg

    Telemasters are great. Esquired Telemasters look cooler still...........

    Can't have reliced wood but pristine metalwork and plastic, tho...... all or nothing :)

  2. If you want Champagne on a beer income, second hand is the way to go. The internet is a great way to learn any new skills you might require- like how to replace tired wiring or pots (not an expensive upgrade). Guitar setup really isn't the Black Art it's made out to be, so long as you can follow instructions and take your time. Cheap guitars are better value than they've ever been- which makes buying top end stuff more of a vanity project, for most of us. The depreciation on £2k guitars can be extreme- which, for my purposes, is a good thing.

    The only time I ever paid four figures for a guitar was for a used National- a true lifetime purchase, acquired for just over half retail. My rare, vintage Tele cost less than a new Mexican copy and my three gigging valve amps cost £600 in total. I've spent three years looking for the perfect acoustic guitar - but I still can't find one worthy of the price tag. My two favourites cost £200 each, second hand and sound/play great.

    I don't consider myself particularly skilled and certainly not ruthless, in the Used market- but I'm patient. I could probably afford to spend a little more- but I don't see the need.

    If a guy wants to drop two grand on a Martin to play in his music room..... more power to him. There's nothing to justify or rationalise there. Problems occur when inexperienced players start thinking that you can't gig or record without expensive, branded everything.......... it's just not true.

  3. When hopeless Luddites like me start downloading their new music, you know it's over for traditional retailing. I've always tried to support One Up- even though they don't really cater to my taste. I hope they can diversify and survive- or some new technology or fashion revives them. Not holding my breath on that, sadly.

  4. I have a set of Axetec pickups, in a Tele. I like 'em. Ultimately you have to find the right combination of guitar, pickups, amp and effects to get the sound you want, so it'll always be less than an exact science.

    There's a lot of psychology involved with purchases, of course- and not just in the marketing. If i paid £200 for pickup, like a Lollar WRHB, say- i'm sure I'd be pretty keen to justify the expense to myself:-)

    The best pickups for you might not cost a fortune. I really like the cut and tone of Gibson single coils, in the right application but I never hear 'experts' raving about them.

  5. Some of them look pretty badass

    I'd take a white one. I don't care what the internet guitar mafia say about them. I'd fucking make it sing.

    220174203374-1.jpg

    Definitely. Pull out the repro WRHBs and slap in some P90s......... and get someone else to do the PITA wiring:-)

  6. One hot evening in, I think, 1972, Robin Trower had a gig at the Lanchester Polytechnic- now Coventry University, in their large rectangular sports hall. Hearing the beginning of a sound check, at about 6pm, I slipped in through the open fire door and sat in a corner, while Trower played and played, enjoying the acoustics in the empty building. Band members came and went but Trower played for about an hour....... very loud indeed, with fantastic chops and as Stu has found, tone to spare. :rockon:

    The gig was great- but the sound check was one of the musical experiences of my young life, to that point............

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