No receipts (especially since much of it has been acquired on the used market). But I do keep detailed photos on a cloud drive folder along with the spreadsheet. So I can show exactly what I have.^^ Interesting. I might have to make one since I'll be picking up renters insurance for my guitars. Do you keep invoices or receipts?
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Well, I think if you work smart, you don't just go buy everything you immediately like. I don't own many guitars for a pro guitarist (5 electrics, 3 acoustics) and I am *not* of the idea that I *need* a Tele because I don't have one or an LP because it sounds a certain way. Some I got as artist endorsement deals, some I built because I always wanted to (Warmoth), and my #1 wasn't terribly expensive. The way I figure it, I don't drink or do drugs or gamble, and I don't like collecting 'stuff' for the sake of it (I am a minimalist at heart). So I buy what I need but don't deny myself if I really really want something.
Without gambling, smoking, drinking, or drugs, is there any reason every guitarist shouldn't have "11 + n" amount of guitars in a roadcase guitar-vault (with lights and drawers)? You know, like the ones their guitar techs work from, backstage.
First, I know the definition of "many" will vary depending on each person's own perception. For the sake of this thread let's say more than 10 guitars is many.
I own a total of 11 stringed instruments. Nine electric guitars, one acoustic, and one bass. At one time I owned only two electrics (a primary and a back up) and it seemed unfathomable to me that I would ever have close to a dozen. I find at this point that my GAS has seriously curbed and when it does surface all I need to do is remind myself how many things I've already got. There's a few pieces I'd really like still but overall I've got all the bases pretty covered.
Now for those of you who own a LOT of guitars, I'm curious about a few things. This isn't a bash or dig on the subject, I'm genuinely asking out of a curiosity.
1. How do you keep track of what you have? I sometimes have trouble remembering if I've got 5 Telecasters or 6 on the wall. When you've got 30 guitars, how does it not become a blur? How do you manage your collection?
2. When you GAS for new stuff does the cheaper stuff still turn you on? Like if you've already got a $5000 Les Paul, does buying a new Indonesian Epi still turn your crank?
3. At what point do you become a collector moreso than a player? Let's be honest, we all could probably get by with one or two guitars if all we were interested in was playing. I'm guilty of it myself. I recently divested myself of some amps because it was getting silly.
4. Do you play them all? When you could play a different guitar every week and not touch the same guitar twice for 6 months or even a year, how do you keep them all fresh in your mind (or hands)?
5. Something I have found as my collection grew is that I don't feel nearly as intimately connected with all of them. Back when I played mostly the same guitar for years, that guitar was like a part of me. I knew it like the back of my hand. Nowadays I don't have that connection with most of my guitars simply because there's so many and I play a different one all the time. I'm curious how those who have even larger collections feel about this.
Discuss!
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I have 5 japanese, a japomexican-american partscaster, and 2 koreans (well, one may or may not be japanese...and the other one is a fretless bass with bartolinis I got for $90)... as well as a couple partscaster's worth of not-in-service parts.
1) keeping track of guitars, easy... keeping track of parts not used, somewhat harder.
2) nothing Indonesian could ever attract me. At least not anything yet made. Not happening.
3) the fretless bass is a bit of a for-the-collection purchase... I haven't actually played it. It's a lefty I bought out of curiosity because it was like 5x cheaper than the cheapest rightie fretless Ive seen. but I need to at least get around to putting some lines and fret markers on it somehow, unlined unmarked and side dots on the wrong side too is a bit too much for me
4) 5 in active service, 2 need work done, fretless - not there yet
5) I cycle through mine in sequence, I like them all
I recently read a profound post about the "Two Electrics Rule" by "jwebsmall" and it was his ONLY post, then he never posted anything ever again. He said:
originally posted by "jwebsmall"
"I'm of the opinion that you shouldn't multiply guitars but rather flip them. If you have more than 2 electrics you are going to divide your playing time between them. If you want to master your instrument you have to live with it without distractions. Look around at famous guitarists. They are connected to that ONE guitar. You are going to have to go through multiple guitars as your tastes mature however. If you live by the "2 ELECTRICS" rule, then you aren't going to let GAS empty your bank account. Until you like one more than the 2 you've got, you won't flip one to make room for the next one until you are sure. You will save a lot of money this way.
[SNIP...]
Building your own guitar from parts is a pricey mistake too because you are going to flip it and take a beating on price when you do. [SNIP...] A lot of market research goes into design the stock models. Fender runs the numbers against the price points. You aren't going to beat their sales team. Likewise if you mod a guitar you are going to take a hit. If you want to save money on a guitar look for the used that have been modified with upgraded pickups. Those poor guys are going to take a real hit."
Original post found here: https://forums.fender.com/viewtopic.php?p=1082028&sid=e7eff83fd7d9f8c5363b926fd0c9ca89#p1082028
First, I know the definition of "many" will vary depending on each person's own perception. For the sake of this thread let's say more than 10 guitars is many.
I own a total of 11 stringed instruments. Nine electric guitars, one acoustic, and one bass. At one time I owned only two electrics (a primary and a back up) and it seemed unfathomable to me that I would ever have close to a dozen. I find at this point that my GAS has seriously curbed and when it does surface all I need to do is remind myself how many things I've already got. There's a few pieces I'd really like still but overall I've got all the bases pretty covered.
Now for those of you who own a LOT of guitars, I'm curious about a few things. This isn't a bash or dig on the subject, I'm genuinely asking out of a curiosity.
1. How do you keep track of what you have? I sometimes have trouble remembering if I've got 5 Telecasters or 6 on the wall. When you've got 30 guitars, how does it not become a blur? How do you manage your collection?
2. When you GAS for new stuff does the cheaper stuff still turn you on? Like if you've already got a $5000 Les Paul, does buying a new Indonesian Epi still turn your crank?
3. At what point do you become a collector moreso than a player? Let's be honest, we all could probably get by with one or two guitars if all we were interested in was playing. I'm guilty of it myself. I recently divested myself of some amps because it was getting silly.
4. Do you play them all? When you could play a different guitar every week and not touch the same guitar twice for 6 months or even a year, how do you keep them all fresh in your mind (or hands)?
5. Something I have found as my collection grew is that I don't feel nearly as intimately connected with all of them. Back when I played mostly the same guitar for years, that guitar was like a part of me. I knew it like the back of my hand. Nowadays I don't have that connection with most of my guitars simply because there's so many and I play a different one all the time. I'm curious how those who have even larger collections feel about this.
Discuss!
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That's certainly not even close to what I would consider "many". That's barely "a few" (can't even consider non-working "parts).
Let us know when you get over a dozen working/functioning/playable guitars.