Re: Do you care about keeping your guitar pristine, or do you like the wear and tear?
I don't like abusing the guitars for the sake of becoming relic'd. But like anything that is delicate and is used often, you invariably will end up with scratches and dents. I prefer dents and scratches that occur while playing and while in use as opposed to ones where stupid things like dropping it while moving from point A to B, or while on a stand and the dog knocks it over. I do not care about pick scratches at all, although I am pretty good about not running my pick down the guitar like that. I am not the guy that washes his hands before I play and wiping the guitar down when I am done, but I obviously won't play when my hands are filthy and if the guitar is grungy, I will wipe it down. I can't see the value or point in worrying about being sure a guitar is in pristine condition. Pride in ownership does not mean you keep things looking like it did the day it came off the showroom floor, it means that you love, care and maintain the guitar for a lifetime. An occasional scratch and dent in inevitable, I think it does add character and value to a guitar, I just hope that the majority of those scuffs are caused while entertaining a crowd or at least while in the actual use of making music.
What pisses me off more than anything is the poser guitars that are now popular; the relic'd guitars...... I am sorry, but I can't see why or how anyone pays EXTRA to have a guitar that is brand new, be worn in such a way to look as if it has been played for years. That is poser ****. Go buy a guitar and beat up on it if you want that look, don't pay to have it that way from the factory. I lose a lot of respect for those that buy relic'd guitars, it is like a non-military-civilian wearing military regalia to acquire respect and or admiration...... They may wear those clothes in respect and admiration for those that earned them, but they themselves did not. If you want a relic'd guitar, buy an actual vintage guitar that is worthy of its look and feel. End rant:
There is beauty in age and like a fine wine, it is not made overnight. Beauty is in the eye of the beholder they say, but no one has looked at a guitar that is an iconoclast and said hell no. That type of look is earned and rewarded by years of hard work and the entertainment of thousands, essentially breaking the status quo.