Empty Pockets
BadHairDayologist
Re: ***gibson dark fire in-depth hands-on review***
yeah but you actually have to use a switch to turn on the robot.
yeah but you actually have to use a switch to turn on the robot.
i just looked it up on gibson's website....
lamesauce.
they start talking about chameleon tone and how it's supposed to sound like anything you want because it's got carbon fiber covers.....
is carbon fiber supposed to be magic or sumthin'? i understand that there's digital technology involved, but just read their description:http://www2.gibson.com/Products/Electric-Guitars/Les-Paul/Gibson-USA/Dark-Fire/Features.aspx
I don't think you know this,but it wasn't gibson who developed the self-tuning system.It was developed by a company called tronical (search in the web for tronical powertuning),gibson just bought the whole thing and that's it.Kind of hard to comment on the review. I mean, it was so in-depth and descriptive that there's nothing left to be said.
I will make one comment on the robot guitar. Only a company like Gibson or Fender could pull this off... maybe an ESP or Ibanez. The reason is because the guitar community is afraid of change... afraid of anything "new" that wasn't around during the golden age of guitars. No technology is perfect when it first comes out, and I highly doubt a small outfit would have the cash flow to develop the technology, especially amidst the criticism of a traditionally skeptical market. Gibson may not have gotten right... they may never get it right... but at least they aren't stuck in 1963.
But they are responsible for its ongoing development (or lack thereof). Anyway, I should have known better than to not so much defend, but rather try to understand, Gibson in a thread that was yet another blatant jab at the company. I won't make the mistake again.
I can't help but feel like all the "uber-versatile" stuff saturating the market these days is intended more for the bedroom hobbyist wanting to cop all the tones of their heroes, rather than the artist who is more intent on finding their own voice.
+1
It seems far too complicated and unreliable (and as far as I'm concerned too expensive) for any sane person to gig with it. It looks like a bedroom toy to me. I do quite like the colour, though![]()
Gigging musicians would never use this guitar if they had a brain in their skull -- it comes in a bright white case that says GIBSON DARK FIRE LIMITED EDITION FIRST RUN.
They could have saved on text by just inscribing STEAL ME.
It would be great in a studio that produces music that isn't necessarily guitar-driven...
...which reminds me that I need to get a nondescript case for my R8 Jr...
I must admit, that even though I am in no way interested in owning another gibson, that a standard in that finish would be gas inducing.
If there is one thing that gibson is doing right it's image I guess.:cool2:
But let's call a spade a spade - Dark Fire is a lame duck. New technology is cool, but I fail to understand why so many companies continue to invest in products that do little more than clumsily ape sounds of the past or attempt to be everything to everyone. You're never going to make the new classic if you're stuck reinventing digital amalgamations of all the old ones.
I'll walk right past something that acts as a passable facsimile of every vintage guitar ever created and spend the same money on one that does its own thing with authority and authenticity.
I can't help but feel like all the "uber-versatile" stuff saturating the market these days is intended more for the bedroom hobbyist wanting to cop all the tones of their heroes, rather than the artist who is more intent on finding their own voice.
Don't take it personally, Mike.
There are a lot of things I like about Gibson. Many of their GOTM models have been really cool-looking and refreshing, and their Historic and VOS models are great.
But let's call a spade a spade - Dark Fire is a lame duck. New technology is cool, but I fail to understand why so many companies continue to invest in products that do little more than clumsily ape sounds of the past or attempt to be everything to everyone. You're never going to make the new classic if you're stuck reinventing digital amalgamations of all the old ones.
I'll walk right past something that acts as a passable facsimile of every vintage guitar ever created and spend the same money on one that does its own thing with authority and authenticity.
I can't help but feel like all the "uber-versatile" stuff saturating the market these days is intended more for the bedroom hobbyist wanting to cop all the tones of their heroes, rather than the artist who is more intent on finding their own voice.