Quencho092
New member
Re: Gibson Quality Control - exposed
+1000 on every point.
My bottom line-people are WAY too picky when it comes to getting 'magical tone'. Sure, my strat is shot with poly and it's probably not the BEST cut of alder on earth, but it sounds great in a live mix, plays well, and intonates well.
Am I going to roam GC's restlessly playing 50-100 guitars a day ike this guy says because I can't be satisfied until I get a piece of magic wood with nitro on it?
You bet I'm not going to. I just think that we're seeing too many people get GAS over reading about 'great' guitars that have 'perfect balance' and what not. Tone is in the ear of the beholder, but a great guitar isn't going to make you play like a champ all of the sudden.
I enjoy playing because it's fun to get in a good groove with a band at a jam or live at a gig, especially when you're playing at your best. Not because I like to get hard-ons playing 'super les pauls' and bragging about my '55 les paul custom and how many good guitars I have. I'd much rather spend several hours a day practicing than spend hours stopping by GC on the way home from work just to 'inspect' the current stock of guitars and ponder my next purchase. :fing25:
big_black said:After reading this aritcle I am sceptical of the existence of "Mr. X". These are few points I can out of it with after a quich scanning.
- I have NEVER heard of a real LP being shot with poly. I have heard the lower end modles like The Paul and The SG were, but I have never held one, so I don't know. I find it hard to believe even in the Norlin years they used poly on the real stuff.
- The "interviewer" is constanly guiding the Mr. X back to the Gibon issue.
- The difference between an "excellent" guitar and a "decent" guitar is totally subjective IMO. The difference between a bad guitar and an excellent is more obvious, but that is somewhat subjective too. People hear different things, want different things, and will accept different flaws in a guitar.
+1000 on every point.
My bottom line-people are WAY too picky when it comes to getting 'magical tone'. Sure, my strat is shot with poly and it's probably not the BEST cut of alder on earth, but it sounds great in a live mix, plays well, and intonates well.
Am I going to roam GC's restlessly playing 50-100 guitars a day ike this guy says because I can't be satisfied until I get a piece of magic wood with nitro on it?
You bet I'm not going to. I just think that we're seeing too many people get GAS over reading about 'great' guitars that have 'perfect balance' and what not. Tone is in the ear of the beholder, but a great guitar isn't going to make you play like a champ all of the sudden.
I enjoy playing because it's fun to get in a good groove with a band at a jam or live at a gig, especially when you're playing at your best. Not because I like to get hard-ons playing 'super les pauls' and bragging about my '55 les paul custom and how many good guitars I have. I'd much rather spend several hours a day practicing than spend hours stopping by GC on the way home from work just to 'inspect' the current stock of guitars and ponder my next purchase. :fing25: