blueman335
Mojo's Minions
Re: Gibson SG faded or Epiphone Les Paul
1) You can be a 'professional' musician & play on high end epuipment & still be a mediocre play; Keith Richrads, Neil Young, and John Foggarty come to mind. Do they really care how they sound, and if they did, why don't they take lessons? How well known you are, or how much you can spend on guitars has only a loose connection with genuine music talent. I just saw a 14 year old kid last weekend at the Sarasota Blues Festival, playing guitar & singing, leading his own band; he is a much better musician than the three above-mentioned 'professional' players.
You're assuming that spending more gives you a better sound. Almost everyone I've shared the stage with has had a more expensive guitar than I did. But I've gotten more compliments on my tones, and often more on my playing. Just because they spent more doesn't mean they sound better. A 'quality' gig to me, is 90% playing skill, and 10% equipment. I don't care more much they blew on their gear, if they're inspired players (even if full-time musicians), it' a mediocre gig. I've seen many bands with a stage full of high-end gear, that didn't sound so hot, or play very well. "Professional tools" only get you so far. You're confusing money with talent. Music's in your hands & in your head, not your wallet.
Tell me, do you want to watch a professional, but boring band with top notch gear, or a great local group that rips it up playing mid-priced equipment, and gets the crowd dancing & on their feet? I've seen plenty of examples of both. Energy, enthusiasism, and creativity...they don't sell that in music stores.
Yeah, I can, and I did. You seem to be implying that the working classes don't earn as much money as the well-heeled stereotypical classical music fan and therefore don't deserve to be entertained by professional musicians who use professional tools or care about the sounds that their instruments produce.
1) You can be a 'professional' musician & play on high end epuipment & still be a mediocre play; Keith Richrads, Neil Young, and John Foggarty come to mind. Do they really care how they sound, and if they did, why don't they take lessons? How well known you are, or how much you can spend on guitars has only a loose connection with genuine music talent. I just saw a 14 year old kid last weekend at the Sarasota Blues Festival, playing guitar & singing, leading his own band; he is a much better musician than the three above-mentioned 'professional' players.
You're assuming that spending more gives you a better sound. Almost everyone I've shared the stage with has had a more expensive guitar than I did. But I've gotten more compliments on my tones, and often more on my playing. Just because they spent more doesn't mean they sound better. A 'quality' gig to me, is 90% playing skill, and 10% equipment. I don't care more much they blew on their gear, if they're inspired players (even if full-time musicians), it' a mediocre gig. I've seen many bands with a stage full of high-end gear, that didn't sound so hot, or play very well. "Professional tools" only get you so far. You're confusing money with talent. Music's in your hands & in your head, not your wallet.
Tell me, do you want to watch a professional, but boring band with top notch gear, or a great local group that rips it up playing mid-priced equipment, and gets the crowd dancing & on their feet? I've seen plenty of examples of both. Energy, enthusiasism, and creativity...they don't sell that in music stores.
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