75lespaul
New member
Re: How can you afford all those amps?
The natural cycle I guess is you can afford more as you get older. I'm 41 and when I was 17, music gear was of course less expensive than it is now, but being relative to what the dollar was worth then as opposed to now, it was cheaper as well. Started playing at 15 and paid $30 for a sunburst strat copy and $50 for a little transistor amp. Later upgraded to a Kay Les Paul copy (what a pos). Bought my first Les Paul, a 72 deluxe at 17 for $275.00. Bought a Guild Starfire for $90 and traded it for an Ibanez doubleneck. In 1982 I got my 75 black beauty Les Paul custom, which I still have, for $415.
I got an Ampeg reverb rocket for $175 in 80 or 81 and sold that to get a bigger amp which turned out to be a Kustom 200. I didn't get my first Marshall, which was a 1980 or 81 JCM 800 until 1983 or 1984 when I was around 20 and that just came from working and saving up. That amp cost me $500 with the cab.
After you graduate, I'm assuming you should be able to get a job way better than anything I ever had and should be able to realize most or all of your amplifier wants in a short time. You are taking a much better path than I did as I didn't go to college until I was thirty. I don't know what it's like in your country, but I started investing in real estate (thanks Carleton Sheets!) in 1999 and that's when the real cash starting to come in. Not really from the rentals because of the area I live in, but from the appreciation. Of course it doesn't have to be real estate. I'm like Ralph Kramden in that I'm always looking for some kind of hair brained scheme to make money. I just sold all my real estate and now I'm opening my own auto body shop.
So, at 41 I've got 11 guitars and nine amps. I feel blessed to be honest, and even though six of my amps are tiny old combo amps, I feel they sound just as good for what I use them for as my "big" amps.
Keep plugging away and believe me, as long as are determined, it WILL come to you. :beerchug:
The natural cycle I guess is you can afford more as you get older. I'm 41 and when I was 17, music gear was of course less expensive than it is now, but being relative to what the dollar was worth then as opposed to now, it was cheaper as well. Started playing at 15 and paid $30 for a sunburst strat copy and $50 for a little transistor amp. Later upgraded to a Kay Les Paul copy (what a pos). Bought my first Les Paul, a 72 deluxe at 17 for $275.00. Bought a Guild Starfire for $90 and traded it for an Ibanez doubleneck. In 1982 I got my 75 black beauty Les Paul custom, which I still have, for $415.
I got an Ampeg reverb rocket for $175 in 80 or 81 and sold that to get a bigger amp which turned out to be a Kustom 200. I didn't get my first Marshall, which was a 1980 or 81 JCM 800 until 1983 or 1984 when I was around 20 and that just came from working and saving up. That amp cost me $500 with the cab.
After you graduate, I'm assuming you should be able to get a job way better than anything I ever had and should be able to realize most or all of your amplifier wants in a short time. You are taking a much better path than I did as I didn't go to college until I was thirty. I don't know what it's like in your country, but I started investing in real estate (thanks Carleton Sheets!) in 1999 and that's when the real cash starting to come in. Not really from the rentals because of the area I live in, but from the appreciation. Of course it doesn't have to be real estate. I'm like Ralph Kramden in that I'm always looking for some kind of hair brained scheme to make money. I just sold all my real estate and now I'm opening my own auto body shop.
So, at 41 I've got 11 guitars and nine amps. I feel blessed to be honest, and even though six of my amps are tiny old combo amps, I feel they sound just as good for what I use them for as my "big" amps.
Keep plugging away and believe me, as long as are determined, it WILL come to you. :beerchug:
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