Ronnie Wood's guitar

elelpe

New member
Anyone knows what guitar it is?

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Re: Ronnie Wood's guitar

Yeah I had wondered what this what when I first saw it a few years back. Seems he's really fond of that guitar and it gets a pretty thick, rich sound! Would love to play one someday.
Weird looking thing if you ask me.
 
Re: Ronnie Wood's guitar

Not "too" bad to me.
Kinda EB/MM meets Reverend-ish...
Looks comfy,& I'm a sucker for Rev Hdstks as well!

yeah. not so weird that I would scoff at owning one... but the big blue semisphere is just way different. It seems to scream, "you better have chops to get away without looking like a poseur!"
 
Re: Ronnie Wood's guitar

I could care less what guitar it is...it's way too ugly for me to ever consider owning one (no matter what the cost...even free).
 
Re: Ronnie Wood's guitar

Versoul Raya 6

Thanks! Yeah it's kinda EBMM, especially Albert Lee model, Toronado-ish with Danelectro aesthetic. and I have a soft spot for reverse headstock. So yeah I dig it except that blue LED thing behind the bridge.
 
Re: Ronnie Wood's guitar

The Stones became just another Rock and roll band when Mick Taylor left.

So grabs a simple C# bar chord and makes it look like he's really stretching the limits...
 
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Re: Ronnie Wood's guitar

The Stones became just another Rock and roll band when Mick Taylor left.

So grabs a simple C# bar chord and makes it look like he's really stretching the limits...

Ron Wood is a far more interesting musician, to me, than Mick.

Mick played some great solos but Ron adds to the whole song...not just the 12 bars of guitar solo.
 
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Re: Ronnie Wood's guitar

i agree that ron is a more interesting player but id rather listen to mick take a solo any day. ive heard ron do some absolute crap solos
 
Re: Ronnie Wood's guitar

IMO Mick Taylor was key in making the Stones "the worlds greatest rock & roll band." Not just his leads but his all around talent shaped the stones sound and songs during their peak. When he left, as I said, the stones just fell back into being just another rock and roll band.

While Mick Taylor was a major player in the blues scene of that time Ron Wood was stumbling around with the Small Faces a band that is well worth forgetting. Wood's peak was playing Bass for the Jeff Beck group, he proved himself as a fine bass player complementing Becks magnificent guitar work.

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Re: Ronnie Wood's guitar

I've always loved Mick Taylors playing. His touch, tone and phrasing are aces in my book. His playing on Can't You Hear Me Knockin' still makes me smile.

As far as Versoul guitars go, the Henry piqued my interest several years ago. Cool guitar.

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Re: Ronnie Wood's guitar

IMO Mick Taylor was key in making the Stones "the worlds greatest rock & roll band." Not just his leads but his all around talent shaped the stones sound and songs during their peak. When he left, as I said, the stones just fell back into being just another rock and roll band.

While Mick Taylor was a major player in the blues scene of that time Ron Wood was stumbling around with the Small Faces a band that is well worth forgetting. Wood's peak was playing Bass for the Jeff Beck group, he proved himself as a fine bass player complementing Becks magnificent guitar work.

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Hold up, the Small Faces are well worth forgetting? The Faces with Rod Stewart were okay, but Steve Marriott era Small Faces is brilliant. Tin Soldier being but one example.


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