Hot _Grits
Buttery Toneologist
Re: When The greats Change Their Tone
Don't forget other important factors: cocaine and everyone telling you you're the greatest thing since spice racks.
Throw those in with encroaching old-fartedness, bad endorsement decisions, bad producers, and hearing loss, and I think we have the whole picture.
But mostly, I think players get bored. Why should famous players be any different from us?
The older 'legends' also look at vintage gear from the perspective of having used it when it was new and what they had to make do with. what we see as a tone machine may seem like 'something that breaks down and never sounded how I wanted it to' to them. For example, Clapton sold Blackie because he had become used to the higher output of the pickups from his signature models.
Don't forget other important factors: cocaine and everyone telling you you're the greatest thing since spice racks.
Throw those in with encroaching old-fartedness, bad endorsement decisions, bad producers, and hearing loss, and I think we have the whole picture.
But mostly, I think players get bored. Why should famous players be any different from us?
The older 'legends' also look at vintage gear from the perspective of having used it when it was new and what they had to make do with. what we see as a tone machine may seem like 'something that breaks down and never sounded how I wanted it to' to them. For example, Clapton sold Blackie because he had become used to the higher output of the pickups from his signature models.