It’s really great to see some of my old friends posting, but I also want to extend an invite to all the lurkers and newbies out there who are reading and not posting. Please, come join our family. Sign up and start posting…even if you don’t have a G&L yet. You’ll want at least five by the time we’re done brainwashing you! (Insert evil laughter here!)

I have no idea what I’m going to have for lunch today, but I know my intake will include COFFEE!!!!!.
I’ve been a coffee fiend for years, going back to the days of the original Starbuck’s down in Seattle’s Pike Place market. I had an irregular heartbeat that finally put me in the hospital a few years ago, and it finally came down to having to become decaffeinated. I have gradually added some caffeinated coffee back into my life. When I make a pot at home, it’s about one-fourth caffeine; but when I’m out at a restaurant it is always pure decaf. I like my coffee with cream, no sugar. I use Coffee-Mate creamer cause I’m having major problems with dairy products. We stocked up on the Starbuck’s decaf Christmas Blend, and that or their Decaf Sumatra is my coffee of choice.
Portland might be the world’s foremost city for microbrews, seems like there’s a brewpub on every corner. And coffee roasters! There’s at least six “micro” roasters in town that compete with Starbucks, Seattle’s Best, and Peet’s. They’re pretty darn good, too!
I don’t drink much wine, maybe two glasses a year. I enjoy a good micro-brew now and then, and a good cocktail. But, since I’ve been on the diet, I haven’t been drinking as much alcohol, and I don’t really miss it. I’ve never been one of those guys who needed three or four drinks before I go out on stage. In fact, when I’m playing music, that’s WORK to me, and I very, very rarely ever have a drink when I’m working. After that last set though, look out! LOL! And no more pop for me. These days I’m sticking with water or the occasional iced tea.
Tell me what you drink, be it alcohol, coffee, tee, water, beer, wine or V-8 juice. I LOVE V-8!!!
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Yesterday’s bio set out some of the things we’ll be talking about this week. So here we go…
I mentioned yesterday that I sing, and it’s probably my best instrument. I sang in the junior high glee clubs and senior high choirs, sang in the musicals in high schools and college. (In fact, I thought about a professional acting career.) I’m a baritone, and over the years I have noticed that I have lost some range, but I still enjoy it. I have a band, and I do 50% of the vocals, splitting them with Sandy the keyboardist. She does the pretty songs and I do the rock and blues. And then I still do some solo singer-songwriter open mikes and things. I’ve sung lead so much over the years, I’ve lost my ear for harmony. I have to work it out, but I can do it.
Do you sing? Lead or back up? Do you have an ear for harmony? Got a favorite vocal mic?
Mine is a Shure Beta 58A, or an SM-58. They’re inexpensive and hard to beat.
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What other instruments do you play? Do you double on sax or keyboards or drums; perhaps you play bass and only dabble on guitar? Could you make a living as a street musician, busking for dollars while playing some blues harp? Are you planning a tour as a digeridoo soloist? Are you playing a washboard in a Cajun zydeco band? Or do you have a secret life, playing clarinet in a polka band?
What instrument would you be playing if you hadn’t learned the guitar? What instrument would you like to learn to play?
I think I might have learned to play the piano at some point in my life had I not started with this love affair with the guitar. At some point I would like to pickup some better blues harp techniques. But mostly at this point, I want to become a better guitarist.
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Let’s talk guitars.
There are Fender Guys, and there are Gibson Guys. (And a few others who like weird stuff!) Among the Fender Guys, there are Tele Guys and Strat Guys. I am definitely a Strat (LEGACY!) guy. And I like Gibson’s, especially Les Pauls and ES-335s, but the Legacy is the one that feels like home to me.
I said yesterday that I liked the modern upgrades that were made to the Legacy over the original Strat design. To me, they are the RIGHT upgrades, keeping the vintage flavor while creating an instrument better suited to the modern player.
I really can’t pick out just one thing that makes me a G&L fan—it was the whole package. Compared to the vintage Strat I owned, the Legacy was superior in so many ways. The tuners were better. The vibrato was better. The bigger frets and the flatter fingerboard radius made string bending easier, which fit my style. The finish was beautiful and the workmanship was top-notch. The PTB controls were powerful tone shaping tools, and meant that you could actually use the bridge pickup. Even the strap buttons were a superior design.
So when you look at a guitar, what is it that makes a desirable instrument? Is it the feel of the neck? The pickups? Tone? Sustain?
How important are looks to you? Or the ergonomics of a certain body style or control placement?
Are there certain guitars you WON’T buy because of certain features?
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Some of my thoughts…
I prefer 22-fret necks over 24 frets. I like that neck pickup under the 24th fret node. And I just can handle the small radius fingerboards any more. I prefer the 12” radius of my G&Ls and the Gibsons.
A lot of it comes down to tuning stability and practicality. I don’t like hollow or semi-hollow bodies with trapeze tailpieces. I’ve had bad experiences with tuning stability on these guitars with a trapeze. I like the stop-tail on the 335s.
I like having a vibrato tailpiece. If it’s not a DF, then I can live with a vintage Fender style. I’m not into Floyd Rose vibratos--they are a PITA to change strings on. Ditto for double-roller Bigsby’s. I just don’t want to have to spend 90 minutes for each string changing session.
I don’t want a guitar that feeds back. It’s fine to get feedback when I want it to, but uncontrollably…no.
I prefer the warmth of a wood guitar over Lucite, steel, or composite materials. Not interested in an aluminum-necked Kramer or Travis Bean, or a Rainsong acoustic. In certain situations, these guitars can be very practical. I can foresee a future where a wood guitar might be a rarity, but for now I want a wooden one.
I like good ergonomics. The Legacy style fits my corpulent body pretty well and is comfortable. I like the control layout. I am less fond of the control positions of the LPs and the 335s, but I can put up with it. Firebirds and SGs have the knobs so close together they’re hard to get to and adjust on the fly. My ASAT Deluxe has a DF Vibrato, and it blocks the controls. Bummer!
Looks are important to me too. I do like shiny new guitars, but I’m not opposed to a relic if it is done tastefully.
I prefer to buy un-modified guitars. Pickups, fine. But probably not if somebody took a router to it.
And when it comes right down to it, the feel of the neck and the playability is the heart and soul of the matter to me. If the rest of the guitar is up to snuff, I can change the pickups; but if the neck isn’t right it’s going to be hard to fall in love with the guitar. A good setup can work wonders, but if the basics aren’t there, forget it.
Have you learned what works for you and what doesn’t?
Hope your Tuesday goes well!
Bill