T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
12.1 | STRAT IS IT | MOSAIC::SAVAGE | | Wed Aug 20 1986 11:51 | 6 |
| Don't make me laugh...
The Fender Strat is the one ... there is no question about this
being the best all-round axe in the universe.
Dennis Savage
|
12.2 | LES PAUL | NISYSE::OPER | | Wed Aug 20 1986 12:11 | 12 |
| Take a look at all the guitars that all the really great? players
have and you'll see an odd collection of assorted and sundry axes.
There'll be name brands and non-name brands. No matter how many
guitars they have or what kind of guitars they have, everyone
has a les paul.
everyone who is anyone has a les paul.
or two.
and a marshall.
what else is there?
|
12.3 | It's whatever fits... | CGHUB::IBBETT | OIS Performance Group | Wed Aug 20 1986 12:49 | 13 |
| The answer to this one is simple.
Its a Strat or a Tele or a Les Paul or a Flying V - dependant upon
the style and 'sound' of what you want to play.
Failing that, its a Strat through a Pro Reverb or a Boogie.
What other axe can give you:-
o A 'clean' Hank Marvin sound
o A 'slightly-dirty' Clapton sound
o A 'whatever' Knopfler sound
o etc
|
12.4 | except for the very few | MTBLUE::BOTTOM_DAVID | | Wed Aug 20 1986 14:52 | 6 |
| I've got to say that the best guitarists (in my humble opinion)
ALL play strats or teles. The Les Paul is well represented but the
best use them only on rare occasions to get the one sound that the
strat can't give them.....
Notable exception :Carlos Santanna
|
12.5 | ES-335 | COMET::STEWART | | Wed Aug 20 1986 15:08 | 16 |
| An ALL around guitar for both jazz and R&R...hmmm.
My vote would go to the Gibson ES-335. Chuck Berry, among others,
used it for R&R, and it's widely used in jazz because of the real
mellow tone it can achieve. However, the large body size might
keep some rock and rollers away from the instrument. Also, it's
not that versatile that you can get that distinctive Fender Twang.
But as I said for general all around use, it's a nice instrument.
Bottom line, buy at least two guitars.
re: PSSS in topic note:
I have a dog named RADIO who can sniff these things out. :^)
=ken
|
12.6 | curiously | NISYSE::OPER | | Wed Aug 20 1986 17:08 | 22 |
| re.4
Of course, that is an opinion and, of course, mine is just an
opinion, too. But......check album covers! Look at all the marshalls
and les pauls. There's an article on steve howe and ??? ???/ some
other well known? guitarist in a music mag and BOTH of them are
holding.....guess........nope, not tele's or strat's....guess again...
........LES PAUL'S.
I wonder, which has sold the most in the last 10 years....?
any body have any figures?
les paul or strat?
I used to own a les paul (among the various things I've owned
in the past. Isn't it obvious?
I hope to get anotehr soon.
rik
|
12.7 | STRAT RULES | COLORS::SAVAGE | | Wed Aug 20 1986 17:31 | 12 |
| A Les Paul is a nice guitar but it's limited to getting that sort
of fat creamy Gibson sound and that's about it. I agree that they
are esentially used when that's the exact sound you want. If you
really want the best overall it's a strat no question. As for a
335 - might be ok for jazz or country or blues or Chuck Berry songs
but serious rock? -- forget it, pal. They're terrible.
I too have owed Les Pauls. About 4 of them - all very nice examples.
I only needed one strat. Playing a strat is like coming home. It's
perfect.
Dennis
|
12.8 | Gibson SG...nice! | HERMES::CLOUD | Full Boogie...too hip! | Wed Aug 20 1986 18:39 | 7 |
| I haven't seen anyone mention the Gibson SG yet. Of course, I
am not an offical axe-o-phile, but I do think the SG sounds great
in just about any application.
Phil
|
12.9 | Strat -- not for jazz | COMET2::STEWART | | Wed Aug 20 1986 23:31 | 28 |
| re: .7
> As for a
> 335 - might be ok for jazz or country or blues or Chuck Berry songs
> but serious rock? -- forget it, pal. They're terrible.
Now hold on pal, the topic note asked for a versatile instrument for
playing jazz and also getting nice rock and roll sounds. I've got a
Strat on my wish list but for no explainable reason I've never been
fond of the Les Paul. I would never use a Strat for playing jazz,
whereas a Les Paul may be a more likely choice. And even so, Les Paul's
are not used as frequently in jazz as say something like a 335 or even
a wider body guitar. The one guitar I've seen used for both jazz and
rock and roll (including blues), and as you said country applications
is the 335. By far, the most versatile instrument.
Also, are you saying that Chuck Berry is not serious rock? What makes
it less serious than anything else? Most serious rock and rollers have
played and continue to play Chuck Berry. BTW, I've seen Clapton, Stills,
and Steve Howe play an L-5. Are these guys not considered serious rock?
WHILE MY GUITAR GENTLY WEEPS was done on an L-5. As I said, get two
guitars. But if one is all that one can afford, the 335 can be more
versatile than the Strat.
Strat for serious jazz? -- forget it, pal. They're terrible.
=ken
|
12.10 | Cat Scratch 335 | KRYPTN::JASNIEWSKI | | Thu Aug 21 1986 09:05 | 7 |
|
Re: 7 -
Tell that to Ted Nugent...
JJJ
|
12.11 | ford or chevy | NISYSE::OPER | | Thu Aug 21 1986 09:20 | 48 |
| I guess what it really all comes down to is.....
every bodies fingers are different lengths and different shapes
and thicknesses.
everybody has different idea of what feels, sounds good.
the guy who swears by a strat may hate a paul and the guy
who swears by a paul may hate a strat. Each of them may be super
pro's making big albums and big bucks and great sounds using
different guitars and different amps and different effects and
the "right" sound person. Some people own 12 guitars, including
a strat and a paul, they use different guitars for different
tunes.
personally, I'd like a paul cuz of the paul sound and I really
liked the action. I could do lots of classical rok type stuff with
the paul real easy. I like the strat sound but only mildly. I've
played them but never owned one. Never had the desire.
I currently own a washburn f5v5 with a whammy and, though it
took some getting used to, I'm beginning to develop a feel for it
and I'm beginning to like it. Still, I'm thinking of getting a
paul again for diversity. The Paul's aren't double cut away so
if you have tiny hands (like I do) it's a little hard to reach
the high end. I don't have that problem on my washburn. the Strat
doesn't have that problem either.
Actually, I want the following
one guitar, 6 string electric, tuned to d
one guitar, 12 string electric, tuned to d
one guitar, 6 tsring acoustic, tuned to d
one guitar, 12 string acoustic, tuned to d
one guitar, 6 string classical, tuned to d
one guitar, 6 string classical, tuned to g
one guitar, 6 string acoustic, tuned to g
one guitar, 12 string acoustic, tuned to g
one.........etc....
i need about 24 guitars.
Should I get 24 strats? Or 24 Pauls?
hey, Dave Bottom....How's your recording coming?
You getting that Midi thing figured out?
If you do....you can explain it to me....I'm real confused!
rik
|
12.12 | Strats rule...sorta | MTBLUE::BOTTOM_DAVID | | Thu Aug 21 1986 09:24 | 30 |
| The best use strats:
Clapton, Malmsteen, Blackmore, Hendrix, Dylan (not really a great
guitarist but a strat user), Eric Johnson, Gilmore, Sting, The Edge,
Stevie Rae & Jimmie Rae Vaughn, Knoffler, Alex Liefson......
or teles:
Segar, Alvin Lee, Kieth Richards, Jeff Beck (not exclusively but
more than any other guitar), Albert Collins......
or Les Pauls:
Jimmi Page, Neil Schon, Steve Howe (not exclusively), Richrath,
Jeff Beck (hmm), Billy Gibbons (although almost all of his rhythm
traks are a Strat that Hendrix gave him), Carlos Santanna (not
exclusively).....
and then there's everybody else......
The answer is to get the best variety of sounds buy at least to
guitars, one with single coil sounds and one with humbuckers. The
start and the Les Paul (to a lesser degree) have been the workhorses
of rock and roll, but both have great competition from the newcomers,
charvel, Jackson, dean, washburn, hammer....evnen (ug!) bc rich.
orthadox metal is a strat through a marshall stack
any others?
dave
|
12.13 | I WANNA PLAY A.... | RANGLY::JENNINGS_RIC | | Thu Aug 21 1986 15:03 | 5 |
| FIRST OFF; I LOVE THIS NEW FILE. THANKS DAVE B FOR TELLING ME ABOUT
IT.. I HAVE OWNED A 335 FOR OVER 13 YEARS AND WOULDN'T DREAM OF
PARTING WITH IT..IT'S BEEN A VERSATILE GUITAR BUT AT TIMES I'VE
NEEDED A SOUND NOT QUITE AS CLEAN ...I'VE ALSO OWNED A STRAT AND
????WHY??? I SOLD IT I'LL NEVER KNOW.. GIVE ME ANOTHER STRAT
|
12.14 | 335 is OK | COLORS::SAVAGE | | Thu Aug 21 1986 15:32 | 4 |
| OK - I'll Wimp out and say I do like 335's. But they aren't anywhere
near as versatile as a Strat.
Dennis
|
12.15 | Les Paul gets my vote | THRUST::DAVIS | Scott H. Davis | Thu Aug 21 1986 16:21 | 24 |
| Les Pauls get my vote. I used to own a strat and currently use a Les Paul.
I think the Les Paul is both more versatile, and for me much more
comfortable than a strat. (My pick always used to hit the middle pick up on the
strat). As to the previous lists of guitar players, most players on that
list have recorded with both types of guitars. For example:
Jeff Beck - BLow by Blow is mostly Les Paul, Wired is mostly Strat.
Steve Howe - Steve Howe has rarely used the same guitar on more than one song,
let alone exclusively. With Yes here's a sample:
ES-175TD - Roundabout, Yours is No Disgrace, Tales from
Topographic Oceans
ES-335 - Close To the Edge, Siberian Khatru
Strat - Parallels
Tele - Relayer album
With Asia, He used a custom made ES-355
With GTR, he's back to switching on every song.
Eric Clapton - All of Cream, Blind Faith were done with various gibsons,
Since Layla he's exclusively used Strats.
Carlos Santana - Currently uses Yamaha, used to use Les Pauls.
|
12.16 | A dark horse | CGHUB::IBBETT | OIS Performance Group | Thu Aug 21 1986 17:46 | 9 |
| Hey db, no mention of your Carvin??
Seriously, I've heard Dave out-Strat my Strat, and get almost *any*
sound (axe-flavor) outa that amazing instrument.
Sure I'm a died-in-the-wool Strat guy, but anyone who hasn't heard/seen
a Carvin might be suprised...it might just be "best overall".
A frustrated Knopfler emulator.
|
12.17 | | BAXTA::BOTTOM_DAVID | | Fri Aug 22 1986 07:55 | 8 |
| hmm carvins.....when I visited their factory in the mid 70's the
guitar they were making were junk......that they have improved
is not a big surprise.
Re; Carlos S. He has two Yamaha's that are identical, but also plays
a lp at every concert I've been to.....
dave
|
12.18 | Carvin DC 200 | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Dave | Fri Aug 22 1986 18:23 | 110 |
| re: .16
I've kind of avoided this note because the idea of a "best guitar" is
somewhat foreign to me. To be honest, I am also turned off when
I hear (as I so often do) someone go on about their particular instrument
and how they've played all the rest but none of them are nearly
as good, etc. etc.
However, I'm quite happy to talk about the Carvin under the pretext
that I'm not making any claims as to whether it's the "best".
My model is a DC 200 Koa. It has a Kahler unit and gold plated
hardware.
A friend of mine got a similar Carvin about the time I was looking
for something to replace my rapidly decaying Gibson SG. One thing
which impressed me right away is that the guitar was setup properly
on arrival. It's a rare occasion when I find a guitar in a store
that is setup properly. I was told that this has been his consistent
experience with Carvins. The action was very low indicating to
me a excellent neck and fret job (later discovered that Carvin has
a unique fretting technique that they've patented). So the first
thing that impressed me was here was a stock guitar that played
well right out of the box.
I played my friends guitar for awhile and he showed me the controls
which I though to be quite intelligently laid out. It has two slightly
different Carvin pickups, each of which has two sets of 11 poles:
6 for the strings, 5 for the gaps between strings to even out the
sound when bending (noticeably effective but not strikingly so).
There's a coil tap for each pickup, and thus you can get some very
interesting blends of single coil and double coil sounds. There
is a in-phase/out-phase switch which controls whether the two pickups
are in or out of phase with each other which gives you even
more variety in two-pickup mode on top of the coil-tapping. What's
more is that the way the switch works (and the guitar is wired)
the switch has the effect of selecting which coil of the bridge
pickup is being used in single coil mode. Thus when the pickup
selector is set to the bridge pickup, the phase switch controls
which of the two coils is being used. The difference is only
subtle but noticeable (pickup placement is more critical as you
get closer to the bridge).
Now there's a couple of things I think they blew. The guitar is
a typical stereo guitar in that when both outputs are plugged in,
one pickup goes to one channel, and the other pickup goes to the
remaining channel. The only advantage I can see to this is that
it allows to you control the balance between the two channels when
both channels are on. But of course using the guitar in stereo
mode forces you to give up much of the variety described in the
previous paragraph, thus I don't think this is the appropriate way
to do it for this guitar. I myself, would have preferred to see
the mono output split into two channels and then have a balance
control. This would allow you to use two seperate rigs (I think
the more common thing these days). I know I would have an application
of the stereo feature if it was set up this way.
My guitar is made of Koa wood, allegedly some kind of rare wood
that is both hard but porous which is supposed to give you better
resonation. Eh.... However, the guitar is quite light and does
have decent (not great) sustain. Being that I always practice standing
up and also am a chronic back sufferer, I'm quite willing to trade
off a little sustain for comfort. BTW. it has a very nice natural finish
(my personal preference).
Anyway, I find that it plays very well, and I can get a wide variety
of sounds with it. I suspect that the same would be true of any
other Carvin DC 200. That's one of the reasons I bought Carvin:
you know you're getting a good guitar that arrives setup properly.
You can buy a Carvin with a certain amount of confidence and that
was important to me. (A guitar mail order place has to have that
property to be at all successful.)
What don't I like about it?:
First, it is hard to do pinky volume swells (which I like to do)
with the rhythm pickup without knocking the pickup selector into
two pickup mode due to the placement of those things. It's hard
to use the bridge pickup to do the same because it's so far back
that you have to pick the strings very close to the bridge (which
is somewhat harder to do) and the arm of the Kahler bar gets in
your way. Now, with practice, I've learned to get around these
problems (I don't knock the pickup selector switch anymore, and
I either take the bar off, or place it between my fingers.)
I talked to the Carvin guy who designed the guitars about this sorta
insignificant but annoying feature. He was real nice, and he actually
called me back later to thank me for the suggestion and tell me
that he implemented my fix on the new guitar he is designing. Wow!
I thought it had gone in one ear and out the other....
Second, both my guitar and my friends needed to be sent back after
about 2 years because the neck straightened out and couldn't be
reset because the nut on the truss rod was already at it's loosest
setting. Carvin is willing to fix these problems for free, but
of course you have to send them the guitar and be without it for
awhile. The point is, this would suggest it's a common Carvin
problem.
Anyway, that's it. I'm not going to load on any bullshit about
how this guitar is so special or so great, or whatever. I'll just
say that I'm extremely happy with it.
db
P.S. BTW, I highly recommend getting locking trems even if you're
not into whammy bar stuff. I think it just helps keep the
guitar in tune. I'm somewhat fussy about tuning, but I'm also
lazy about it, and thus it's nice to have a guitar that holds
it's tune well. Now if only I could hold a tune :-)
|
12.19 | pickups are more critical | YOGI::DCOLEMAN | A CLOd NaMEd iv | Thu Aug 28 1986 17:43 | 16 |
| If sound versatility is what you're looking for, your best bet is
not to choose a favorite guitar, but rather to figure out what pickups
will give you the widest range of sounds. Then take the guitar that
feels most comfortable in your hands and customize it with your
favorite pickups and wirings (phase controls, etc.). This might
not be the most practical or cheapest route (not even possible for
some combinations), but you'll get a wide range of sound possiblities.
Of those guitarists mentioned previously who are known to use
a certain axe, how many have customized theirs? Most are known more
for their distinct sound than for their versatility.
Another question, how important is an amp for sound versatility?
Dave, whose Tele custom (humbucking up front)
is not too versatile
|
12.20 | | BIGALO::BOTTOM_DAVID | | Sun Aug 24 1986 07:24 | 12 |
| amps can give you (depending on the amp) a great deal of variety
on your sound.....best bet are the Semour Duncans which are designed
with removeable preamps that allow you set up the amp with a selection
of five different preamps for five different sounds......chaning
a preamp is about a 2 minute job...and there are around ten different
ones available, sounds range from crystal clean to super dirty with
variations of all sorts....
I agree about the pickups, get what suits you best and customise
it to meet (or exceed) your needs......
dave
|
12.21 | | ERLANG::DICKENS | Jeff Dickens | Sun Aug 24 1986 14:59 | 5 |
| I agree with the "versatility" argument. I use "tapped" humbuckers,
and with the tap switch in I can fake a reasonable tele sound.
Now if I could just afford a Seymour Duncan ...
|
12.22 | Seymour Duncan Almost | USRCV1::MCNALLT | | Tue Dec 30 1986 20:21 | 29 |
| I'm not so sure if you want to rush out and buy a Seymour Duncan.
I've played in bands for 20 years and have studied and modified
many tube amps and have become very critical of guitar/amp sounds.
When the Seymour amp first came out, my lead player rushed out to
buy one to see if he would like it better than his boogie mark 1
which he bought in 1976. We used it at all types of gigs for about
90 days then sold it back to the music store because it just didn't
have enough high end. We took it apart and I was going to add a
brightness control which would hve been easy but probably would
have hurt the trade in value. The construction was fantastic and
the switchable preamps were a great idea but the bottom line was
that the sound was not that great. We play commercial music from
Steely Dan to Hall and Oats and we needed a wide spectrum of sounds
but this amp seemed only good for narrow bandwidth distorted rock.
I think the hot new amp which we're going to try next is the new
boogie with 3 switchable sounds and two channels.
I have devised a poor man's way to obtain a boogie sound out a fender
amp by reallocating the vibrato 12AX7 and using one of its sections
to provide an additional stage of gain in the preamp stage. Then
one of the vibrato pots is wired as a gain control and the other
is used as a master volume control just before the output section.
I did this conversion to a twin, a dual shoman, and a pro-reverb
-the pro sounded the best but I think that was due to the old "Special
Design" Jensens which for some reason sounded great.
If anybody wants copies of Fender or Boogie schematics and these
modifications I would happy to send them off.
|
12.23 | Don't Forget Mail Code | USRCV1::MCNALLT | | Wed Jan 07 1987 18:17 | 2 |
| Those of you who reply to note 12.22; please be sure to include
your mail code, DTN, or home address!
|
12.24 | A Collective Approach | DV780::MALKOSKI | | Tue Jun 02 1987 15:22 | 6 |
| Guitars are like horsepower in cars: too much is never enough!
I have finally broken my one guitar a month habit, and have whittled
my collection down to a few. Got to have a Strat AND a Les Paul
AND at least one Martin acoustic.
Paul
|
12.25 | Old habits or a new image? | ERASER::BUCKLEY | Restless and Wild | Tue Jun 02 1987 17:16 | 9 |
| - 1.
> Got to have a Strat AND a Les Paul AND at least one Martin acoustic.
I agree on the martin, but I'll take an ESP over a Fender strat
and a Jackson over a Les Paul anyday, they have a more `contemporary'
sound to them I think.
|
12.26 | GIBSONS BLOW WIND | FILMOR::JTAYLOR | | Fri Jul 17 1987 10:03 | 3 |
| I HAVE A KRAMER STRAT STYLE W/2 SINGLE COIL PICKUPS 1 HUMBUCKER
W/SPLIT COIL OPTION,FLOYD ROSE LOCK+DIMARZIO ONBOARD PREAMP
THIS COMBO BLOWS AWAY ALL OTHERS FENDER IS HISTORY,KRAMER RULES
|
12.27 | ....... | CASPER::EXCHANGE_1 | | Wed Aug 03 1988 16:26 | 3 |
|
Sigh.
|
12.28 | just found this note | USRCV1::REAUME | undergoing behavior analysis | Mon Feb 20 1989 11:39 | 19 |
|
It's time to kick up some dust in this topic. I'll fess up
right off and put a mark in the Les Paul column. My Les Paul
Custom ( candy apple red , gold h/w , EMG's ) is the weekend
workhorse. For five years it's been suitable for 80% of my
needs. I have a Roland GP-8 that helps with adjusting the tone
to fit the bill.
My other guitar is a B.C. Rich Bich that I bought in the
early Eighties when it was the most radical guitar for hard
rock ( that was then , this is now ) The B.C. is still a
great guitar in it's own right but doesn't fit in with where
I'm at now. I still feel the early B.C. Rich guitars ( Mockingbirds,
Eagles, and Bich's ) were worth their asking price , truly a
handmade , quality instrument.
STRAT ... a real Fender Strat is a guitar for the masses, and
there are good ones if you sort through the bunches. Fender has
been doing a lot lately to keep from being out-strated. A carved
guitar like a LP Custom is much harder to clone.
|
12.29 | LET'S OPEN OUR MINDS | COMET::DREILING | | Tue Jul 11 1989 14:21 | 11 |
|
Some of us po'boys have come to realize that Ibanez makes a
good mid-priced guitar.I'm not claiming that they're the "best"
but then again looking at the people who are currently using and
endorsing them. They might just start turning a few heads if this
keeps up.
I personally have both a Roadstar and a Proline 1660,and I love
them both.So do my friends with their Lessies and Straties.
Keep on playing,
. Eric
|
12.30 | | UWRITE::DUBE | Dan Dube 264-0506 | Thu Jul 20 1989 13:48 | 11 |
| re: -.1
I agree - Ibanez makes a great guitar for the money. I have a Roadstar
II that gets a much better clean sound than my Charvel Model 6 at
about 25% of the cost. Unfortunately, that's the *only* good sound out
of the Ibanez, but it has its uses. (especially now that I'm playing
a lot of funk-style music, which requires a crisp, clean strat sound).
As for all other styles and sounds, the Charvel is the greatest!
-Dan
|
12.31 | Personal opinion, good stuff | CSC32::G_HOUSE | No silver bullets please! | Thu Jul 20 1989 18:33 | 17 |
| re: .30
Dan, If you haven't, you may want to check out the new Ibanez models
(esp. the RG5xx series). They are very nice! I had a Roadstar II a
few years ago that I thought was junk (had dead spots all over the neck
when you bent notes and would NOT stay in tune). But, I played one of
the new ones recently (I think it was an RG570) while demoing something
and it blew me away. It was really flexable in sounds (2 humbuckers, 1
single in between them) and played like a dream.
Incidentially, I play a Charvel too (Model 4). I honestly liked this
Ibanez better then the Charvel (and I love it).
I'm not trying to talk you into anything, just that if you like the
Charvel, you'll almost certainly like these too.
Greg
|
12.32 | | ASAHI::COOPER | Burn my flag, and I'll shoot ya... | Thu Aug 03 1989 13:44 | 3 |
| Agreed. the RG550's that Buck has are nice...They ROCK !
Gotta love those simply rude colors and stuff. Gotta have flash!
|
12.33 | Tied for First | LUDWIG::TEMP3 | Flying in a Blue Dream | Mon Mar 19 1990 23:31 | 15 |
|
In my opinion, the Strat AND the Les Paul are the best.
(only because I own 1 of each)
Actually, they are two totally seperate guitars, each having
alot of pluses and hardly any minuses. I happen to like the
feel, sound and sustain of my LP better. But on my Strat,
I have EMG active pick ups and a Wonder bar on it. It sounds
REALLY hot and the action is INCREDIBLE!!
S
T
E
V
E
|
12.34 | hooked | COMET::DURHAM | | Thu Mar 07 1991 17:12 | 17 |
|
I myself own a les paul, and an ibanez rg 550 which I just bought.
I've had people tell me that my les paul cuts thru a little better
than my ibanez live. My les paul is truly a fine guitar and will never
part with it. My ibanez has a distinct sound too. Really good for the
whammy bar stuff.
still jammin after all these years.
|
12.35 | The Stratocaster's have it ! | SALEM::TAYLOR_J | Pickin' and a grinnin' | Fri Aug 21 1992 11:26 | 11 |
| Don't make me laugh.
" STRAT RULES "
Gonzo
|
12.36 | no laughing matter.... | NAVY5::SDANDREA | Toy Syndrome Addict | Fri Aug 21 1992 12:38 | 8 |
| Careful, Gonzo,
if you heard the guy in .34 play that Les Paul, I guarantee you you
would NOT laugh. He has clean, tasty, accurate chops for days, and can
play a slide to make you think you were at an Allman Bros concert. Bob
Durham is one fine axe-slinger, and "does" Les pauls proud.....
STEVE (who likes strats too!)
|
12.37 | | KDX200::COOPER | A regular model of restraint... | Sat Aug 22 1992 09:51 | 2 |
| Agreed. Watching Bob play makes me wanna give up... But I won't.
:)
|
12.38 | First time on | POLAR::MCNALLY | | Fri Jan 14 1994 16:23 | 4 |
| I am just peforming a test
|
12.39 | Gibson and Marshall | POLAR::FRACALANZA | | Fri Jan 14 1994 16:44 | 6 |
| I just wanna say that I own a Gibson Les Paul Gold Top and I think that
Gibson Les Paul's have the best sound. Fender Strats are good too if
you like more of a twang. However, I have always liked the Les Paul
since my early guitar playing days. BTW, my Gold Top was built in 1992
and it is a 1960 version. I use it with a Marshall and I think that
Gibson and Marshall go very well together. Fender also make good amps.
|
12.40 | | FABSIX::K_KAMAR | | Sun Mar 17 1996 13:47 | 4
|