T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
145.1 | R.I.P. | INK::BUCKLEY | | Tue Jan 20 1987 11:51 | 10 |
| > the music stores in this area aren't carrying them yet. I would
YET?? G&L has `come and gone' so to say. It's was started by Leo
after his stint with Music Man. They were slightly popular in 1983,
but their popluarity has since declined. I've only seen one recent
ad, which proves they still exist, but I think you'll be hard pressed
to find a dealer that carries the line...it's just not selling that
well.
WjB
|
145.2 | " they were popular in N.Y. " | ROCKET::ABATELLI | | Tue Jan 20 1987 12:12 | 11 |
| Hi,
I've worked with a few guys that have them. The guitars are not
as good as the basses. The necks resemble the strat type and precision
bass necks. The basses sound alittle better that the guitars though.
Not very popular due to the higher price of them as compaired to
the jap brands. If you get a good price for one then it's worth
it. Try one and really listen to it both clean and dirty, but above
all... it has to feel good. Kinda like home, if you know what
I mean.
Good luck,
Fred
|
145.3 | A lead on where to look at one | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Dave | Tue Jan 20 1987 13:01 | 5 |
| I've seen them most recently at Hampshire Music in Nashua, NH.
Hampshire Music also has good prices.
db
|
145.4 | | RICKS::CALCAGNI | | Tue Jan 20 1987 13:53 | 4 |
| Liberty Music in Framingham carried G&L the last time I looked (quite
a while ago). I currently have a G&L bass that I am very happy with.
/rick
|
145.5 | Why? | MOSAIC::BUSENBARK | | Mon Jan 12 1987 09:05 | 10 |
| I tried one at Hampshire Music(in Keene NH) 4 months' ago
that looked alot like a Telecaster and had 2 single coil pickup's
and I did not care for it.
Too much 60hz noise and not very versatile. The strat shaped
G&L I would have liked to try,but I never could find one. The net
on the telie shape was around $400 which was too much for what I
wanted.
Rick
|
145.6 | Musicman | 25941::JASNIEWSKI | | Wed Jan 21 1987 08:09 | 9 |
|
I owned a "musicman" (previous company of leo's) guitar that,
in spite of it's HUGE pole pieces on the pickups, couldnt hold a
sustained note to save it's life! At least not when compared to
one of the best at that, a Gibson SG.
Joe Jas
|
145.7 | | RICKS::CALCAGNI | | Wed Jan 21 1987 10:41 | 4 |
| re .6
I assume you're talking about a six string here. The Musicman basses
I've tried have been MONSTERS! Just don't let the battery run down.
|
145.8 | G&L is great, but there are alternatives | PABLO::DUBE | | Wed Jan 21 1987 13:16 | 11 |
| The other guitar player in my band bought a G&L strat model from
Hampshire in 1983, and it is still his main axe (he has 5 guitars).
I've played it on numerous occasions, and I agree that it is a super
guitar. I've never noticed any hum problem, and it really has a
sweet clean sound and is also very punchy in a distortion setting.
However, I picked up a brand new Ibanez Roadstar II a year later
for half the cost and I think the sound is almost as good, especially
in the clean setting.
|
145.9 | Thanks ! | GLIND1::VALASEK | | Wed Jan 21 1987 13:32 | 8 |
| Thanks for the info, I was curious about other Leo Fender models.
I assumed that everyone Leo touched may be gold. It appears that
this is not the case.
Thanks again !
Tony
|
145.10 | I own a G&L would my opinion count ? ? ? | MELODY::HASTINGS | | Tue May 19 1987 07:18 | 14 |
| I've have a G&L INVADER with a Kahler Cam action. I think it's
a great guitar, plays beutiful has a nice sound, this model has
1 humbucker and two single coil each one can be turned on or off
individualy. You can get many sounds from it. I like you saw the
G&L advertisement in Guitar for the practicing musician and decided
to look into it. I hunted down some dealers, the only one I can
remmeber is Hampshire music in Nashua N.H. thats where I bought
mine. At Hampshire they had a G&L Rampage which was just as nice.
It had one humbucker, Kahler, one volume nob, and an unfinished
neck awesome. Try and track one down I think you would like it.
Tim
HAPPY OWNER OF A -< G&L Guitar >-
|
145.11 | G&L in Shrewsbury,MA | AQUA::ROST | But are they friendly spirits? | Tue May 19 1987 09:28 | 16 |
| McDuff's in Shrewsbury, MA carries G&L.
Used to work with a guy who had one and the stock G&L whammy stays
in tune much better than a stock Strat whammy though a locking one
would probably surpass it. Sound-wise, I thought it was quite
versatile.
BTW, I think the company is deliberately staying low-profile rather
than risk the boom and bust syndrome that Gibson and Fender keep
going through.
As others have mentioned, the basses are *very* nice. I spent two
years shopping for a fretless bass and almost ended up with a G&L.
The only others I even considered were the Pedulla and the B.C. Rich
(which I bought) and at the time the G&L was only 1/3 of the cost, which
should tell you something.
|
145.12 | I'll check it out ! | GLIND1::VALASEK | | Wed May 27 1987 12:41 | 6 |
| I'll have to check them out. I am looking for a second guitar.
If I find one, I'll post my opinion later.
Thanks,
Tony
|
145.13 | G&L Guitar Co. lives on! | SMOGGY::TURNER | | Fri Apr 12 1991 19:18 | 6 |
| Update: G&L Guitars is still producing fine guitars in Fullerton,
California.
I own an G&L S-500 and love it!
Paul
|
145.14 | NICE stuff! | GOES11::G_HOUSE | Now I'm down in it | Thu Apr 02 1992 18:21 | 18 |
| I played a new G&L Legand (Legacy?) Strat style guitar last week. It
was truly a fine feeling instrument! It's like a Strat with all the
modern features I'd like on it. It had an updated non-locking tremelo,
a flatter fretboard radius and large frets. Played like a dream!
I didn't plug it up (wanted to get outta the store with my Mastercard
balance intact), so I can't comment on the sound.
The fit and finish was also very nice. It was Surf Green (or whatever
their name for that color is) with a maple fretboard and looked great.
My only complaint about it was that it had a single layer pickguard and
it was already starting to warp a little. I guess they were going for
the "vintage" look or something.
Price? "About the same you'd pay for an American Standard Strat"
Greg
|
145.15 | coincidence? | RICKS::CALCAGNI | multiple sarcasm | Fri Apr 03 1992 10:34 | 5 |
| Was that pickguard warped down near the bridge? I checked out two
high priced signature series Fenders this week (the Beck and Cray
models) and was amazed that both of them suffered from pickguard
buckle in that same spot. Maybe it was a bad week at the pickguard
factory.
|
145.16 | It's a feature, a place to hold extra picks... | GOES11::G_HOUSE | Now I'm down in it | Fri Apr 03 1992 14:57 | 5 |
| It was warped along the top edge on the bridge side (the section where
it starts to curve down, a large area with no screws). It wasn't bad,
just standing up a little.
Greg
|
145.17 | G&L Asat Classic | AIMTEC::JOHNSON_R | | Wed Apr 21 1993 19:30 | 10 |
| Just purchased a G&L Asat Classic last Friday. Traded in the Tele+.
The neck has a much better feel. The sound is classic Tele. I am
very pleased with this guitar. Anyone looking should check these out,
they make several different models, Legacy (strat), some with locking
tuners, rolling nut, hot rails, etc.
RJ,
(usual disclaimer)
|
145.18 | | GOES11::G_HOUSE | Son of Spam | Thu Apr 22 1993 11:28 | 5 |
| I played one of those awhile back and really liked the feel. As
mentioned in another note, I also enjoyed playing the Strat style model
a lot too.
Greg
|
145.19 | Investment Potential | ZYMRGY::sam | I made life easy just by laughing | Wed Jul 21 1993 15:18 | 7 |
| Saw a G&L ASAT Classic "Leo Fender Commemorative" today. Beautiful guitar.
Cherry sunburst, brass pickguard and hardware, black pickup covers. Very
striking. Has "Leo Fender" with birth and death dates on the top. I wasn't
seriously interested in trying to get "the best price" but was quoted $2300
for it. Nice to buy and put in a case for about 20 years...
-- Sam
|
145.20 | | SAHQ::ROSENKRANZ | C'mon baby, drive south! | Wed Jul 21 1993 15:58 | 3 |
| Some of the early ASATs have Leo's signature somewhere on the neck or
neck joint. It strikes me that these might be more interesting to
collect.
|
145.21 | A tale of two Teles | RICKS::CALCAGNI | Will work for '59 Les Paul | Mon Sep 20 1993 13:09 | 22 |
| I got an interesting opportunity to play a G&L ASAT Special Tele
side-by-side with a stock '53 Fender recently. The Fender was very
nice, featherweight body, huge V-shaped neck, all original parts and
electronics in clean shape. The body had been refinished (blonde).
The price? A cool $4k.
Just for grins, I pulled down a G&L they had for comparison. I was
surprised to find the body had the exact weight and feel as the '53;
it was perfect. The neck was V'd, but less thick and with large frets;
the big '53 had a nice funky feel, but the ASAT was faster and more
playable. What really killed me were the pickups though. The '53 neck
pickup was fairly useless, on the ASAT it yielded a nice full single
coil sound. In the bridge, the ASAT had a little more gain and lots
more twang. Unbelievable! The '53 was a very nice Tele, but the G&L
equalled or bested it in every department from what I could tell.
Oh yeah, the price on the ASAT? Around $600.
I walked away totally amazed by the G&L. Their Strats are nice, but
the Teles (at least this one) are incredible. Definitely check these
out if you're in the market for a Tele.
/rick
|
145.22 | | GOES11::HOUSE | What planet are *you* from? | Mon Sep 20 1993 15:33 | 5 |
| I've never seen (much less played) an old Fender Tele like that, but I
have played an ASAT and it felt pretty good. Neck was still a little
clunky for me, but overall it seemed like a nice solid instrument.
Greg
|
145.23 | Store claimed G&L's are "hard to get", so $$ | TLE::RALTO | | Mon Nov 08 1993 14:14 | 29 |
| Over the weekend I looked at a G&L S500... it seemed to be along
the lines of a Strat Plus, with locking tuners, G&L-designed
pickups, and a nice translucent cherry finish (you could actually
see wood through it, what a concept). In addition to the usual
5-position switch, there was another small switch that they
claimed let you get a Tele sound (not clear how, maybe by
selecting 1st and 3rd pickups?).
This guitar supposedly lists for over $1200, and the tagged price
was $829, apparently "firm", even if paying cash (?!). Might anyone
here know enough about G&L's to say what a reasonable price would be
for one of these?
While I was looking around, I also saw a Strat Plus for $695
(a blue sort-of-sunburst); what's a good price for a Strat Plus
these days?
I'm basically looking for some "benchmarks". While I'm here, I've
gotta say that looking for a decent guitar (I've never had one, and
figured it was about time :-)) is ultimately almost as frustrating
as looking for a new car. Finding the right combination of "feels
right" (narrow neck for small hands, regular frets), "looks right",
price, etc., is tough... usually if it feels right, I don't like
how it looks, and so on.
Yeah, yeah, I know... buy used, or buy foreign, or both! I think it's
time for a break! :-)
Chris
|
145.24 | G&L dealers, NH/MA | NWACES::HICKERNELL | Merry Merry, Joy Joy | Thu Jan 06 1994 13:24 | 5 |
| I'm trying to find a G&L dealer in southern NH/northeastern Mass. I
know The Music Factory, Salem, NH, is one, and Hampshire Music in
Nashua, NH, who used to be one, is no longer. Any others?
Dave
|
145.25 | | SPEZKO::FRASER | Mobius Loop; see other side | Thu Jan 06 1994 13:45 | 7 |
| Dave - Music Factory just off Elm St in Manchester has _some_
G&Ls on the wall as of last weekend. I can't remember the
street name, but it's almost opposite Ted's Music Mart, up the
side street about 200 feet on the right.
Andy
|
145.26 | | LEDS::BURATI | boss burato | Thu Jan 06 1994 13:50 | 5 |
| Dave,
There must be a Daddy's around there somewhere. They deal G&L.
--Ron
|
145.27 | | NWACES::HICKERNELL | Merry Merry, Joy Joy | Thu Jan 06 1994 15:10 | 14 |
| Andy -
The Music Factory in Salem is a dealer, but as of ten days ago they had
one ASAT (Tele) and one SB-1 (P-bass). I'll check out the one in
Manchester, though.
Ron,
There is a Daddy's in Salem. I didn't know they were a dealer, though.
I'll stop in and report back.
Thanks.
Dave
|
145.28 | Performance Music Center in Woburn Mass. has G&L | TLE::RALTO | | Fri Jan 07 1994 14:20 | 7 |
| Performance Music Center on Main St. in Woburn, MA. is a G&L
dealer, and they always seem to have 10 or so of them in stock,
not bad for a smaller store. They're very enthusiastic about
G&L's, to say the least... I got a natural-finish Legacy from
them a couple of months ago. Their phone number is 617-938-6411.
Chris
|
145.29 | | NWACES::HICKERNELL | Merry Merry, Joy Joy | Fri Jan 07 1994 14:37 | 7 |
| re: Performance Music
Thanks, Chris. I've never been in there, though it's not that far
away. I hear they have lots of percussion stuff, too, so my drummer
wife will want to go, too.
Dave
|
145.30 | Seek and ye shall find? | NWACES::HICKERNELL | Drums must never stop! | Mon Feb 28 1994 11:54 | 16 |
| This past Friday and Saturday I made a concerted effort to find a
G&L L-2000 bass in the southern-NH/north-of-Boston area. I called
over twenty music stores from Boston to Manchester, NH and Danvers
to Fitchburg. The only store or chain who had any was Daddy's; they
have three somewhere in their chain. So I had them transfer one to
my local store, and I should get to play it this weekend.
But geez, these things are hard to find! I don't know how anyone
can sell any of them when no one even stocks a demonstrator. %^(
Performance Music in Woburn, for example, has ten or so G&L guitars
in stock, but had *no* basses the last time I was in there (the middle
of January), and are still waiting on an L-2000. The owner said it
was a combination of the NAMM show, the earthquake and the modest
output of the factory.
Dave
|
145.31 | they've gotta be good, right? 8) | NAVY5::SDANDREA | Tonya Harding shot the Deputy | Mon Feb 28 1994 11:59 | 3 |
| Gee Dave, since they seem to be so rare, guess you gotta have one!
sd
|
145.32 | life is so rough here | EZ2GET::STEWART | Death before disco | Mon Feb 28 1994 15:17 | 8 |
|
They're not so rare out here, but then G&L is just up the road a
piece...
\sun-burned in So CA...
|
145.33 | 8*P | NAVY5::SDANDREA | Tonya Harding shot the Deputy | Tue Mar 01 1994 07:20 | 6 |
| -< life is so 'rough' here >-
izzat a reference to the earthquakes, or are ya just rubbin' our winter
laden noses in yer sunshine?
8*)
|
145.34 | | NWACES::HICKERNELL | Good rhythms to bad rubbish | Tue Mar 01 1994 08:00 | 10 |
| re: 31
Well, yeah, since they're so hard to find I have to at least *try* one.
Of course, Daddy's also just got in this Firebird bass... %^)
re: 32
I figured G&L instruments were probably more common Out There.
Dave
|
145.35 | opportunities everywhere! | EZ2GET::STEWART | Death before disco | Tue Mar 01 1994 09:06 | 10 |
|
I guess I was just tweakin' y'all, a little bit. Actually, the G&L
factory show room probably experienced a good bit of shaking in that
last little rollercoaster ride -- maybe there are some scratch 'n' dent
savings to be had?
I'm not gonna be the one to find out, though... But I wonder if the
Rickenbacker store has any specials? Somehow, I just wouldn't expect a
Rick to survive a significant drop...
|
145.36 | G&L Legacy - a joy to pick up and play | BIGQ::DCLARK | I do believe I've had enough | Mon Mar 21 1994 09:58 | 8 |
| I succumbed to an acute GTS attack friday and traded my American
Standard Strat in on a G&L Legacy. What an amazing guitar! It is
very lightweight but the wood is very resonant; it feels like an
acoustic guitar when you play the notes. It's a lot easier to feel
'connected' to your playing. The pickups are Duncans and sound great;
very scooped mid-range sort of Hendrixy sound. The fretboard is a lot
flatter than on the Strat; I think that's an improvement. Top it
off with a metallic burgundy-fade-to-black paint job. I'm psyched!
|
145.37 | curious.... | NAVY5::SDANDREA | Plonker | Mon Mar 21 1994 11:37 | 6 |
| re: Dave's G&L Legacy........
Does it have a strat style body? Rosewood or maple fretboard? How
many frets? Locking nut? Pickup switch style? Etc?
steve
|
145.38 | | BIGQ::DCLARK | I do believe I've had enough | Mon Mar 21 1994 11:55 | 13 |
| re .-1
Strat style, rosewood, 22 fret neck (not sure of radius, but would
guess 12" or 16"), no locking nut (I rarely if ever use a whammy
anyways, so no big deal). Basically a straight-ahead Strat style
guitar, although Rick C. tells me the tone controls may work on
different pickup configurations than on a standard Strat.
question ... does blocking the trem (i.e. putting a piece of wood
in back of the trem unit so it doesn't pull forward when you bend
a string) affect the tone?
- Dave
|
145.39 | I think so.... | NAVY5::SDANDREA | Plonker | Mon Mar 21 1994 12:12 | 9 |
| >> does blocking the trem affect the tone?
I have heard the answer is yes....increasing sustain (if that is
considered 'tone') by increasing the string 'contact' with the body of
the axe.
ask Danny or Brian or Rick........
sd
|
145.40 | Hard-tail Strat. | MILKWY::JACQUES | Vintage taste, reissue budget | Mon Mar 21 1994 13:12 | 14 |
| As Steve said, blocking the trem will increase sustain. I believe the
reason is because with a floating tremelo, the bridge gives a little
as the string vibrates. This causes the tension on the string to
be reduced. Reduced tension = reduced sustain.
I never bothered to block the trem on my Strat, but I did install
a couple extra springs. This causes the bridge to sit flat against
the top of the guitar, and it takes more umph to wiggle the trem.
It has a similar effect to blocking the trem, without disabling
it completely. I'm not sure if this is possible on a G&L.
Enjoy!
Mark
|
145.41 | yowsa! Love those flat fretboards! | BIGQ::DCLARK | thankful for my country home | Wed Apr 06 1994 10:51 | 3 |
| FWIW, I had Rich MacDuff do a set-up on the G&L. Action is now
3/64" on the high E and 4/64" on the low E at the 22nd fret, and
the strings don't fret out when you bend them!
|
145.42 | Cluck for Hours | BIGQ::DCLARK | thankful for my country home | Mon Apr 11 1994 12:47 | 3 |
| FInally got a chance to try out my G&L cranked up with nobody home.
The neck pickup has unbelievable cluck, more than even the LP Custom
I used to play.
|
145.43 | C L U C K ? ? ? | EZ2GET::STEWART | Fight fire with marshmallows | Mon Apr 11 1994 13:43 | 7 |
|
This sounds like something country players would shooting for...
This must have something to do with chicken pickin', right?
|
145.44 | L-2000 bass | NWACES::HICKERNELL | Good rhythms to bad rubbish | Fri Jun 24 1994 13:22 | 44 |
| I never did finish my string about looking for a bass, so I'll do it
real quick now. I was waiting until my new axe came in, but it hasn't
yet so I'll have to quote the catalog and describe the demo I played.
I ordered an L-2000. This was described to me (by Rick Calcagni) as
Leo Fender's last update on the Precision bass, his previous update
being the Music Man. It's shaped like a P-bass, but has two big low
impedance humbuckers with exposed polepieces. These are active
pickups, but also work in passive mode.
There are three knobs (volume, treble, bass) and three mini toggle
switches (pickup select, series/parallel, passive/active/active+treble).
The 21-fret neck is a very comfortable P-bass style, but not as wide as
most Fenders; it plays very nicely. The G&L catalog says it's 1-3/4"
wide at the nut, but the ones I've seen were actually 1-5/8" wide,
which is OK by me.
G&L makes two basic bass necks, a less tapered P-style neck and a more
tapered J-style one. Each model they offer has one of these as its
standard neck. Although the catalog doesn't say so, any of them
can be ordered with the nonstandard neck for a nominal fee. Each bass
can also be ordered with either a maple or rosewood board at no extra
charge. Lefthanded versions are available for a fee.
The instrument's forte is versatility. In passive mode it sounds quite
"vintage". In active mode it's very contemporary. This versatility
appealed to me, as I can only afford to buy one good bass, and this one
will give me lots of options. I also liked the bypass mode, which
means the instrument is not completely battery dependant; I guess I'm
sort of a belt-and-suspenders kind of guy anyway.
The L-2000, along with the Tele-shaped ASAT, is G&L's top of the line
4-string. I ordered mine in Cherryburst with a rosewood board, just
like the G&L ads in BP; it seems I like red guitars. I ordered it
through The Music Factory in Salem, NH; they told me it would be 4-6
weeks for delivery, and as of today it's been 8, but hopefully it'll be
in today.
My thanks to Rick Calcagni, Fred Abatelli and Brian Rost (through his
past notes) for recommending this bass to me. I'm sure I'll love it,
if I ever get the darn thing.
Dave
|
145.45 | desert island bass? | RICKS::CALCAGNI | really useful engine | Fri Jun 24 1994 14:00 | 8 |
| I've had an old L-2000 hanging around for about 8 years now. It's solid,
versatile, and dependable. I've used it for recording, gigs, jams,
practicing, in all kinds of musical situations; it never fails to
deliver. It's not as flashy, sexy, or cool as other basses I've owned
but it's probably the best money I've ever spent on an instrument.
Have fun with it Dave.
|
145.46 | I'm sold | RICKS::CALCAGNI | really useful engine | Tue Jun 28 1994 09:12 | 15 |
| Well, I got the chance to hear Dave Clark's new Legacy Strat in person
last night. This is a GREAT axe. Often a guitar sounds good in the
store or in your living room, but you never really know what it's going
to do until you get it in a band situation. The Legacy sounded terrfic.
Dave and I played together on a similar project last summer and at the
time he was using a Fender American Standard, so I can sort of compare
the two; same band, same tunes. The Legacy sounds better, cuts through
better, and just seems to do more of what you expect from a traditional
style Strat. The bridge position in particular is worthy of mention;
it just has this incredible, Tele-like bite. All positions have a rich,
full shimmer. Even with heavy Rat distortion, the difference was marked.
Imo, the Legacy sets a new high water mark for modern "vintage" Strats.
/rick
|
145.47 | :-) | BIGQ::DCLARK | Collective Soul | Tue Jun 28 1994 12:36 | 3 |
| re .-1
uh, yeah, I agree with Rick
|
145.48 | | LEDS::ORSI | Cuz I FELT like it...OK? | Tue Jun 28 1994 12:54 | 7 |
|
Hey Rick,
It could be the amp you know. 8^)
Neal
|
145.49 | Dave finally got his 2000 | WEDOIT::ABATELLI | | Fri Jul 01 1994 08:13 | 12 |
| I jammed with Dave Hickernell last Tuesday night! He brought over his
new G&L 2000! What a beautiful guitar, what great tone this bass had...
I got hit with the GTS bug really fast after I played it for a few
minutes. Gosh... what a great bass!
Dave sends his best wishes to all in the conference! He had a job
interview last Tuesday that looks good, but doesn't like the idea of
driving to Waltham, Mass. from Derry, NH every day. I think he'll keep
looking for something closer, but he's doing well none-the-less.
Rock on,
Fred
|
145.50 | going down the line... | POWDML::BUCKLEY | Venimus, Vidimus, Coastimus | Fri Jul 01 1994 15:48 | 2 |
| Geez -- I'm jamming with Dave Hinkernell NEXT week ... he sure does get
around!! ;')
|
145.51 | ditto on .49 | RICKS::CALCAGNI | This is a dream band: no guitars | Mon Aug 22 1994 15:15 | 15 |
| Got together with Dave Hickernell last week and checked out the new
bass. Dave's just got himself a new job (starts today) and he's
pretty excited about it.
Anyway, we did a side-by-side with Dave's new L-2000 and my "vintage"
one. The neck is slightly narrower and thicker on the newer bass;
the old L-2000 is like a 60's P-bass profile and the new one more like
a 70's P-bass style. They got rid of the metal plate under the control
knobs, so that they are now mounted directly on the body; much more
attractive than the old style imo. Otherwise, these basses play and
sound almost identical. If anything, the new bass sounded funkier and
more in-your-face, but that could be because the strings on mine are
about 5 years old!
/rick
|
145.52 | | OCTAVE::VIGNEAULT | Minister of chiles | Mon May 08 1995 12:03 | 4 |
|
Are there any G&L dealers in the Worcester area ?
Lv
|
145.53 | | RICKS::CALCAGNI | more zip stupid juice | Mon May 08 1995 12:15 | 8 |
| Daddy's (in Shrewsbury and elsewhere) is one; the Shrew store usually
has a nice selection in stock.
Speaking of which, I had the chance to play someone's killer '63 Strat
this weekend and was noticing how much it reminded me of some of the
Legacy Strats I've tried (Dave Clark's, for instance). If you're into
that vintage vibe, I think the G&Ls are the way to go.
|
145.54 | GTS is knocking on my door | OCTAVE::VIGNEAULT | Minister of chiles | Mon May 08 1995 12:23 | 6 |
|
Thanks Rick. I heard the Legacy's were pretty nice gits. Do you have
an idea what they're getting for these ? I saw them advertised in
Manny's mailorder for ~$680 with case.
Lv
|
145.55 | satisfied customer | BIGQ::DCLARK | baseball's back; who cares? | Mon May 08 1995 12:28 | 6 |
| I got my Legacy last year for $549 including case at Daddy's in
Shrewsbury. All the ones I tried were nice; the one I got was
the nicest. To me the maple neck ones sounded a little thin,
the rosewood ones sounded fuller.
- Dave
|
145.56 | | RICKS::CALCAGNI | more zip stupid juice | Mon May 08 1995 12:33 | 4 |
| Don't know if this is true or not, but I've heard that since GP started
raving about both the Teles and the Strats prices have gone up.
$549 is a way cool deal for one of these.
|
145.57 | George and Leo | MILKWY::JACQUES | Vintage taste, reissue budget | Mon May 08 1995 14:06 | 4 |
| I was in Daddy's today at lunchtime. They have several of the
G&L Strat-style guitars. One that caught my eye has a cherry-
sunburst finish. Glad to see the ole GTS bug is rubbing off!
|
145.58 | use Homer Simpson voice | BIGQ::DCLARK | baseball's back; who cares? | Mon May 08 1995 14:39 | 1 |
| mmmmmmmm .... cherryburst
|
145.59 | Get plenty of rest, and keep a hand on the neck .. | OCTAVE::VIGNEAULT | Minister of chiles | Wed May 10 1995 06:27 | 33 |
|
Well, GTS has been successfully treated once again. I looked at the
Legacy's which are beautiful guitars, and they sound & play great. In
the end, I didn't end up buying a Legacy.
Instead, I ended up buying an absolutely beautiful G&L S-500. This is
one of their top-end strat type guitars. The body is made of swamp
ash, and the neck is maple with a rosewood fretboard. The pickups are
Leo Fenders own design and are manufactured by G&L, not Seymour Duncan.
It has chrome knobs ala Tele, and a dual fulcrum tremolo. Tuners are
locking sperzels, and it has a bone nut. There's also a mini-toggle
which I think functions as a coil splitter. It seems to provide a
brighter sound when you want it. The bass & treble controls function
as bass cut / treble cut as in the Legacy Special, and are both 500k
pots. The pick guard is 3 ply, white in color. The guitar is finished
in a transparent Honey premier finish, which actually looks like a mid
brown color. At first, I wasn't crazy about the color, but it really
grows on you, and will age nicely. The wood grain is gorgeous on this
guitar ! I haven't had the chance to really crank it up yet, but it
has a really sweet sound, and can scream when you want it to. It plays
like a dream, and I think there's still room to improve the action.
I'll probably bring it down to MacDuffs and have Rich set it up for me.
They replaced the strings, installed strap-loks (Shecter I believe),
and setup the action and intonation.
I got home and had a Manny's catalog waiting in the mail. I called
Manny's, and I could have gotten the guitar for about $50 bucks cheaper
from them (excluding shipping). Nonetheless, I'm happy with my
purchase and the instant gratification that came along with it.
Larry
|
145.60 | | RICKS::CALCAGNI | more zip stupid juice | Wed May 10 1995 13:42 | 16 |
| I couldn't help it, the peer pressure was too much; went to Daddy's
today and checked out their lineup of G&L Strats. The cherryburst
seemed to be the nicest sounding of the the bunch, a real clucky one.
Larry, congratulations on your purchase. Mr C's had a transparent blue
maple board S-500 that I really liked; gorgeous looking, great neck and
electronics. Unfortunately, this one weighed a ton; otherwise, I'd
probably own it today. I don't think the mini-toggle switch is a coil
cutter. Remember, these are single coils, what's to cut? As I recall
from playing with the one at Mr C's, in forward position the switch causes
one of the pickups to be on all the time (either neck or bridge, I
can't remember which). This is a cheap and easy way allow you to get
neck/bridge and neck/middle/bridge pickup configurations.
/rick
|
145.61 | | KDX200::COOPER | Revolution calling! | Wed May 10 1995 14:07 | 3 |
| Rick,
Are you sure they aren't "stacked" hums?
|
145.62 | I've probably got the switch wrong ... | OCTAVE::VIGNEAULT | Minister of chiles | Wed May 10 1995 14:25 | 7 |
|
The swampash body isn't all that heavy. I was comparing it with the
Odyssey I have, and they felt about the same. It's really quite
comfortable to play. As to the mini-switch, I thought the sales dude
said it was a coil-tap or a coil splitter, but I forget exactly.
Lv
|
145.63 | | RICKS::CALCAGNI | more zip stupid juice | Wed May 10 1995 14:35 | 5 |
| To the best of my knowledge, those are true single coils. There was
some literature with the Mr C's S-500 that described the mystic
workings of that switch, should be easy to check if yours works the
same.
|
145.64 | | USPMLO::DESROCHERS | Was this ignorance or bliss... | Wed May 10 1995 14:43 | 6 |
|
Rick and peer pressure... did you buy it ???
If not, it doesn't count...
|
145.65 | but don't think I wasn't tempted | RICKS::CALCAGNI | more zip stupid juice | Wed May 10 1995 14:59 | 2 |
| Ha! No, I left this one for you Tom. C'mon, you NEED a Strat mon!
|
145.66 | repeat after me, rick | POWDML::BUCKLEY | | Wed May 10 1995 15:18 | 1 |
| GTS GTS GTS GTS GTS
|
145.67 | Mini-switch functions ... | OCTAVE::VIGNEAULT | Minister of chiles | Thu May 11 1995 06:00 | 14 |
|
The mystery mini-switch allows you to select a couple of additional
pickup configurations that you don't get on a standard strat. With
the mini switch down the 5 way selector operates as a normal strat.
With the mini switch up, you get the following configs:
Selector Switch Neck Middle Bridge
--------------- ---- ------ ------
Up (1) * off *
2 * * *
3 off * off [same as with mini down]
4 * * * [same as position 2]
5 * off * [same as position 1]
|
145.68 | | USPMLO::DESROCHERS | Was this ignorance or bliss... | Thu May 11 1995 06:43 | 15 |
|
re: Rick and me needing a strat... well, I'm not really a
Strat guy but I must admit that Bob Conroy's Strat sounds
terrific thru the Blues DeVille.
A tele's another matter though. And you say those G&L tele's
are great, eh?
Man, it's weird how I can just lust over tons of electrics and
have a less than zero interest in acoustics. If the only
guitars were acoustics, I wouldn't even play.
Tom
|
145.69 | | OCTAVE::VIGNEAULT | Minister of chiles | Thu May 11 1995 06:57 | 17 |
|
Tom,
You just haven't met the right acoustic yet. They have a bunch of
G&L Asat's down at Gordon Music in Worcester. They look like nice
axes. I've never been a big Fender fan, and I've never owned a Fender
style guitar, but I've really been enjoying the new G&L. It's a totally
different feel than any of the other gits I've owned, and I swear you
could slice bread with a loud chord on the bridge pickup. Tons of
tonal flexibility, and those Steely Dan solos sound right on tone wise.
I'll bet this axe would really sing through your blues Deville. My
next guitar acquisition may just be an Asat, but that's a way's down
the road.
Lv
|
145.70 | ASATs you say? | RICKS::CALCAGNI | more zip stupid juice | Thu May 11 1995 08:28 | 9 |
| re .67
yeah, that looks familiar. I guess there's some way that the
mini-toggle always forces *both* bridge and neck on when either
is selected. Would be interesting to see how it's wired up to do
this. In any event, a cool switch.
btw, where is Gordon's? Directions?
|
145.71 | | OCTAVE::VIGNEAULT | Minister of chiles | Fri May 12 1995 06:13 | 23 |
|
Gordon's is in downtown Worcester in the old Denholm's building.
Parking can be difficult. If you know Worcester at all, it's
right on Main Street near city hall.
_____ ___ (parking)
| |
| | [xx]Denholm's bldg
_____| |________________________| |____
Main St ------> Towards Lincoln Square
_________ ___________________
| |<-Franklin St | |<- Front St
[city hall]
I brought the S-500 down yesterday and had em tweak the action. What
a sweet sounding guitar ! Of all the guitars I've owned, including the
PRS Custom, I think this guitar plays the best and has the best tonal
capabilities. It's really difficult to put it down. Consider me very
pleased with my purchase.
Lv
|
145.72 | Not to be confuzed with "Sweat-Jam" | SANDZ::JACQUES | Vintage taste, reissue budget | Fri May 12 1995 08:16 | 20 |
| I've only been in Gordon's music once, and to tell you the truth
I wasn't impressed. Perhaps I should check them out again. If I
remember correctly, Gordon's music used to have a store on West
Boylston st, which later become Billy Lee's music. Billy Lee's
Music has been gone for 3-4 years now, and they even tore down
the building (a 3-decker) he was in.
Gordon's Music also has a store in the K-Mart plaza on the
Fitchburg/Leominster line. Every time I've driven by there,
they've been closed. I don't get down there too often, and
usually it's after hours.
I understand that Gordon's Music also has a store in the
Southbridge area somewhere.
Congrats on the G&L guitar Larry. We've got to get together one
of these dayz. Last time we got together was the volume-jam at
the Northboro F&G.
Mark
|
145.73 | | OCTAVE::VIGNEAULT | Minister of chiles | Fri May 12 1995 08:31 | 11 |
|
Actually, that was my first time in their store. It isn't real
impressive. They have an okay selection of guitars (depleted by
the only s-500 they had). They were pretty willing to negotiate
price, and they had what I wanted so it worked out well for me.
Even less impressive is Union Music. Geez, Carl has crap in there
for guitars these days. I have to wonder how he stays in business
since he's definitely not one for cutting you a great deal.
Lv
|
145.74 | Still happy | OCTAVE::VIGNEAULT | Minister of chiles | Thu May 25 1995 10:34 | 16 |
|
Well, after ~2 weeks of owning my S-500, I'm thrilled with this
guitar. Used it in my first jam situation on Sunday. Everyone
commented about what a killer sound I was getting. My basic setup
is a Hughes & Kettner Attax 100 with a PV 4x10 extension cab, and
a MidiVerb II in the effects loop. You can get some really cool,
FAT strat sounds or hot distortion as well. The neck on this guitar
seems particularly alive. In the past I never did a lot of tapping
type stuff, but it sounds great on this guitar. The action is great
and I find myself playing ALOT more since I bought it. I also bought
a Shure SM57 for recording. I'd been running a direct line out of
my amp into my 4 track prior to this. I'm amazed at how much better
the miked sound is on tape ! So all in all, I feel rejuvenated
musically speaking.
Lv
|
145.75 | Truss rod adjustment on Legacy | DECWIN::RALTO | It's a small third world after all | Tue May 30 1995 10:33 | 24 |
| I'm going to need to adjust the truss rod on a G&L Legacy to try
to get rid of some fret buzz. I've done all of the other things
related to setup, as described in the manual, but I'm still getting
a fair amount of buzz (especially on the upper frets) even with the
action raised to 3/32. So, a question for any Legacy owners out there
who know something about this:
If I'm standing at the headstock with the guitar facing away from
me, and I've got the Allen wrench in the adjustment nut, and I want
to decrease the tension in the neck (i.e., let it "bow" a little
more, which is what I want to do, I think [?]), should I turn the
wrench counter-clockwise? Should I loosen the strings first? By
the way, it looks pretty awkward turning that wrench with the 3rd
and 4th strings in the way...
I figured I'd ask before doing it, having read many horror stories
in here about cracked necks and the like. I suppose I could take
it to where I bought it (they offer free lifetime setup if you
bought it there), but I thought I'd try it myself first, since it
doesn't look like it should be all that difficult. Once you get
the directions right, that is... :-)
Thanks,
Chris
|
145.76 | Should Not Be A Problem | BSS::MESSAGE | My name is Bill & I'm a head case... | Tue May 30 1995 12:07 | 12 |
| I don't have one of these guitars, but I sincerely doubt that they
would use a counter-clockwise thread.....
Proper trussrod adjustment is done with the strings at tension. Never
adjust more that 90 degrees (a quarter turn at a time, and give the
neck some time to settle at the new counter tension setting. To loosen
the trussrod; while looking down at the trussrod adjustment device
(usually an internal hex head), turn counterclockwise (to your left).
To tighten the trussrod, turn clockwise (to your right).
Regards,
Bill Message
|
145.77 | Get off my head! | COMETZ::JACQUES | Vintage taste, reissue budget | Tue May 30 1995 12:10 | 13 |
| First of all, don't stand "at the headstock". The neck is not made
to withstand the body weight of the average guitar player. %^)
To loosen the truss rod, turn it counter clockwise. This will allow
the neck to relax a little and should eliminate buzzing in the higher
frets. I'd start by turning it 1/4 - 1/2 turn. It is not necessary to
loosen the strings for this, but it doesn't hurt. It's more critical
to loosen the strings when tightening the truss rod, as more tension
is being applied.
Good luck with George and Leo!
Mark
|
145.78 | for what it's worth | BIGQ::DCLARK | giddyup, giddyup 409 | Tue May 30 1995 12:25 | 6 |
| FWIW, my G&L owner's manual says to make truss rod adjustments with
the strings at tension. I find that loosening the strings requires
multiple passes to get the neck relief just right, since the neck
curves a little bit more when you re-tighten the strings. But I'm
*really* picky about feel.
|
145.79 | | RICKS::CALCAGNI | more zip stupid juice | Tue May 30 1995 12:59 | 13 |
| I agree that all truss rod adjustments are best done under full
string tension. One trick I've seen many pro guitar mechanics
do when tightening the truss rod (and the generally recommended
way from what I hear) is to momentarily reduce tension on the neck
by pulling back on the headstock slightly; not much, just a little
back pressure can have enough of an affect. On older guitars with
sticky adjusters, it's often absolutely necessary to do this to get
the adjuster to even move. The trickiest part of this is simultaneously
bracing the body, pulling back on the neck, and turning the wrench;
one of those times you could use an extra hand.
/rick
|
145.80 | | OCTAVE::VIGNEAULT | Minister of chiles | Tue May 30 1995 13:03 | 8 |
|
Maybe I'm misunderstanding the problem, but would'nt he want to tighten
the truss rod in order solve this problem ? I thought that if you
loosen the neck, it tends to aggravate the type of problem he
described. It would seem to me that a clockwise turn would increase
the bow away from the strings and prevent the frets from buzzing.
Lv
|
145.81 | | MPGS::MARKEY | The bottom end of Liquid Sanctuary | Tue May 30 1995 13:06 | 11 |
|
Nope Larry, you're backwards... well, you're not, just your
explanation is... :-)
By increasing the tension -- turning the nut clockwise -- the
neck is flattened. By decreasing the tension -- turning counter-
clockwise -- the neck is bowed. The flatter the neck, the more
likely fret buzz becomes, but the action is "lighter". So,
it's a trade-off between buzz and light action.
-b
|
145.82 | Stand back, kids, Dad's going to turn this now | DECWIN::RALTO | It's a small third world after all | Tue May 30 1995 15:06 | 15 |
| Thanks for all the help, everyone... it makes sense that the correct
thing would be to turn it counter-clockwise, and I'd read all of the
other related notes on this topic here, but I wanted to make sure
that there wasn't some weird G&L-specific stuff going on in the neck
that I didn't know about.
The action/buzz trade-off is interesting... I'm hoping that I can
get it down to 1/16" with minimal buzz. It's "okay" the way it
is now, in a mediocre kind of way, but I think it could be better.
I'll give it a try tonight. If you hear a loud "snap" across
the New England area, you'll know that I did it wrong. :-)
Thanks again,
Chris
|
145.83 | he's goin in full throttle | RICKS::CALCAGNI | more zip stupid juice | Tue May 30 1995 15:22 | 2 |
| may the force of Leo be with you my son...
|
145.84 | Okay, I can take off my goggles now | DECWIN::RALTO | It's a small third world after all | Thu Jun 01 1995 14:10 | 9 |
| Soooo, I didn't break the neck, great! The Force of Leo must have
been with me after all.
On the other hand, while it's better, I've still got some buzzzz,
so I think I might take it somewhere to get it setup; it might need
some frets to be levelled or whatever.
Thanks again,
Chris
|