T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
342.1 | GP goin down the drain | ERASER::BUCKLEY | IROC, Therefore I am | Mon Sep 21 1987 15:08 | 13 |
| I really don't like guitar player! It has really become an `ad'
mag.
I like Guitar World. They offer some good tips on playing while
providing real indepth interviews and equipment lists of players.
Guitar for the practicing musician used to contain bogus interviews
and bogus sheet music, but they are getting better (hiring better
transcriptionists, writers, etc.).
I get a few overseas guitar mags also, and those two remain the
best of the lot (my opinion).
wjb
|
342.2 | Big Business !!! | MORRIS::JACQUES | | Mon Sep 21 1987 16:30 | 40 |
| As far as other guitar magazines being better than Guitar Player,
I think that's a lot of bull caca. Guitar for the practicing musician
is no where near the quality of guitar player. Guitar world is close,
but no cigar. I find Guitar for the practicing musician is full
of heavey medalist, new wavers, and punk rockers. In case you hadn't
noticed the teenage head bangers, and punk rockers out there make up
about 90% of all record, musical intrument, and magazine sales,
period. Naturally, record companies, musical instrument manufacturers,
music stores, and publishers cannot deny this simple fact of life.
They are gonna market products that will be sellable to the majority
of customers out there, period.
Guitar Player magazine is intended for the serious guitarists,
regardless of age, or style, but often times does not appeal to
the "Kids" out there. Unfortunately, those are the people you
have to satisfy if you are in the music business today.
Go into most music stores these days. What do you see on display?
Jackson Carvels, Randy Rhodes guitars, Kramers, Strat copies with
the hockey stick headstock, Marshall amps, leopard skin guitar
finishes and the like. The more radical, the easier it sells.
When I was 15 years old, I bought an Ampeg Dan Armstrong clear
plexiglass guitar because I thought it looked cool. To my untrained
ear it sounded good. I also used to by the magazine hit parader
which was not at all intended for musicians. I also used to buy
an amp because it was big, thinking I would look cool with this
huge amp behind me. What did I know ? I was just a dumb kid like
everyone else back then.
Not to dump on people who like heavey medal. It just so happens
that what they see as non-conformance, to hell with society,
lets party music, is the most commercially succesful (and pro-
big business) music out there right now. Big bisiness sees this
and loves it because they feel they can market all the Ossy Osbourne,
Van Halen, Iron Moron, Leaf Leaper music they want, and they are
gonna get rich off of it.
PLEASE, NO FLAMES, just my opinion again !!!!
Mark Jacques
|
342.3 | | ERASER::BUCKLEY | IROC, Therefore I am | Mon Sep 21 1987 17:16 | 10 |
| Well, my opinion is that Guitar player does not offer enough good
advice for guitarists looking to improve their playing/technique.
I think their questions collum along with the Tommy Tedesco thing
are pretty lame. Who cares how much moolah TT made last month??
I've found Guitar World to have some real useful suggestions for
playing guitar. The Tony MacAlpine collum esp.
To each his own.
wjb
|
342.4 | More on GP and GFTPM | BSS::JENSEN | | Mon Sep 21 1987 19:08 | 26 |
| I'm really undecided about the various mags out there. I currently receive
Guitar Player and Guitar for the practicing musician. They're both not
bad for what they are. But neither of them provide me with exactly what I
want. I probably don't know exactly what I want, but they're not it.
I like the idea behind Guitar FTPM in that they provide transcriptions for
lots of music - several songs per issue. And they attempt to provide
multiple parts (guitar,bass,keyboards). Unfortunately, as was mentioned
previously, the transcriptions are not generally of music I'm *real*
interested in. However, I've been able to learn something from every issue
- albeit some issues more than others.
Guitar Player has some interesting stuff on it's soundpage from time to
time. And I really like the idea of a recording of the example scores. It
helps tremendously when you can hear how its supposed to sound - Unless, of
course, you have incredible sight reading ability and you can just "hear"
it from looking at the score - not me! It also has a couple of pretty good
columns. But I agree with .3 when it comes to Tommy Tedesco's wages - I
just can't give squat about that.
I just bought a copy of Guitar World yesterday, and haven't gone through it
in detail so I've no opinion, yet. However, it appears to be pretty good
on the surface.
steve
|
342.5 | notesMaybe I was hasty !! | MORRIS::JACQUES | | Tue Sep 22 1987 09:40 | 26 |
| I have subscriptions to Guitar Player, Frets and Audio Mag.
Lately I haven't been spending much time reading Audio, so
I think I'm gonna subscribe to something else next time.
I have to admit, since I don't subscribe to Guitar World,
or GFTPM, I don't see them every month, so I am not really
in a good position to pass jugement on them. But one thing
is for sure, I'll never give up my GP or Frets subscriptions
unless they really go down hill. I have bought several issues
of both Guitar world and GFTPM off the shelf. I ended up giving
all the GFTPM's to my 12 year old nephew. Guitar world isn't
bad, I just thought their magazine was not as polished as
GP. Maybe I will subscribe to Guitar World next time as well
as GP & Frets. I find every month I end up disappointed
because I read both magazines in a week and wait all month
for the next issues to arrive in the mail.
I have one problem with subscribing to these mags though.
By the time I get them in the mail, the soundpage is not
playable because the magazine has been folded. I even installed
a new mailbox so the mailman would have no excuse for folding
them. We have a different mailman every other day and they
insist on folding magazines. It almost tempts me to let my
subscriptions run out and then buy them off the rack monthly.
I beleive I would get them earlier that way as well. By the
time I get them in the mail, they have been on the shelf a
week already.
|
342.6 | | CSSE::CLARK | I'm not Beethoven | Tue Sep 22 1987 09:49 | 14 |
| I still like GP. I haven't real Guitar World in a long time. I bought
a few when they first started (maybe early '81) and they were kind
of the National Enquirer of Guitar magazines back then. Maybe they've
cleaned up their act since then.
I don't like what I see as a general trend in these magazines -
the drift from 'feeling' to 'technique'. I used to be able to
read articles in GP that were almost mystical in describing the
relationship between the performer and his/her instrument. Now
I read 'yeah, I run my Charvel through blah blah signal chain
chorus delay blah blah'. All the technical end of the music and
none of the spiritual end. I guess that's the eighties for ya, though.
-Dave
|
342.7 | for those with wider interests | VISUAL::MILLING | | Tue Sep 22 1987 10:34 | 9 |
| There doesn't seem to be anything published in the U.S. for those
of us who are also interested in the classical guitar. Two
competing publications from the U.K., however, are right on target.
One is GUITAR and the other is CLASSICAL GUITAR. I subscribe to
both.
Contact me directly for details.
Bob
|
342.8 | You're really looking for something with NARROWER coverage | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Dave | Tue Sep 22 1987 10:47 | 15 |
| re: for those with "wider" interests
Wider?
> There doesn't seem to be anything published in the U.S. for those
> of us who are also interested in the classical guitar.
If you're looking for a magazine that is entirely devoted to classical
guitar, you're right. However, every issue of Guitar Player has
a number of things of interest to classical guitar players (including
a monthly column).
I think Guitar Player covers a very wide mix of styles.
db
|
342.9 | Who publishes Guitar World? | FTMUDG::HENDERSON | | Tue Sep 22 1987 13:03 | 12 |
| I have been receiving Guitar Player for a number of years and
feel they do a good job in covering most styles and genre. I have
not been able to find Guitar World or Guitar FTPM in the Colorado
Springs area, only GPI publications. (Guitar Player and Frets)
Could someone out there let me know who publishes Guitar World
and Guitar FTPM.
I do agree with the replys that pointed out some of the short
comings of Guitar Player, i.e. Tommy T. and the Pro's reply but
they have carried a number of very helpful articles on both playing
technique and guitar repair.
Don
|
342.10 | Other GPI Books | MORRIS::JACQUES | | Tue Sep 22 1987 14:32 | 7 |
| GPI also offers a mutitude of high quality books as well as their
magazines Guitar Player, and Frets. Don't they also have something
to do with contemporary keyboards and modern drummer. At any rate
they have published the Guitar Player book, American Guitars,
and a multitude of other reference books.
|
342.11 | | MTBLUE::BOTTOM_DAVID | Not so famous rock star | Tue Sep 29 1987 08:55 | 14 |
| I quit subsciribing to GP about 8 years ago and Haven't looked at
one since...they had lost so much quality that it was a waste of
money. At that time most interview articles contained primarily
what amps/effects joe rock star used and where he set the knobs.
Yucch! As if I wanted to sound like eveyone else. They also had
a habit at that time of starting an interesting column and then
it would just sort of die on the vine with month after month of
beating around the bush.
AS for the rest...heavy metal seems to rule a number of them...so
I got a subscription to muscian and gave up on trying to find a
good guitar mag.
dave
|
342.12 | guitar in the '80's | IMGAWN::MOREAU | | Tue Sep 29 1987 14:53 | 3 |
| It seems to me that GP mag has gone in the direction of "Golly
gee kids look at this swell new whizmo" or "Watch the looks
you get when you pull off this scale".
|
342.13 | Who says, you can't have it all !!! | MORRIS::JACQUES | | Fri Oct 02 1987 15:44 | 29 |
| I personally don't mind seeing a lot of advertisements in Guitar
Player since I like to keep up with new products out there. What
I do mind is seeing the same advertisers and the same ads month
after month. The It's new is interesting too, especially after
the NAMM show each year. I always enjoy specials on vintage guitars
and reviews of guitar shows from around the country, since I don't
have the ways and means to fly around and see these shows. I do
notice that some months are especially boring compared to other
months. For example, a couple of months ago they devoted almost
an entire issue to strings. Really now, who is interested in reading
100 pages on strings. Especially when it is common knowledge among
guitarists that there are only a couple of companies out there that
actually make guitar strings. Everyone else simply puts their name
on them.
If you really want to keep up with the changing world of guitars
you cannot simply sit back in your easy chair and read a magazine.
You have to go out to the clubs, concerts, music stores, seminars,
and interact with other musicians to get exposure to it all. I
generally try to nail down a product completely before I go out
and make an investment. Otherwise, I end not dissatisfied with my
purchases. At this point in time I find out more useful and interesting
information from reading this notes file than all the magazines
and books I buy. When you think about it, we are all pretty lucky
to have this notes file at our disposal.
Mark Jacques
|
342.14 | | DOBRO::SIMON | Blown away in the country...Vermont | Fri Oct 02 1987 16:08 | 9 |
| re: -.1
> When you think about it, we are all pretty lucky
> to have this notes file at our disposal.
amen!
|
342.15 | GFTPM collector's Issue ?? | MORRIS::JACQUES | | Wed Oct 14 1987 16:18 | 16 |
| The other day I was in a Music store and spotted an issue of
Guitar For The Practicing Musician labeled Special Collector's
Issue. Being interested in anything collectable, I picked up a
copy and began leafing through it. 80% of the magazine was sheet
music. There was not one article on collectable instruments. I
ended up putting it back on the rack.
I guess it all boils down to what you want from a guitar magazine.
I for one, have no use for a magazine full of sheet music. Most
modern songs can be picked up by ear for people who want to play
them. I prefer a magazine like Guitar Player. I just wish they
wouldn't do so much redundant stuff. Like carrying the same exact
ad for 6 months straight.
Mark Jacques
|
342.16 | FYI | PNO::HEISER | I hate it when it is 116�F!!! | Mon Jun 19 1989 15:38 | 7 |
| I was talking with a custom acoustic guitar craftsman this morning.
He mentioned that he has been interviewed by "FRETS" magazine in
the past. I asked about that magazine since it is so difficult
to find. It seems that they are folding and that their last issue
is this month.
Mike
|
342.17 | | COOKIE::WITHERS | Short-Term Profits is an Oxymoron | Mon Jun 19 1989 15:50 | 4 |
| If Frets is folding, that's news 'cause I just got one in the mail along
with the "please renew your subscrition as it runs out in 3 months and it
takes a while to get through our computers" reminder...
|
342.19 | | ASAHI::COOPER | It's just me and my Z | Tue Jun 20 1989 11:46 | 3 |
| Yeah, I think Frets and GP are quite closely related...
jc
|
342.20 | Frets is no more. | POBOX::DAVIA | And the bearded lady said to me... | Wed Jul 05 1989 17:28 | 9 |
|
I just called GPI publications hoping to subcribe to GP and FRETS.
The guy who took the call said that FRETS was indeed folding and
that July would be the last month the magazine was sent out.
He said that another publication called Bass Player would be coming
out.
Phil
|
342.21 | | FROST::SIMON | Birds can't row boats | Fri Jul 07 1989 10:23 | 14 |
|
RE: > I just called GPI publications hoping to subcribe to GP and FRETS.
> The guy who took the call said that FRETS was indeed folding and
>that July would be the last month the magazine was sent out.
That's funny, I just got my July issue of FRETS in the mail yesterday.
Reading the Editorial intro there was no mention of no more FRETS.
There were still subscription postcards and advertisements in it.
I find it had to believe that they would just go away without warning
to the regular readers!..:-(
_gary
|
342.22 | | PNO::HEISER | bash-n-the code | Fri Jul 07 1989 17:13 | 8 |
| Could someone post the number for GPI? I'm interested in getting
"Frets" and "Guitar Player".
Also, isn't there a mag called "Guitar for the Practicing Musician"?
If so, who publishes it?
Thanks,
Mike
|
342.23 | Subscription Info. | 38012::JMINVILLE | I'm a man, you're just a kid | Sun Jul 09 1989 12:19 | 11 |
| Subscriptions for Guitar Player call (408)-446-1088. This might
be GPI's number, I'm not sure (so you might be able to ask about
the future of Frets as well). $23.95 per year for GP.
Guitar For the practicing musician is published by Cherry Lane
Music Company, Inc. 110 Midland Avenue, Port Chester, NY 10573-
1490. Couldn't find a phone number. $24.90 per year. Or,
Guitar For The Practicing Musician , P.O. Box 889, Farmingdale,
NY 11737-9989.
joe.
|
342.24 | Interesting fact | 29067::G_HOUSE | Be excellent to everyone! | Sun Jul 09 1989 19:57 | 12 |
| Kind of an interesting side note, I saw an ad in "The String Instrument
Craftsman" (a luthiers mag, also published by GPI) which said that
Frets would be putting out a special North American Luthier/Repair
Guide.
The ad included a really interesting demographic (referring to readers
of FRET), "Our surveys show that the average reader's collection
consists of five instruments, at least two of them worth over $2000".
Wild, huh?
Greg
|
342.25 | FRETS is no mo. | AZTECH::MADDUX | no title yet blues | Mon Jul 10 1989 13:00 | 15 |
| FRETS - goes the way of the dodo.
FRETS, which just celebrated its 10th anniversary, sent me mail last
week that if I wish, my subscription would be transferred to Guitar
Player (both magazines were published by GPI). Sad that acoustic
music finds another victim.
As a flatpicker I've enjoyed Dan Crary's column for years, (sometimes
it was the only article that I read, and by itself worth the
subscription price). Anyone know of other periodicals that publish
tablature etc... for flatpickers? Maybe we could convince Crary to
start a quarterly (ala Mandolin World News).
FRETS - RIP
|
342.26 | Gone the way of disco | COMET::LEVETT | | Mon Jul 10 1989 18:39 | 10 |
| I also received my "dear John" letter this weekend. Bummer. I
have received GUITAR PLAYER as a gift since 1975 and transfered
the subscription to FRETS when it came out (Still have all issues!)
since it was more in line with my musical tastes. The letter said
that the AUGUST issue, which will come out this month, will be the
last. I'm not sure if I keep going with GUITAR PLAYER after my
subscription runs out...At least JAZZIZ magazine I can get free
cd's!
_stew-
|
342.27 | | PNO::HEISER | bash-n-the code | Mon Jul 10 1989 20:09 | 4 |
| I wonder if FRETS would still accept orders on back issues. Anyone
know?
Mike
|
342.28 | | DEMING::CLARK | roots, wings, and oat bran | Tue Jul 11 1989 10:30 | 5 |
| re .-1
probably. GPI owns both GP and Frets, and every month you see
ads in GP for back issues.
-DAve
|
342.29 | get 'em while there hot | FROST::SIMON | Birds can't row boats | Tue Jul 11 1989 13:55 | 8 |
|
re - .2 back issues of Frets.
The July issue (which is the current and next to last ever) is still
advertising back issues, although not all issues are still available.
_gary
|
342.30 | Maybe most issues? | COMET::LEVETT | | Tue Jul 11 1989 19:21 | 4 |
| The July issue has an add (at least I think) where you can order
*all* back issues for just over $100.00.
_stew-
|
342.31 | Acoustic Guitar - new magazine | ZYDECO::MCABEE | les haricots | Mon Jan 08 1990 11:17 | 11 |
| I have a subscription to Strings, the Magazine for Players and Makers of Bowed
Instruments, and in the current issue they have an announcement for a new
magazine called Acoustic Guitar. You can get the first issue free in a trial
subscription. I forgot to remember to bring in the address, but I do happen
to have the phone number for Strings. It's the same publisher, so I assume
they can provide the details. (415)485-6946
I plan to give it a try. I've found Strings to be short on hype and long on
information, and I'm hoping for the same from Acoustic Guitar.
Bob
|
342.32 | doesthis guy like himself or what? | JURAN::CLARK | not a speck of cereal | Mon Jan 08 1990 12:45 | 3 |
| anybody besides me feel that Fripp's GP column is the most
pretentious, pseudo-intellectual cr*p they've come across
in the past 20 years?
|
342.33 | I agree with you (Dave is this you?) | BUSY::JMINVILLE | Nec Aspera Terrent | Mon Jan 08 1990 13:45 | 19 |
| I've tried to read Fripp's column a couple of times. He's
either:
1. Really intelligent (I mean it took him like the first
few columns just to introduce his concept o "craft");
2. Being very sacastic;
3. Done way too much acid;
4. All of the above.
I mean it's cool to get in touch with yourself and all that kind
of crap and his approach is very "eastern" (it seems to me), but
all you have to do is read "Sidhartha" (sp?) and "The Way of Zen"
to realize what he's talking about. Maybe I'm off base. I can't
get into his column at all.
joe.
|
342.34 | | JURAN::CLARK | not a speck of cereal | Mon Jan 08 1990 14:04 | 9 |
| re .-1
yes, it's me.
I really have made an effort to read one of his columns all the way
through (in several mental states) and have yet to succeed. It's like
reading a VAX hardware manual.
-Dave
|
342.35 | Maybe he shouldn't have done battery acid... | SUBWAY::BAUER | Evan Bauer, DBS Tech Support, NY | Tue Jan 09 1990 00:51 | 6 |
| re: -.1 At least there is content in a VAX hardware manual if you get
past the prose. I found that recent publications on Object Oriented
Databases were perfect prep for Fripp's material. :-)
- Evan
|
342.36 | More info on new magazine | ZYDECO::MCABEE | les haricots | Tue Jan 09 1990 12:12 | 11 |
|
A trial subscription is available. If you don't like the first issue, you can
cancel and owe nothing.
ACOUSTIC GUITAR
PO Box 767
San Anselmo, CA 94960
$18.00 for one year (six issues).
Bob
|
342.37 | AI Use Algebra! Techy! | VLNVAX::ALECLAIRE | | Thu Jan 11 1990 21:54 | 6 |
| Object orientation:
I read about this in AAAI mag when I got it,
83-84.
Old Tech?
Or Mathematical foundation?
|
342.38 | Fripp | SMURF::BENNETT | Blue Fingers Talk | Mon Jan 15 1990 13:02 | 7 |
|
I'm enjoying the Fripp column. It seems to me like he's telling us
a shaggy dog story and when he drops in the punch line it'll be
something like "Hey all you guitar weenies, will you please stop
taking yourselves so f*cking seriously!"
chasb
|
342.39 | | DNEAST::GREVE_STEVE | If all else fails, take a nap... | Mon Jan 15 1990 14:19 | 6 |
|
Could you be more clear??
|
342.40 | Acoustic Guitar | PNO::HEISER | welcome to the TONE ZONE | Tue Feb 19 1991 11:29 | 8 |
| There's a new guitar magazine out (yet another!). This is a bimonthly
publication called "Acoustic Guitar" from some publisher in California.
Subscription runs about $17/year.
I looked thru the latest in the store the other day. Since I have a
place in my heart for acoustics, I kinda liked it.
Mike
|
342.41 | | RAVEN1::BLAIR | and that ain't too cool.. | Tue Feb 19 1991 13:12 | 14 |
|
re: Acoustic Guitar mag...yawn. Just kidding Mikey, whatever
floats your boat. Can anyone recommend a guitar mag oriented
towards cynical, old, blues farts like myself? You know,
one with Jimi or EC on the front every issue and a Strat of
the Month fold-out? Seriously, my GP subscription ran out
and to be honest, I'm glad it did. I'd appreciate any ideas
as I've really only read GP and GW.
Thanks
-pat
P.S. I really was teasin' Mike!
|
342.42 | | PNO::HEISER | welcome to the TONE ZONE | Tue Feb 19 1991 13:17 | 1 |
| Hey Pat, try "Tiger Beat" for the blues stuff ;-)
|
342.43 | | GSRC::COOPER | Major MIDI Rack Puke (tm) | Tue Feb 19 1991 17:08 | 15 |
| There's a mag called "Metal Edge" that features Eric Clapton
doin' a fashion column...
Wagagagagagagaaaa...
Sorry. I don't think there is a mag directed towards only Blues
but it seems like GW tends to feature more than metal_shred_masters
in their articles and TAB stuff...
Of course, I don't think they are gonna cover anything "vintage"
either... According to Mike, their latest issue has the TAB to Thin
Lizzy's "Boy Are Back In Town", which is a rather vintage_metal tune.
jc
|
342.44 | just say no! | PNO::HEISER | welcome to the TONE ZONE | Tue Feb 19 1991 17:35 | 13 |
| I wrote a letter to GFTPM and complained about the lack of coverage for
non-metal guitarists. It seems that GFTPM and GW believe that the
world revolves around metal.
How's GP (Guitar Player)? does it have a better balance? I've never
subscribed and have only read a couple issues. I like some metal, but
don't need to see it on every page. Sounds like it'll take me at least 2
magazines to get my acoustic (only Guitar Extra and Acoustic Guitar to
choose from) and electric fixes.
BTW - It is the new GFTPM that has "The Boys are Back in Town".
Mike
|
342.45 | 8^) | MILKWY::SLABOUNTY | Got into a war with reality ... | Tue Feb 19 1991 17:38 | 8 |
|
RE: .44 [Mike]
Well, you're not going to learn anything about guitar play-
ing if they start posting Eric Clapton tabs!!
GTI
|
342.46 | there's value in all types of playing | PNO::HEISER | welcome to the TONE ZONE | Tue Feb 19 1991 17:43 | 5 |
| let's just say Eric Clapton served his time and generation well. He's
has a few songs that I really like, but most of his stuff just isn't my
"Cup o Tea".
Mike
|
342.47 | | GSRC::COOPER | Major MIDI Rack Puke (tm) | Tue Feb 19 1991 17:53 | 12 |
| RE: Mike
> world revolves around metal.
Well, doesn't it ?
Seriously though gang, check the back issues for the older stuff.
It's been printed once, if it had any popularity.
jc ("metal in yer butt!!")
PS - I know I saw "Layla" AND "Bad Face (?)" transcribed recently in
one rag or another...
|
342.48 | can learn from them all | PNO::HEISER | welcome to the TONE ZONE | Tue Feb 19 1991 18:10 | 4 |
| since I'm such a musical slut, I'd prefer more balance. I don't see
anything wrong with Hedges tab on one page and Satriani on the next.
Mike
|
342.50 | Not if you go by covers | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | I'll have 2 all-u-can-eat platters | Wed Feb 20 1991 08:47 | 18 |
|
> This is just my personal opinion, but I think Guitar Player is no
> better than any of the other mags on the market. It's got just as
> much metal nonsense and as many ads as the rest.
Wow!
I have to say that I disagree. I can't remember the time GFTPM or GW had
anything other than a metal musician or a VERY mainstream or
exceedingly well-known guitarist on the cover.
In the last year, Guitar Player has had all kinds of players on their
cover. In fact, I would say for every non-metal example of a GFTPM
or GW cover that doesn't fit that mold, I could find easily a dozen
GP covers of people I had barely even "heard of" before!
|
342.52 | Who are the *ADVERTISERS* targeting? | STAR::DONOVAN | | Wed Feb 20 1991 10:31 | 27 |
|
I've been thinking about this a lot lately and decided to
post here for discussion.
I think most of us agree that the magazines are geared primarily
to a metal market. I assume that audience is comprised *primarily*
(but not exclusively) of young white males from 14 to 25 or so.
HOWEVER, the equipment advertised within must exceed the pocketbook
of the audience the magazine serves, right? I mean, how many 17
year old guys are ordering up brand new Marshall setups, and complete
rack systems?
I am assuming people like us, with jobs, etc., are the top buyers of
expensive, brand new equipment. If that is the case, why aren't the
magazines featuring (on a more regular basis) the guitarists that
appeal to those of us who are a little older, and have more cash to
spend?
Am I making a fundamental judgement error here? Are there lots of
rich kids out there, or do George Lynch/Randy Covern/Warren DeMartini/
Alex Skolnick/Nuno Bettencourt/Reb Beach have a much, much larger,
cash-ready demographic than I am giving them credit for?
Any thoughts?
Brian
|
342.53 | | STOHUB::TRIGG::EATON | | Wed Feb 20 1991 11:48 | 2 |
| Could it be that they're trying to cash in on the
"don't-want-to-grow-up" syndrome?
|
342.54 | | PNO::HEISER | welcome to the TONE ZONE | Wed Feb 20 1991 12:49 | 13 |
| To me it sounds like GP is the best balanced of the lot. Anyone that
puts Michael Hedges, Satriani, Steve Vai, Eric Johnson, and Leo Kottke
on their covers has to be balanced!
Re: markets with money
I know some teens that flip burgers at McDonald's and spend every penny
they earn on guitars, amps, effects, etc. Some of the 16 year olds
spend more than I. Then there are the ones with the silver spoons in
their mouths. I wouldn't underestimate them. GIT is full of teenage
high school dropouts that sleep, eat, and breathe guitar.
Mike
|
342.55 | | RAVEN1::BLAIR | there's a red house over yonder | Wed Feb 20 1991 14:47 | 8 |
|
Some do indeed flip burgers, but I've noticed that many of these
15-24 year olds (more like 13-17) have mommies and daddies that
drive mercedes benzies. Often, I'll be sitting in the git shop
waiting for my lesson to begin, and most kids come escorted by
said m/d's. The sales are remarkable fast with no dickering.
I just look at the owner and smile. I gotta believe that the
git rags are extremely effective for this market.
|
342.56 | Acoustic Guitar | UPWARD::HEISER | welcome to the TONE ZONE | Fri Feb 22 1991 12:45 | 10 |
| Here's the address:
Acoustic Guitar
PO Box 767
San Anselmo, CA 94960
The subscription price of $17.95 is $5.75 off the newsstand price.
Canada is $7.50 more, other countries are $15 more.
Mike
|
342.57 | just say no to metal only | HAVASU::HEISER | singing thru your fingers | Tue Oct 15 1991 12:20 | 19 |
| Re: GP subscriptions
I just received my last issue of GFTPM (someone else is going to have
to update the tab directory now ;-)) and don't plan on renewing it. GP
seems to address the most variety of possible readers and I'll probably
switch to that one. A musical slut like me can't get by on headbanging
alone and GFTPM's tunnel vision has annoyed me. During the year that
I've received it, I'm lucky if there is more than 1 song I'm interested
in and a lot of the metal stuff I've never heard.
However, I did enjoy working out Metallica's "Enter Sandman" (kings of
the heavy Em licks ;-)) in this months issue.
On a related note, they had EJ's "Trademark" in their this month too.
I already own the EJ songbook and I was comparing the tab for each
version of "Trademark" last night. It was amazing how different and
how similar they were throughout the song!
Mike
|
342.58 | I don't mind metal that much, but... | GOES11::G_HOUSE | I wanna be sedated! | Tue Oct 15 1991 12:35 | 12 |
| I never had a subscription to GFTPM and probably never will. I just
don't really get off on learning songs from tab and, like Mike, most of
the time there would be only a song or so in any given issue that I had
any interest in whatsoever. I used to be more interested in the songs
that they charted out several years ago and bought them pretty
regularly, but I never really learned any of them from it.
Now I only buy an issue if I'm really interesting in something that's
in it. Hmm... Haven't bought one in over a year, I wonder what that
means?
gh
|
342.59 | re: GP | GLDOA::REITER | | Tue Oct 15 1991 14:35 | 16 |
| I just _started_ my subscription to GP; I found myself picking up that
one on the racks as opposed to mags that had a lot of tab (some people
want it, some people don't).
I like the way they cover many styles of music, and the writing's not
bad. With any hobby, the adverts are also useful to see what's new on
the market.
As far as subscription management, it seems everyone uses some outfit
in Boulder CO who are probably running on Army surplus GE mainframes as
quick as it takes them to update their records!
I have one question from the recent issue, though: What was it that
"the amp manufaturers don't want you to know" that was revealed in that
article on tube amps?
\Gary
|
342.60 | I must be getting old | BSS::STPALY::MOLLER | Fix it before it breaks | Mon Oct 21 1991 18:41 | 15 |
| I stopped subscribing to GP (and most other music magazines -
I now only subscribe to Electronic Musician), because so little seemed to
relate to anything that I was interested in. The magazines were either
too focused or way to scattered in context. I now tend to look at them
on the newstand and buy only those that appeal to me (which is about 1 per
year). Most of these magazines were better in the late 1970's and early 1980's
than more recently (GP used to dedicate sections for all types of music,
then branched off to the ill-fated FRETS magazine, basically killing that
aspect of Guitar Player). I guess that they shoot for market share and
I'm a little to much on the outside of the big selling issues (I don't care
about a lot of subjects that relate to metal guitar in particular). There
are still lots of good issues published, but I'm more selective on what I
want to read about.
Jens
|
342.61 | AND ANOTHER THING... | LEDS::BURATI | Fender Bender | Mon Oct 21 1991 19:00 | 15 |
| Yeah, I must be getting old too. There has to be something really good
in one of those magazines (like how to fix a...) for me to buy it. I
can't bring myself to walk up to the cashier with a magazine with many
of todays chart-topping guitar heroes on the cover. JUST CAN'T DO IT.
That's all. SLASH is the best example I can think of. MUSICIAN as well
as Guitar Player and Guitar World all lost sales from me because these
guys LEAVE ME COLD. Don't know how else to put it. I hope they're
selling copies to lots of other players because they're not selling them
to me. Of course if the issue also included a piece on a real guitar
player and one that I'm interested in reading about (like say Jeff Beck
or Buddy Guy), I would then have a real dilemma.
Hope this stirs something up, this conference is way too quiet lately.
--rjb
|
342.62 | but I have 3 hours a day to read... | EZ2GET::STEWART | Balanced on the biggest wave | Mon Oct 21 1991 19:05 | 10 |
|
I used to think that if I didn't read every article in a magazine I was
somehow "wasting" it. But then I took a business class, where the
instructor put forth the proposition that if just one idea in a
magazine improved your bottom line, then that subscription was more
than paid for. I'm not going to attempt to put my music commix (very
appropriate term, Karl) subscriptions on any type of economic scale
(and I get most of 'em), but I feel like I'm picking up useful data
from just about all of them.
|
342.63 | my $.02 about GP | GOOROO::CLARK | not(cranking) => yanking | Tue Oct 22 1991 10:45 | 11 |
| the thing that gets me about the recent GP is that it's trying to
be the most 'politically correct' guitar magazine in the world.
Last month they had an interview with someone named Phrank who
is a lesbian folk-singer. In the intro they went out of their
way to point out that Phrank never plays leads and that her
guitar technique consists of strumming first position chords
and occasionally picking the notes of the chords. So why is
she in GP? I have nothing against her lifestyle, but this constant
emphasis on 'pan-cultural-guitar-music' turns me off!
p.s. they also had Sonic Youth on the cover. Blech.
|
342.64 | my relief valve is starting to hiss | LEDS::BURATI | Fender Bender | Tue Oct 22 1991 11:57 | 7 |
| ditto!
Give this politically correct, multi-cultural, euro-centric sh!t a
freekin BREAK! Turns me right-the-f__k off, too. I agree with the
point, I don't care who she sleeps with or what her orientation to the
rest of the universe is, she should get print if she merits it as a
guitarist - PERIOD! Right? Thank you.
|
342.65 | Where's the Dave Pegg Transcriptions? | RGB::ROST | I Had A Torrid Affair With Geraldo | Wed Oct 23 1991 13:45 | 6 |
| Anybody out there tried Guitar Extra yet? It's an offshoot of GFTPM
with transcriptions, etc. but aims for boomers into blues, acoustic,
etc. Like this month, a Richard Thompson cover story and transcription.
No bass lines (bumming).
Brian
|
342.66 | | BTOVT::BEST_G | supernatural paradise is the place | Wed Oct 23 1991 16:05 | 13 |
|
I must be getting old too - and I'm only 25!
This year was the first time I bought a subscription to GP, and
they usually end up on "the magazine pile", which has currently
taken up residence in a plastic bag in the basement. I spend
maybe....45 minutes looking it over, but I rarely find much that
merits much more than a cursory skimming.
If I don't win that big prize, I'm not renewing....;-)
guy
|
342.67 | Duplicate songs | FSOA::BDONOVAN | Mark Farner's guitar tech | Thu Oct 24 1991 09:52 | 41 |
|
A disturbing trend in guitar magazines: Duplicate transcriptions!
When I "came up," tab guitar transcriptions were unheard of.
And the existing sheet music for most rock songs was funny,
indeed! Most of the time the chords weren't even in the
same key as the original song, never mind *being* the right
chords.
If there was a guitar solo, the music would say "TACET" or "ADD LIB"
or there would be just a page of rests.
So, the development of tab has been great for me.
Now, here's the bitch: GFTPM and Guitar School, even Guitar Player
are putting out duplicate versions of the same song. There's like
40 versions of Red House available now, but for the most part,
it's usually two versions of the same song.
I realize the two publications compete against each other, but
in the interest of the music world and practicing public, you
think they could agree not to duplicate songs.
It's not like there aren't other good songs to transcribe.
Of course, the marketing departments have probably got the demographics
down to such a "tee" that they can determine exactly how many
copies a magazine is going to sell if they put so-and-so on the
cover and put these certain songs inside.
Oh, well. I suppose it's better than the old days where Guitar Player
used to ask every interviewee to describe his strings and picks....
as though that was all it would take to sound like that player:
"A Herco nylon? A pignose in the studio and a stack live?
Ernie Ball lights, and I'm there?"
Like it would be that easy ! :)
Brian (who_doesn't_buy_as_many_mags_as_he_used_to)
|
342.68 | | LEDS::BURATI | Fender Bender | Thu Oct 24 1991 10:24 | 8 |
| I mostly agree about the strings and picks part. But on the other hand,
if they didn't tell us about Stevie Ray Vaughn's strings, we wouldn't
realize (most of us) that it is possible to play LIKE THAT on rather
heavy strings. So once in a while (lately a great while) we get
something enlightening and useful from them. But, yes, I do believe many
readers think these are the keys to making the music. No, these are just
the tools of the trade. People get too hung up on the hardware, the
gardgetry.
|
342.69 | | GLDOA::REITER | | Thu Oct 24 1991 10:39 | 23 |
| Yesterday I was reading through a reprint (obviously) of a Duane Allman
interview in a "GTS rag" that I had picked up recently... he had some
comments on slide that I had never heard explained that way before, so
for me it was worth the price.
Someone said recently in here that they heard that if you get ONE data
point out of a magazine that improves your life, it's worth it. I
think that's true.
With any "hobby" or interest that people move through, there's a whole
life cycle: some people ramp up and then ramp down and go on to
something else, but some people just keep the same level of interest
forever.
Magazines fit in there somewhere, but sometimes people get tired of the
magazines, and sometimes they become less interested in the subject.
Think of all the possible hobbies; it's got to be tough to come up with
fresh ideas month after month, and then compete with other special
interest mags doing the same thing.
There is value in the advertisements and test reports, though, and the
reviews of artists and new material.
\Gary
|
342.70 | I shoulda picked a different analogy... | EZ2GET::STEWART | Bring me the head of Barry Manilow! | Thu Oct 24 1991 17:45 | 11 |
|
The magazines transcribe lots of the same songs for the same reasons we
sell Unix boxes - that's what some of the market wants/needs. Magazine
X isn't going to make a reader buy one of its competitors if that
reader wants "Red House". Besides, it's a lot easier to transcribe a
song after someone else has done it first....
Disclaimer: No intentions of starting OS wars, OK
|
342.71 | GP..phooey, GPE yeah! | COMPLX::BULLARD | | Thu Oct 24 1991 18:38 | 4 |
| Is it possible to get a subscription to Guitar Player EXTRA
only?
chuck
|
342.72 | not available for back order | HAVASU::HEISER | unborn women have rights too | Tue Oct 29 1991 18:59 | 10 |
| >Date Cover Artist Articles Cond Code
>------- --------------------------- -------------------- ------------
>May '81 - Albert Lee Molly Hatchet M, NGP
> Phil Keaggy
Does anyone out there have this issue of Guitar Player? Could you
possibly send me a photocopy of the Keaggy article?
Thanks,
Mike
|
342.73 | I get all the mags.... | SMURF::BENNETT | Ask me about Guitar Lessons | Wed Oct 30 1991 16:45 | 17 |
|
I look at the musical bit and almost never read the stuff that
about players. I agree with Laurie Anderson's quip that writing
about music is like dancing about architecture. I don't wanna
read about the musical attitude about some old blues fart and
I'm only mildly interested in what flavor strings Thurston's
using this week.
I am interested in some of the obscure stuff that they run just
so that I can see what's out there and who's pushing the envelope.
It's unfortunate that there's prople that bum because their
fave didn't get space.
Pick of the bunch? I like the Reeves Gabrels column in GFTPM.
He does what I think Robt Fripp should have done in his GP
column. Of course there's no accounting for taste.
|
342.74 | Been Caught Lookin' FOr Back Issues | POBOX::PATLA | Elvis sells PATHWORKS at DEC! | Mon Jan 06 1992 21:33 | 8 |
| Greetings, I was wondering if anyone who gets GFTPM or GW or GS or GP
tell me what issues might have some Jane's Addiction transcriptions
in them? I can't tell what transcriptions are offered in Guitar World
and I know that some where in a notes conference I read where December
91 had an interview with Dave N.
ADthanksVANCE,
Pat
|
342.75 | | FRETZ::HEISER | Sun Devil | Tue Jan 07 1992 10:40 | 5 |
| Re: -1
Pat, look in 2143.last
Mike
|
342.76 | | GOES11::G_HOUSE | Tommy The Cat | Tue Jan 07 1992 11:27 | 4 |
| To save you the trouble, the only JA song that's in the list is "Stop".
It was in the Jan. '91 issue.
Greg (also a big JA fan!)
|
342.77 | | DECWIN::KMCDONOUGH | Set Kids/Nosick | Fri Feb 28 1992 07:55 | 14 |
|
The latest Guitar Player has a letter to equipment manufacturers that
basically says "The gloves are off" when it comes to reviews. GP has
reversed its earlier policy of reviewing only equipment that it liked
and will now list the good and the bad.
The tube amp comparison looks to be along these lines. There are
winners and losers, and amps with problems are called out.
Maybe it won't be a guitar version of Consumer Reports, but it's a
start.
Kevin
|
342.78 | | FREEBE::REAUME | H&K/K&H | Fri Feb 28 1992 08:02 | 10 |
|
Alright! I was starting to wonder how much of a kickback David Hicks
was getting for his reviews. He never blasted a product in all the
years I'd read it. I read the recent tube amp review and thought it was very
objective.
I'm sure they realize that they don't want to p.o. a long time
advertiser, but be honest!!!!! It will be interesting to read some of
the newly printable reviews!
-B()()M-
|
342.79 | combo quest | BUSY::JMINVILLE | | Tue Mar 03 1992 09:36 | 11 |
| Yeah, the amp review (combos under 50 watts) gave the top spot to the
Matchless D/C-30...hey if you've got $2400 to spend, no problem you can
have great tone...
The Carvin XT-112 has always seemed like a good bang for the $$ at
$499.
Great article at any rate. Did anyone notice that Bedrock has moved
to Southboro, MA (me and Coop's old hometown).
joe.
|
342.80 | more burn-in! | GOOROO::CLARK | Saddam still has a job, do u? | Tue Mar 03 1992 11:53 | 5 |
| re .-1
did anyone notice that the Bedrocks both had infant mortality problems?
- Dave (principal reliability engineer geek)
|
342.81 | | KDX200::COOPER | Step UP to the RACK ! | Tue Mar 03 1992 12:01 | 1 |
| Their MTBF is 90000 (but only at 20% confidence :)
|
342.83 | Notable for their absence | GANTRY::ALLBERY | Jim | Tue Mar 03 1992 12:21 | 23 |
| I understand GP's desire to keep the list down to a reasonable
number, but thought it would have been nice to not limit the
number of entries to just one per company. Some other amps that
I wish had been reviewed include:
Fender Bassman re-issue
Fender '65 Blackface Twin re-issue
Fender The Twin
Peavey Classic (both 4X10 and 2x12 versions)
I found it interesting that the THD and Kendrick Bassman clones
received 5's in clean / low gain distortion tones, when the
Fender Vibroverb re-issue received 3's. In GP's Bassman "shoot-out"
comparison (a few months back), many of the reviewers seem to like
the tone of the Fender Bassman re-issue better than that of the THD
and Kendrick clones. Does the Bassman reissue sound that much better
than the Vibroverb?
FWIW, I've tried out the '65 Twin and the '59 Bassman re-issies at
music stores (when demoing guitars, however, not amps), and preferred
the sound of the Twin over the Bassman.
Jim
|
342.84 | I would have thought they'd at least include "The Twin" | GOES11::G_HOUSE | Now I'm down in it | Tue Mar 03 1992 14:25 | 6 |
| Perhaps it was a case of "if you don't have anything good to say about
something..."
Who knows?
Greg
|
342.85 | | RAVEN1::BLAIR | Ren and Stimpy...the Lost Episodes | Tue Mar 03 1992 14:52 | 5 |
|
Was the Twin not included? Perhaps the test was limited to wattage?
Also, on the Bedrock, they cited bad circuit traces - not a burn in
issue, but certainly a QC issue. Probably a bad pwb vendor.
|
342.86 | | PHAROS::SAKELARIS | | Tue Mar 03 1992 15:36 | 7 |
| re. 83
Nope, guitar player did a Review of "The Twin" in their January '88
issue. I have a photocopy if anyone's interested. Post yer mail stop
and I'll shoot a copy to ya.
"sakman"
|
342.87 | | FRETZ::HEISER | lightning flashing east to west | Tue Mar 03 1992 15:36 | 3 |
| Are they 50wt tube amps? That's what the test was based on.
Mike
|
342.88 | | KDX200::COOPER | Step UP to the RACK ! | Tue Mar 03 1992 15:45 | 4 |
| Yo Sakman - How much does the review weigh ??
Oppsss - sorry.
:)
|
342.89 | Gotta be quick around here.. | ZYMRGY::sam | But Momma, that's where the fun is | Tue Mar 03 1992 16:02 | 5 |
| re: .-1
Damn, and I was gonna say that! :-)
-- Sam
|
342.90 | | PHAROS::SAKELARIS | | Wed Mar 04 1992 07:56 | 3 |
| Oh, two men and a boy should be the most that it'd take.
"sakman" ;^)
|
342.91 | Guitar World online | FRETZ::HEISER | Maranatha! | Thu May 26 1994 12:28 | 23 |
| Article 29753 of alt.guitar:
Path: nntpd2.cxo.dec.com!nntpd.lkg.dec.com!jac.zko.dec.com!crl.dec.com!crl.dec.com!decwrl!hookup!europa.eng.gtefsd.com!news.ans.net!newstf01.cr1.aol.com!search01.news.aol.com!not-for-mail
From: [email protected] (DanAmrich)
Newsgroups: alt.guitar
Subject: Greetings from Guitar World Magazine
Date: 25 May 1994 13:31:02 -0400
Organization: America Online, Inc. (1-800-827-6364)
Lines: 11
Sender: [email protected]
Message-ID: <[email protected]>
NNTP-Posting-Host: search01.news.aol.com
Some folks 'round here have expressed some dissatisfaction with the
way GW presents its material. As Editorial Assistant for the mag,
feel free to post your comments here about GW and what you like and
don't like about the way we do things. We're working on getting our
own little area online somewhere with one of the commercial services,
but until then, consider me your electronic mouthpiece.
Why am I now expected a mountain of 100 List comments?
Dan Amrich
[email protected]
|
342.92 | For the completist | SSDEVO::LAMBERT | I made life easy just by laughing | Thu May 26 1994 15:31 | 10 |
| It's not online, but there's another "new" mag out. Called "Guitar Shop"
it's primarily a gear-head rag. Equipment, that is. Apparently it's only
in it's 2nd issue, though the issues come out quarterly. Published by
Cherry Lane, the pubs of GFTPM. I picked up the current issue (marked
July, 1994) as it has a "40th anniversary of the Strat" spread. It's
pretty good, but it is _all_ equipment, right down to block diagrams of
certain individuals stage setups. There's even a Dream Theater article,
with writups on both Petrucci and Myung.
-- Sam
|
342.93 | no more wading through boring music articles :-) | RICKS::CALCAGNI | tripe my guacomole | Thu May 26 1994 15:45 | 8 |
| Yeah, saw this one too. Some of it's pretty funny. Like, they have a
Varney/Spotlight type column, but instead of sending in tapes of
yourself playing you send in descriptions of your cool gear.
Hey, I might even have a chance of making this one :-)
It's hard not to like a mag that has Buck Dharma doing product reviews
/gyro
|
342.94 | Buck = "Duck" ? | DPDMAI::COXC | Oooh Noooo- Mr. Bill! | Wed Jun 15 1994 11:50 | 15 |
| RE:-1
Didn't Buck Dharma play lead guitar for Blue Oyster Cult? If so, there
is a guy with chops! GFTPM reviewed "Unsung Guitar Hero's" in the Feb.
& March '94 issues and he was passed over for other greats like Randy
Bachman!! 8^|
BTW- my subscription to GFTPM runs out in Aug. and I'm not
renewing after 3 years. The transcription trend is moving from all
metal to 70% metal and 30% alternative bands (Smashing Pumpkins, Sonic
Youth, Stone Temple Pilots...); a good trend...but the writing is
becoming more redundant than usual....I can only read Steve Morris's
"a good musician's attitude or how to land a gig" so many times!
Bill
|
342.95 | | TRUCKS::GORE | Bar Sinister with Pedant Rampant | Thu Jun 16 1994 03:38 | 6 |
| Re -1
> Didn't Buck Dharma play lead guitar for Blue Oyster Cult?
Yes!
Ian G.
|
342.96 | Who's Fernando Sor??? | HOTLNE::LUCHT | | Mon Jun 27 1994 11:23 | 9 |
| There seems to be a distinctive retreat in quality
articles relating to the classical guitar. The few
guitar mags available don't even include a outing in
classical guitar anymore? The classics resolving into
relative obscurity? Perhaps I should enlighten myself
in "Da Blooz" topic once more to cheer me up.
Kev --
|
342.97 | | TECRUS::ROST | That O.J., what a cut up! | Mon Jun 27 1994 11:30 | 9 |
| Re: .96
Have you tried "Acoustic Guitar" magazine? Being a bassist I haven't
done more than notice it's on the stands.
Hey if someone can make money selling "Bass Player", maybe "Classical
Guitar" magazine will arrive soon 8^)
Brian
|
342.98 | Ooops... | HOTLNE::LUCHT | | Mon Jun 27 1994 11:56 | 17 |
| Forgive me, I almost neglected to mention that one!
Yes "Acoustic Guitar" does have a column on classical guitar.
The writer is the famed Sharon Isbin, one of the finest
classical guitarists on the scene today. I read one
of her columns a while back which made for some interesting
reading. The column was devoted to practice routines and
what classical guitarists actually do in their final
preparations before a concert. Must be a nerve-twinging
vibe, huh?
BTW, I would love to see a magazine devoted to the art of
the classical guitar considering the repotoire is an ever
increasing body of music that dates back many centuries.
Kev --
|
342.99 | It's out there... | MYMUSE::MASHIA | Every lil' thing gonna be all right | Mon Jun 27 1994 15:27 | 5 |
| There is a magazine for classical guitarists - can't remember the name,
but saw an ad in some other guitar mag - Acoustic Guitar, I think. I'll
try and remember to check tonight.
Rodney
|
342.100 | ! | STRATA::LUCHT | Is it a passion or just a profession? | Fri Aug 11 1995 04:11 | 7 |
|
Check out the lastest issue of GFTPM. On the very last page
they've got a photo/points comparison of Yngwie and Richie
Blackmore that's kinda funny.
Kev --
|