Page 4 of 9

Posted: Thu Nov 10, 2005 10:37 pm
by Bjam
jack wrote:hey stu, is that a D-28?
OMC Aura.
jack wrote:also....what is that old gibson electric hiding back there. LP junior?
Gibson Sonex 180? That's what the label says. All I know is it's bloody heavy.
jack wrote:also......bjam, if that IS a D-28, why the hell you playing an ovation? ;)
Because I have an allegiance with Mr Sparkles.

Posted: Fri Nov 11, 2005 1:30 am
by Sober
My Strat is nearly done.

My Peavey T60 is getting new saddles.

I'll be reworking my T40 into a 4-string.

Posted: Fri Nov 11, 2005 8:31 am
by stueym
jack wrote:hey stu, is that a D-28?

also....what is that old gibson electric hiding back there. LP junior?

also......bjam, if that IS a D-28, why the hell you playing an ovation? ;)
Martin OMC Aura is built like an OMC-40 so abalone inlays in fret board and rosette, bound headstock and fretboard, cutaway (C).

The pre-amp is the cute bit. It uses a custom version of Fishman's Aura electronics built on-board to use models of the OMC recorded with various mic's in various positions. There is then a blend fader that blends the modeled sound with the "raw" piezo sound. Makes for an extremely good sounding DI. Designed for live use, but actually pretty damned good for recording in the experiments I have run so far. Look out for the OMC on a forthcoming project very soon.

The Gibson Sonex was the third serious elctric I ever owned and I loved the sound of the PAF. Its sustains forever because it is a Gibson experiment from the early 80's. Body is made of Resonwood a composite material that is incredibly dense. This thing is even heavier than a LP hence one of the reasosn people give up on them. Mine was stolen when I was 20. So when I saw a reasonable one come up eBay it had to come home.

The first electric I ever had I kick myself to this day over. It was a 1960 Orange Gretsch Country Gentleman. Owened it for 6 months when I was 17. Unfortunately the guys I was playing with said it wasnt a serious rock guitar so it got sold. Today the bloody thing would probably be worth several thousand $....urgh!

Posted: Sat Nov 12, 2005 5:42 pm
by Dan-O from Five-O
stueym wrote:The first electric I ever had I kick myself to this day over. It was a 1960 Orange Gretsch Country Gentleman. Owened it for 6 months when I was 17. Unfortunately the guys I was playing with said it wasnt a serious rock guitar so it got sold. Today the bloody thing would probably be worth several thousand $....urgh!
Aaaarrrgggghhhh! The pain! THE PAIN!!!!! PLEASE MAKE IT STOP!!!!!!!!

Several thousand? I myself would gladly hand over something close to 5 figures to have a pristine 1960 model instead of the close to 3 grand they want for a Fender re-issue model.

I need to go lay down for a bit, I feel sick.

Godin guitars

Posted: Thu Nov 17, 2005 3:34 pm
by roymond
Anyone have a Godin? I am trying to check out their LGXT and LGSA models for synth control. But they're very hard to find.

Re: Godin guitars

Posted: Fri Nov 18, 2005 3:34 pm
by stueym
roymond wrote:Anyone have a Godin? I am trying to check out their LGXT and LGSA models for synth control. But they're very hard to find.
The Godin solids are sooo hard to find, although they do come up on Ebay from time to time. SamAsh did carry them up to 18 months ago so there were quite a few around but none of them seem to be in stock anymore.

I have Roland GR-33 and also a VG-88 and eventually bought a Brian Moore 2.13 which I think is much nicer axe (Mr. Sun from Bjam's AAD as it has a Sunburst finish over very nice maple).

This works immensely well with the Roland boards although I havent tried the Midi out from them to drive anything else....yet. If you wanted to come down to Philly for a visit one day to try out you'd be very welcome.

Posted: Fri Nov 18, 2005 3:49 pm
by ken
Those Gibson Sonexs are cool. Would you please bring it to the next Songfight Live? Thanks.

If the Gretsch Countryman wasn't a serious rock guitar, why were the Monkees playing them?

Ken

Posted: Fri Nov 18, 2005 4:20 pm
by stueym
ken wrote:Those Gibson Sonexs are cool. Would you please bring it to the next Songfight Live? Thanks.

If the Gretsch Countryman wasn't a serious rock guitar, why were the Monkees playing them?

Ken
Ah Ken you are a man of indubitable taste and discrimination!

Once I work out a way to get an increased weight allowance from the airline that does not involve me travelling in a freight carrier I will consider it for Santa Cruz but seriously the Sonex's are f'ing heavy bastards :-)

I never thought I would ever see anyone put "Monkees" and "serious rock"in the same sentence.....EVER!!! Damn you Ken... now I can't get "Last train to Clarksville" out of my head. Bit like when I drove around Nashville last year and saw the town of Clarksville on a route sign and thought......

Tangential thought...how many popular song references originate from Nashville due to the concetration of songwriting/music publishing talent down in that little TN town?

Posted: Fri Nov 18, 2005 4:33 pm
by ken
stueym wrote:Once I work out a way to get an increased weight allowance from the airline that does not involve me travelling in a freight carrier I will consider it for Santa Cruz but seriously the Sonex's are f'ing heavy bastards :-)
Feel free to send it to me ahead of time, I'll drive it down there for you.

Ken

Re: Godin guitars

Posted: Fri Nov 18, 2005 5:06 pm
by blue
roymond wrote:Anyone have a Godin? I am trying to check out their LGXT and LGSA models for synth control. But they're very hard to find.
dennis supercar has a semihollowbody Godin. it plays nice but sounds way too pleasant for our consumption.

Godin

Posted: Fri Nov 18, 2005 11:32 pm
by chuckstas
Yeah, Godin's look sweet, but I can't find them anywhere. I want to try out the Montreal. It looks like a sleeker 335. Right now I have a Parker Nitfely, and while I love it, there's two things I don't like: 1. The one volume knob is way too close to the strumming area like almost 99% of strat-style guitars, and 2. It has like zero sustain to it. But man is the clean sound funky.

Volume Knobs

Posted: Fri Nov 18, 2005 11:35 pm
by chuckstas
Am I the only guitarist that just wants those knobs way out of the way?

Posted: Sat Nov 19, 2005 6:30 am
by roymond
I use the volume knob lots. Can't always have a volume pedal nearby :)

Knobs

Posted: Sun Nov 20, 2005 12:33 am
by chuckstas
I just hate always hitting them while strumming. It's also difficult to get a good palm mute sound on the high strings because of it.

Re: Godin guitars

Posted: Mon Nov 21, 2005 3:02 pm
by Henrietta
roymond wrote:Anyone have a Godin? I am trying to check out their LGXT and LGSA models for synth control. But they're very hard to find.
Here's a used Godin LGX-SA. It looks very pretty.
http://www.musicgoround.com/gear/invent ... ?id=382014

Posted: Wed Dec 21, 2005 1:35 am
by Sober
In my room there are currently two Godin guitars. One Seagull and one La Patrie. They're a little hard to find because they're on rocky ground with Guitar Center, to my understanding.

Seagull is their acoustic line, and La Patrie is their classical line, both made in Quebec.

Fantastic guitars, fantastic prices.

Real reason for dredging the thread up:

Image

Oh dear god is it sweet. Just got it last night. It's a '97. She cleaned up real good.

And the volume knob is right where it should be. You can curl your pinky around it while you play.

And another thing - When playing, you shouldn't be hitting the pickguard. I don't care what kind of playing you're doing, damnit.

Posted: Wed Dec 21, 2005 9:23 am
by Lunkhead
I probably posted this somewhere already, but here's a picture of the new natural finish all mahogany Les Paul Studio I bought last September (next to the little Marshall tube combo amp I bought within the last year, as well):

http://www.bozos.com/pictures/misc/my_rig.jpg

Mmmmm, Gibson + Marshall....

Posted: Tue Jan 17, 2006 4:35 pm
by boltoph
Speaking of Guitar Talk...
Leaf wrote:By the way, if someone has the knowledge and the time, a thread about rock/blues/whatever GUITAR riffs and ideas would be bloody awesome. Especially the blues licks. I got one. And it sucks... anyone... anyone...
Leaf, I'm not much for paradiddles, I stopped formally "practicing" guitar when I was about 14, but I know a ton of this stuff.

I will be back to discuss...or hit me with a PM. Most people don't care much for ripping up the fretboard these days unless you're into the jam band scene (which..uh...I am, sorta). Thousands of concert-goers (that's right, concert-goers...listeners who are dedicated to the music they love) cheering for crazy guitar solos, all on the same substances which fueled my inspriration to write songs in the first place, can't be wrong...

We can discuss 20 standard blues licks. 8 finger exercises, 10 picking exercises. You are the next Yngwie, by gods. ...Yngwie....bwaaaaaaaaa

Posted: Tue Jan 17, 2006 5:41 pm
by pegor
boltoph wrote:Speaking of Guitar Talk...
Leaf wrote:By the way, if someone has the knowledge and the time, a thread about rock/blues/whatever GUITAR riffs and ideas would be bloody awesome. Especially the blues licks. I got one. And it sucks... anyone... anyone...
We can discuss 20 standard blues licks. 8 finger exercises, 10 picking exercises. You are the next Yngwie, by gods. ...Yngwie....bwaaaaaaaaa
You know something I've never read about or heard discussed was the way virtuoso GTR players hold a chord shape when they are soloing. Identifing that shape seems to be a big part of emulating their sound.

It looks to me like Clapton grabs a form like an F (if in the nut position) and keeps his index barred there while is other fingers managed the riffing. He holds the same shape regardless of the fret position. I think SRV and Jimi were more fond of a sorta A shape with the thumb thrown in as needed.

Any of you real life musicos notice this or is my imagination?

I'm talking about Clapton and SRV mainly. I'm sure Yngwie just burns scales up and down the neck.

Posted: Tue Jan 17, 2006 6:07 pm
by boltoph
pegor wrote:You know something I've never read about or heard discussed was the way virtuoso GTR players hold a chord shape when they are soloing. Identifing that shape seems to be a big part of emulating their sound.

It looks to me like Clapton grabs a form like an F (if in the nut position) and keeps his index barred there while is other fingers managed the riffing. He holds the same shape regardless of the fret position. I think SRV and Jimi were more fond of a sorta A shape with the thumb thrown in as needed.

Any of you real life musicos notice this or is my imagination?

I'm talking about Clapton and SRV mainly. I'm sure Yngwie just burns scales up and down the neck.
I know what you're saying, but I don't always notice it...

There are different ways to play a chord, jazz musicians do alot of chords with the 5th on the bottom, but those are kinda weird.

How about the C shape chord, when used to play a D or an E. Uses all the fingers, allows for all sorts of pulloffs, and has a full sound. This style of chord represents the triad of a chord, from bottom up.

Most other forms of chords go 1st, 5th, and then another 1st, and then the third, like A or E major open frames. I think of chords as frames. I always had a hard time resisting a quick game of connect the dots, when I look at them.

I am a big fan of the C shape full chord. Really, the thing to get into is triads, or just playing a 1-3-5 on the higher strings. When one uses the C shape, and bars the top, say playing an E with your first finger barring the top three strings...you realize, the E form is the same as the D form with a couple others on bottom!
But with the C form, you have two or three good pull off options there without even moving. Learn to slide the triads around.

It all comes down to knowing patterns 1 through 5. I have yet to find a really good internet link for these. There are jazz versions that are wider, and there are the original classical versions.

It's tough to start talking about chords without going full on into musical theory.

eh, I gotta get in a clearer frame of mind to really harness in on what I want to say.

I'd say learn to work the smaller, higher parts of the chords, and get to know them based on the way they fit into the five patterns, which cover the full major scale from fret zero to fret 12, and then repeat.

In jazz, at least, I wouldn't want to be caught dead playing the low E string unless the song called for some heavier rhythm...so study the top parts of the chords, and how they fit in to the key that you are in. Then you can start making your own chords. Unless we're talking melodic/harmonic minor or augmented/diminshed stuff, everything else is all just the major (and relative minor) scale. Especially if we're talking about rock.

This site has the five as pentatonic. (refresh the page after you go there, to get rid of the shitty popup) Pentatonic is the major/minor scale, just missing some notes. The link at the bottom of this page shows them all together.

Now, just gotta find ones that fill in the rest of the notes to complete the major and minor scales, and you'd be able to map out all the little parts of the chords, be it a C/D shape chord, A shape, E shape, etc.
I'm lookin...
I like to look at the way the chords fit into those patterns, based on the key that the song (or part, or chord) is in.

I'm sure alot of people know this stuff, I'm just spouting it out here.

dude, Yngwie? hahaha I'm pretty sure he used "Z shape" and "X/Y shape" chords or something....

The modes, they're really just the major scales played over the wrong key. Eff the modes. The only one that ever works is Mixolydian, or Lydian (sometimes). Like when one person plays an Gmajor chord-based progression, and you solo in the key of C major, that's Lydian. Your soloing over the 4 of the key you "sound like" you're in. Solo in the key of D major, over a G chord, and now you're in Mixolydian. There will be one or two important notes between the scales, and one or two that you want to avoid though. I could be wrong about all of this, but I just jammed it and heard the proof....i think.... :)

whoa how did i get into the modes...well those different chord shapes, the best players use a combination of a whole bunch. I'm going to watch peole more carefully. Personally, often I mute strings in between so that I can hit the chords where I want to hit them. All depends on the style of music, I think.

Posted: Sat Jan 28, 2006 3:25 pm
by Bjam
I just got a new guitar for my birthday(which is 2 weeks away, but I needed to pick it out, and since my actual birthday is on a Tuesday, we just went today to get it). It's a Fender Telecaster.

http://www.bananas.com/multimedia/5598/ ... e/5598.jpg That's it, I think. Blue agave. Basically like Mr Sparkles but electric and blue. :D (You'll have great fun playing either a sparkley black acoustic with sparkley pink strap, or a sparkley blue electric at SongFight Presents: PA :P)

Not as good as the Martin I would love(apparently I'll get that for my 2st. Great idea, give me a nice expensive acoustic when I'm legally allowed to drink.), but still pretty damn nice.

Posted: Sat Jan 28, 2006 3:37 pm
by blue
a blue tele? you're becoming the girl-Ken. :D

congrats on the guitar.. those are very nice.