Although my search for the perfect sandwich continues (and it came close yesterday)...today it’s a chicken and bacon pasta salad washed down with a rather dreary cup of coffee and a biscuit to ‘dunk’ in my coffee (I am also in search of the best biscuits for ‘dunking’ into tea / coffee). The more observant amongst you will notice the ‘bacon’ theme again today. This may well be something to watch for over the coming reports.....as well as additional biscuit research...I hate it when the biscuit falls into the drink. Apologies for those of you who find dunking disgusting – but I’m out and proud about this.....
G&L topic:
OK – a bit of fun today. So let us assume you have a “Hot-tub time machine” and you can go back in time to meet any artist you want and convince them of the merits of your G&L (plus associated bits of kit) instead of what they did use at the time to record or perform the music. So, perhaps you could convince Jimmy Page that an Asat might be better for him than his Tele….(for example) or that Clapton should use a Legacy. Firstly, who would you travel to? Secondly, for what track or album? Thirdly, what kit would you recommend (what G&L guitar and why)? Finally, how would convince him / her your G&L might be something they should consider? Would this be an argument based on tone, sustain, range of tone, etc? Would you suggest a G&L guitar or an effects pedal?
On a slightly related note - I was always confused as to why Clapton played a strat with a fixed bridge. Why not play a tele? It must be because he thinks he can get better tone from his strat or even that it’s just because on stage a strat might look sexier to him than the bulkier Asat / tele shape. Who knows......
(PS - I would punch Hendrix in the face if he set fire to a legacy.....

nonG&L topic:
I was in a large mainstream guitar shop the other day (how many stories begin with that line....). No G&L here, just the main brands and you can all imagine what they were. Anyway, I was watching a couple of parents walking around with their young son. He would have been around 10 years old I guess. Of course, he wanted a F***er Stratocaster and the parents were a bit lost in the many options hanging on the wall. Price tags were steering where they looked (and understandably so). The young shop assistant came over and immediately steered them to the USA (£800 / $1100) range of guitars. I was disgusted. The young boy was obviously starting out – but to my mind, that was excessive and irresponsible for a shop assistant to be recommended an instrument like that in front of the child. He seemed to be manipulating the parent’s lack of knowledge and their well-placed emotions to buy what their child wanted. The chap walked off for a while and I did something I would not normally have done. I walked over to them and gave them a bit of advice (including cheaper alternatives in the store as well as the G&L option and other non-mainstream brands that would serve the young boy well). I think they ended up going for a Squire or something. Nothing wrong with that for his first guitar.
There are two points here. One is, what advice would you give to kids and their parents regarding buying an instrument. Cheap and cheerful (as the kid may only play for 10mins and never touch it again) or expensive? My personal take is cheap is not always good as crappy tuners can turn while string bending (i’ve seen this), action can be uneven, pickups can be muddy, build quality can be so poor overall that it makes the guitar difficult to live with and enjoy and may put the kid off playing altogether or at least for a while. Not good. However, $1000 for a beginner – that’s excessive. It might sound obvious, but my generic advice is always to go as expensive as you can as generally speaking it does relate to quality. What’s your take on this? What advice would you give? Do you have kids of your own and if so, have you advised them on what’s best for their needs? Did they listen? Have you advise others and did that advice pay off for them?
The second point is – have you had a similar experience to me – where you have witnessed bad advice being given to vulnerable parents in guitar shops? Do you know of shops in your area that do this systematically and are well known for it and avoided by those in the know (don’t mention the shops....just tell us your experience). Why is it that many in the large and commercial guitar shops, actually seem more interested in the commission than quality advice – as you can get both. There were plenty of good options in that store for that child.