Lunch
As we approach the end of financial year I have a few time critical projects, so today I decided to work from home to avoid distractions. No one else was home so I just raided the fridge and threw a few slices of roast beef between a couple of slices of bread. Only addition was some ground black pepper. Washed it down with the usual lemon tea while I checked through the latest repsponses to yesterday's report.
G&L Topic - What Makes a G&L a G&L
I've seen them occassionally in the past but just lately there have been quite a few used Made in Japan Tribute guitars on Ebay AUS - in fact over the last few weeks there have been three S500's. At $500 including a hard case, I thought the prices were reasonable (for AUS) and was almost ready to pull the trigger on one for my son when I noticed the bridge didn't look right. I thought that a previous owner must have swapped it out, but then I noticed that all three that were listed had the same bridge.

From a bit of research it seems that unlike the Korean/Indonesian Tributes that are made for the world market, the Japanse made Tributes sold in Japan don't have the DFV or Saddle Lock bridges but use a Gotoh bridge. More research and it looks like the G&L Premium range sold in Japan also uses the Gotoh bridge. The basses do however seem to use the saddle lock.
I don't know what the rationale is for that but for me it was a deal breaker and I didn't bid. Wasn't so much an issue about the bridge as it was about the guitar just not being "G&L" enough.
So what makes a G&L a G&L? How much can be swapped out either by the manufacturer or an owner before it's not really what we'd consider to be a G&L
General Topic - Fives and Sevens
I've posed this question before - maybe here maybe somehere else, I can't recall for sure - but we have quite a few new folk here and I'm into recycling

There have been a few discussions lately about the number of strings on guitars and basses. Traditionally, most people would think of guitars as having six strings and basses having four. However five string basses are now commonplace across all genres. The idea of an extra string on guitars, however, hasn't received the same level of support outside the metal players - although jazz player George Van Eps did play a seven string Gretsch in the '60s.
Why do you think 5 string basses have won more general accepatance than 7 string quitars?
Is it an issue of playing chords vs playing single notes?
Or perhaps simple ergonomics and the limitations on fretboard widths and string spacing for the average player?
For the bass players - what are your thoughts on 4 vs 5 strings? My bass player mate flat out refuses to use a 5 string.
Guitar players - Have you tried a 7 (or even 8) string guitar? Thoughts?
A Brief History of .... Mine (1972)
Yesterday I posted a clip of my most recent piece. Today is what I consider to be the first real song I wrote. I had just turned 16yo at the time and the girl who sang it was 15yo. There's a lot about this that makes me cringe but overall I'm still pretty pleased with it - after all it is my first born

Empty Streets.mp2
The girl who sang on that track has gone on to a respectable career as a singer/songwriter/producer ... Here she is now
[youtube]KXvr6QkiR6Q[/youtube]
Time for bed here so .... until tomorrow.
cheers, Robbie