Lunch
another of those roast beef sandwiches - this time with HP Sause - a banana (which at $5 each are still something of an extravagance after the Queensland floods), with the usual Lemon Tea.
G&L Dealers
To the best of my knowledge its been a l-o-n-g time since there has been a G&L stockist or dealer anywhere in Western Australia. While I was browsing at a local music store a few weeks back I asked the manager why no one in Perth handled G&L and he told me that he had recently entered into an arrangement with the Australian G&L distributor and was now able to take and submit orders for G&L's. When I asked why he didn't have any G&L's on show or amy promotional material visible he oferred two reasons - first, because G&L were an unknown brand in WA it was too big a financial risk for them to invest in the stock, and second it was very clear to them that their major supplier of single coil guitars would be "unhappy" to see him stocking a directly competing product. This certainly isn't the largest music store in town but they are not small either. While I'm not happy about it, I can certainly understand why a dealer might think its not worth the risk.
Do the G&L dealers in your part of the world also stock the most popular brand of single coil guitars? Or is it a case of one or the other? Do they carry a good range of G&L's? Basses and guitars?
Active vs Passive
Seeing JonC's Sabre in yesterdays Lunch Report got me thinking about active pickups. As with the "extra" string discussion on Tuesday, it seems to me that active pickups have been more common in basses than in guitars, although again a general exception being the metal guitars where EMG's have established a strong presence. I have one guitar with an EMG 81/85 pair which I think work well for modern hard rock songs and with modern style solid state amps. I don't like them quite so much with other music or amp styles though
Do active pickups have more to offer for bass players?
Or is it as Brock and Sirmyghin suggested on Tuesday - guitar players are by nature just more conservative than their bass playing bretheren?
Do you have a preference for active or passive? Do you own both?
A Brief History ... (1977)
Fast forward four years and UK punk is starting to raise its head. Perth develops a small underground punk scene lead by one Dave Faulkner and his band The Victims. Aussies will know Dave who later went on to found the hugely successful pop rock band the Hoodoo Gurus. Anyway, in our 21st year my bass player mate and I decide to tap into this new scene and set up a side project dabbling in the gothic punk area.
Quite different from what we were doing with our "main" band but in retrospect we weren't all that punky really. I'm still not quite getting the rock thing though

black river.mp3
night time.mp3
Time for me to hit th sack ... so I'll catch you tomorrow.
cheers, Robbie