A couple of nights ago I was perusing the living room and Ginny asked me what I was doing. I told her I was looking for something I could trade. I took several out to the garage over the evening and brought them in and back on the wall. A lot of deep thought and a couple of cold ones to help the decision process. I finally came back in and said to Ginny, " I have a problem" I kind of got "the look" but she finally asked " what's wrong"? My response " I don't have anything that I can trade". Now I really got the look!!! It is true, I have no trading material. Out of this whole mess there is nothing I want to part with. They are all very special.
The G&L rep was at AGB today and we spent quite some time talking. He has requested light guitars before but they will not guarantee a weight. I had been thinking about this a lot as I was concerned about a special order for a light weight bass could very well be a crap shoot. If I ordered something and I did not like it, I would not refuse to take delivery on it. I would not leave the dealer holding the bag as that is who would get stuck with it. I had talked to TIm (dealer) before he left for NAMM and told him that I had reservations.
I have 3 great basses already. Last weekend I used the Pink Lady, 10 lbs 13 oz, and it did not bother me. One thing that I have noticed is that it is balanced very well. My Carvin weighs 8lbs 1 oz and is a breeze for a 4 hour gig. It does not quite have that G&L growl, close but not quite. I love the Asat Savannah, especially for recording but it is a 4 string and I prefer a 5 string for gigging.
About 9 months ago I saw a new M-2500 at AGB and looked at it. It was gorgeous but it was a Tribute much to my surprise. The workmanship and finish was flawless. The neck was nice, the pocket tight and it was pretty sweet. I didn't plug it in. I have been to AGB many times since and that Tribute always drew my attention and a couple of months ago I considered dealing on it a bit. Then I would ask myself, why get a tribute. That is not good reasoning but it is what it is.
Today I went back to look at the L-2500. I couldn't do it. I looked at that M-2500 again. The neck looked perfect. It played extremely well, no buzz and it was nice to look at. I like maple necks and had one on my last L-2500 and it always felt heavy. In retrospect I think is was more balance than weight. It weighs a flat 10 lbs. This Tribute felt so well balanced and it just felt good. I finally asked the big question, "what is it going to take to get this one". It was marked at MAP. I got an immediate response which surprised me and my answer was "Ring it up".
I brought it home and the neck relief and setup was perfect. I didn't make a change to anything. It was one of those no risk deals. If I didn't like it, I could recover most of my purchase price. It turns out to be a gem and I hope that it will remain so. I have owned one other tribute and it was an Asat Special, a very nice guitar and sold to a friend who really wanted it. So, this Tribute is joining my other 16 American G&L's and is proud to do so. Here are a couple of pics. It is supposed to be a Honeyburst but has very little burst on the edge. I like it. This will be a gigger. My quest may be over.-- Darwin

