As per usual I have packed some leftover for lunch. Instead of describing my actual boring lunch I'll tell you something good I had while on the cruise a few weeks ago.
On the ship there was a food counter where they have different types of seafood items during lunch, one item is seared Ahi on watermelon. If you don't like sushi, this may be the end of the story for you, but if you like sushi, read on. Seared Ahi is a piece of Ahi 3/4 of an inch thick, about the size of a quarter, the outside edge of which is seared, I guess on a hot grill, while the inside is still raw. The Ahi is then put on top of a small cube of watermelon, and the resutlt is heaven. It was so good I had some for lunch 2 times, and I'm still thinking about it now though weeks have passed.
Travel Picture
Why this picture? Why not?

My Instruments
I had stopped playing guitar altogether from 1986 to 1996. I don't know what prompted me to start picking up my guitars and playing again in 1997 when my son was about a year old, but I'm glad I did.
It was around that time when I bought the Godin ST-IV as GAS soon followed after I started playing again. I had played some Godins in local music stores and thought they were very nicely made instruments, and then I ran across this guitar advertised online from a private individual. I bought it sight unseen, as this was the time before digital photography was popular and the internet allows you to easily exchange images. The guitar turned out to be light weight, had a really great neck, perfectly set up to play, and it sounded quite good. It is so easy to play that it still gets played frequently. It was also my first guitar with locking tuners. I remember I had to email the seller to ask him how they worked since I may mess them up otherwise.
In 1999 I was lurking on the old GbL board while the discussion was going on with the specification of the G&L LE. Eventually the LE went on sale and I remember that the first 20 or so went in about 48 hours. I had a serious pang of GAS and jumped in to get #22 out of 25. I still have it and still enjoy playing it. Like I mentioned before I tend to practice unplugged, with this being a semi-hollow I can hear it better unplugged.
Leo's Innovation
Every once in a while I would think about Leo Fender's contribution to the world of modern music, and I wonder what would be considered his most significant innovation. I like to hear your opinion.
For me, I think the electric bass may have made the biggest impact on modern music. Electric guitar had been invented prior to Leo putting his own formula to the instrument, but, far as I know, electric bass was something new. I remember reading how George Fullerton described having to wind their own bass strings to test out their first bass prototypes. It is hard for me to imagine modern music without the electric bass holding down the rhythm. And soon after the electric bass became popular innovators in the playing of the instrument began to show the world how this instrument can impact the music we hear.
I recently watched the DVD "Standing In The Shadow Of Motown," and the name James Jamerson frequently came up. I have heard that James Jamerson is the genius on bass, but when I was young listening to Motown the bass parts don't come through like it can in the amplifiers of the last 20, 30 years. Yesterday I did a quick search on youtube and found a couple of videos that demonstrated to me the crazy skills of Mr. Jamerson. I wonder whether somebody has done a remix enhancing the bass in some of these tracks because I can now hear the bass perfectly. And what magic it is in these bass lines.
You have to watch this with James Jamerson in action with Marvin Gaye
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Kit