Lunch - Man does not live by bread alone. My travels today will take me very close to one of my favorite music stores in the universe - Mass Street Music. So for Woof today lunch is probbaly gonna be some eye candy. If my tummy grumbling starts drowning out the guitars I will probably grab a Double Quarterpounder with cheese at Micky D's off the highway on the way home.
G&L Thought of the Day.
OK today you guys with that I don't need no stinkin' two pickups the same attitude get your chance to sound off. Slapping different pups on a guitar is, of course, a time honored tradition. Back in the 1960s many of us took a shot at adding a humbucker or P-90 to a Melody Maker. Sometimes we ended up butchering the poor instrument - but other times you walked out in that bar with a guitar that really had something to say.
For me when I think of guitars with mismatched pickups the Keefcaster and Coodercaster come to mind. So all you cats out there, lets here you shout to the Heavens about your Customs, Bluesboys and whatever else G&L has put together through the years.
Musical Hodgepodge - The Stuff that Dreams Were Made Of
Back when I was a kid and hankering to strap on an electric six string, there were no guitar meglomarts. Heck, music stores in general were few and far between. You were more likely to see your first real live electric geetar at a Western Auto store as a music shop.
For us geezers, the Sears and Monkey Wards catalogs were our Guitar Centers. Page after page of guitars in every body style and pickup configuration you could think of. It did not matter that most of them were built by Harmony and Kay instead of Fender and Gibson (although you could get Gibson pups on at least two Silvertones). They were guitars. These were the instruments that launched a thousand garage bands and the ones we played when we knew that fame and fortune were right around the corner.
Hey, when you listen to the opening riff on the Kinks "All Day and All of the Night" you ain't hearing a Gibson or Fender. That's Dave Davies playing a Harmony Meteor with DeArmond pickups.
These days that tradition of getting you into a guitar no matter how slim your wallet may be is carried on with Fender Squires, G&L Tributes and a whole slew of others.
So today I would like to celebrate those bottom of the food chain guitars - and I say that not with derision but with the utmost love. Lets hear your stories and, as usual, post pics if you got 'em - especially you Tribute guys.
My contibution - I always seem to have a Harmony or Kay around. While most are of the acoustic variety (and most of those dating from the Great Depression years) I can offer up this one. A 1963 Alden-badged Harmony Stratotone Mars (Alden being the name of the store that sold them). This little sweetie sold for $39.95. The two pickup version would cost you $20 more. Or for the same money you could get the single pickup version and amp.
The amp is an Airline-badged Supro Sportsman. It was made in 1967 when Valco was going belly up and I guess to clear out the warehouse and fill as many orders as possible, they literally just slapped an Airline logo on the thing and sent it out to Wards. Kinda looks like the dashboard of a 1965 Rambler. The cab is also a throwback - a Fender Bandmaster cab loaded with two 1956 RCA speakers.


That Be It For today.