Lunch Today - ham and cheese on wheatberry bread, vegetable soup (its cold out there today) and a fruit cup (which my daughter graciously allowed me to take from her stash).
G&L Thoughts
First I want to give G&L credit for changing the way I looked at guitars. Before I snagged my first G&L you could not have convinced me to even think about a guitar with ceramic pickups. I kept envisioning these sterile sounding things while saying to myself, - a little 60 cycle hum never hurt anybody. You could only hear it when your were not playing anyway. So I guess you can teach an old dog new tricks.
Speaking of pickups, today I would really like to hear especially from you guys who play Z pickup G&Ls. These split pickup single coils Leo developed for the P Bass really interest me. How do they sound compared to the candy bar MFDs?
Also, just curious does anybody out there use something from Leo's three companies - say an ASAT Special plugged into a Fender Reverb tank hooked up to a Music Man amp or something. Anybody got a Fender, Music Man, and G&L guitar or bass?
Post Pics If You Got 'Em
Musical Hodgepodge - Part 1
Fill in the blank:
In a perfect world ___________would have sold more records than Eddie Van Halen.
I gotta go with a guy I mentioned the other day - Dave Lindley. Sit back and take a listen.
http://youtu.be/TAbbgSKUZB4
Musical Hodgepode - Part 2:
OK, anyone who knows me even a little had to know this was coming - It Be Acoustic Day!!!
So who else divides their time between an acoustic and electric? Any problems shifting between the two? Do you change your style when playing one or the other?
I still spend most of time with an acoustic in my hands. I play the same stuff on acoustic as I do on electric and play both with my fingers.
Not going to post pics of them all but here are a few:
First up - a 1946-1947 Gibson LG-2.

Because man does not live by wood alone - a 1932 National Duolian.

Next a ca. 1933 May-Bell (made by Slingerland) all mahogany round soundhole archtop

Here is one of my project guitars - a 1955-1956 Epiphone flat top - one of the last made before Gibson snapped the company up.

When I feel the need to plug in - I slap one of these across the soundhole - a DeArmond 210 pickup.

Whew, this tired me out so Woof is going to sign off for a bit.
Thanks to the great folks at G&L who have provided us with the lumber that has helped us get through the the bad times and made the good times even better over the years; to Craig and others who keep the forum up and running for giving us a place to share; and all of you for doing the sharing.