Well, I had some fun yesterday. Loved the thing about plugging a 12 string into a Marshall and Tim's take on the Dano 12 stringer being about as good as it got (they truly were). Here is the guitar that got me started on the 12 string thing - a mid-1960s EKO. EKO, of course, was the Italian company that also made Vox guitars. This one actually came from the DeLuca Brothers (who imported the EKOs and others) warehouse sale in Milwaukee back in the mid-1980s. C'mon now, admit this thing is cool looking. But me being me, it will end up losing the three lower octave strings, get the action raised a bit and then be let loose on with a bottleneck.

But lets light this candle now.
Ok, so ya'll now have a brand spankin' new name for your metal band. And now that you have ripped the sleeves off your Anvil t-shirt and strapped on your studded leather, spark spitting codpiece, it is time to get your axe. But wait a minute. Holy Cow, G&L has come forward and tells you they would love to have you endorse their guitars.
G&L will put toether whatever you want as long as your dream metal machine is made with bodies, necks, pickups, and whatever they currently are using. So for me and Witch's Spawn I am going to ask G&L to start with an SC-2 with a #4 Extra Fat C neck and Dual Fulcrom Vibrato. For power to the point I want a JB humbucker in the bridge and Duncan '59 in the neck. Color - black is beautiful baby including the headstock. And I want it buffed to such a high sheen that folks in the first three rows will be seeing spots before their eyes from the reflection of the stage lights on my guitar.
So what say ya'll - what could those great folks at G&L do to put you in metal heaven.
Whew, needing a break from the closet metal head that I am let's slow things down a tad.
When you are starting to write a song or just work one out is there a certain guitar you grab or perhaps a piano or a tuba or something. For me, and I don't know why, it more often as not is my none too cherry mid-1950s Epiphone flattop. For some cool musical trivia - this is the same kind of guitar that Jimi Hendrix used to work out the songs for the Electric Ladyland LP.

That's All Folks (for today)