Thanks everybody, for participating this week. I had fun doing it. And I look forward to the contributions of Sprinter 92 next week.
Lunch:
Pretty sure it will be our ordinary Friday shindig at Buckley's. I'll go for the chicken fingers with honey mustard dip and a spinach salad.
G&L related
Time for an oldie but a goodie which needed some TLC at some time of her life. It involves an instrument previously owned by Josey Wales. I have bought about 5 instruments from him now and we frequently communicate by email. Through that channel, I knew already that he had 3 G-200s: one fair, one good, and one excellent (with flamed maple neck and breaks on ebony board). One evening, just before going home at 6pm, I check out eBay and find a listing for a G-200 with Josey's name attached to it. But I did not really pay attention. Yup that happens once in while. I didn't read the description and just put in my price, just a little higher than the then highest bid. When checking my stuff after dinner, I turned out to be the rightful owner of this G-200.




Clearly it is the 'fair' one. The guitars shows some trauma: the pickup selector once had a unfriendly collision with something hard.


It has been professionally repaired and I do not intend to do anything just for esthetics. This guitar now allows itself to be played!
Here are the stamps in the pocket and on the heel.


This G-200 sounds incredible. Unfortunately I cannot compare it with a contemporary F-100, but the sound is definitely different than my F-100 Return Edition or 25th Anniversary for that matter. It is more like an Gibson LP or PRS SC when handling the controls but with more top end than those models. Of course the ability to balance volumes and change the tone separately for each pup adds an infinite number of additional settings especially when combining the pups.
Q: Of all guitars ever produced, G&L or otherwise, what would be the one you like to own and why? Lets assume money is no impediment and that instruments that have been lost could be revived in some way or another.
Non-G&L related
When I volunteered for this week, I though that one of my inlaws would be in town. But actually she was here 4 weeks ago and left 2 weeks ago. We have a fairly large garden and one of her hobbies turns out to be gardening. What luck! And how we have become beneficiaries of all her hard work. The garden looks great right now with lots of weeds and vegetation that is not supposed to be there gone and a bounty of edible fruits and vegetables. We still have lots of tomatoes, some beans, kale, herbs, and what not that we are enjoying while preparing and eating food. In part it is because we have had this amazing summer with dry, not overbearingly hot, humid kind of weather. So whereas there was no precipitation for 49 days (we missed the record by 2), the vegetable garden was doing great with just a moderate amount of watering. Many years ago while visiting the Greek isles, I was told that their tomatoes were so good because the leaves would just suck up the water from the humid air. Think it might work here in the Pacific NW too at times!
Q: How was your summer? If you have a vegetable garden, were you able to harvest anything?
Next month I'll be attending a symposium in Groningen, NL to honor my thesis advisor. When booking the hotel, I looked around what was playing in the jazz cafés and theaters I frequented more than 20 years ago while preparing and doing my experiments. Lo and behold, De Dijk, one of my favorite Dutch lyrics bands, happens to be in town one of these nights. So I got me a ticket. Pretty weird still, to be able to reserve a seat in a theatre on the other side of the world from the convenience of your own home. Oh well. I present to you 'Bloedend Hart' . (I put the text into Google translations and was laughing my … off).
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Have a nice weekend.
- Jos
P.S. Maybe I bored you with all these Dutch songs. But as we say, "If it ain't Dutch, it ain't much"
