No lunch today - - too much work, so we'll just dive in:
In the beginning
some players point to "the minute," like The Beatles on Ed Sullivan,others were influenced by family members who played, or friends that had a nice stack of records, still others were always listening to the radio and came to know the songs and be able to play them by heart. if you were lucky you had a mom or dad that was in the business or parents not intent on saddling you with the violin.

my first guitar was a nylon string folk guitar. this was the height of the folk era and my sister and her friends spent their weekends at washington square park in nyc. i taqged along with them a few times and can still hear songs like Springhill Mining Disaster playing in my head. so folks songs were the first things i learned and in many ways colored the blues, rock, pop, new wave, indie pop, et al that followed. then i heard The Turtles version of It Ain't Me Babe and the Guess Who version of Shakin All Over and that was it for the nylon string. What about you? Defining moment? Copping chords and licks off records? Family member or friend play an instrument and encouraged you?
G&L:
not to raise bugaboos from the past, and as much as i hated to see it go, the old board had to die. while a lot of friendships were made, knowledge and tips passed around and arguments hashed out, it was doing little to nothing for the brand. it was mostly a bunch of guys mainly jawing about Leo-era G&L's and showing off the ones we got or lusted after. Leo-era G&L's will always be my first love and to be fair i only have one made after his death. but i have had a number of BBE-era guitars and all were excellent, and in many ways played and felt better than the earlier ones. and the comments on this board bear out that BBE is building some great guitars and basses.
one of the most significant changes i've seen at G&L is the transition from the post-Leo era, which was basically most of the 90's, to the full-fledged BBE-era. yes, the core is still Leo and George and their designs and influence, but Darth and team have clearly come into their own and build an instrument that's second to none. especially in looks, woods and finishing. and while Fred Finisher said he thought a lot of today's instruments look "dipped in plastic," i still say that other than a handful of standout finishes on Leo-era instruments, none reach a level of refinement and "polish" that the BBE G&L's have. and it looks like we've only seen the tip of the iceberg so to speak. agree, disagree?
Some reference points in my musical journey:
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