And Back To Pop
So what do you do if you hate disco, rock music has become played out, FM radio, which was once a wealth of new music to discover is now for the most part play listed like AM, and 50's and 60's Strats, Tele's, Pauls, etc. are cheap cause no one wants them. On the other hand keyboard and synth sales are taking off. Sure, we were still jamming and playing the old tunes but it was time to try something new, or rather, return to what I started with. Albeit updated and in turn eventually twisted into a new "aesthetic" during the 80's. Some of my pals said I was going soft when I tried to play them things like American Girl, Starry Eyes, A Million Miles Away, Pump It Up. Look Sharp, This Charming Man, Everybody's Happy Nowawdays, etc. But to my ears these were just guitar pop songs with some great hooks that had more to do with the 60's music I grew up with, despite the "New Wave" moniker. There were also the garage bands like the Fleshtones, who my friend played with for a while, and of course the Ramones, Dolls, Television and a number of others who played CBGB's, Max's Kansas City, etc., so it was a pretty good time in spite of the leisure suits. It also led me in a direction musically that still colors the music i do. Basically, 60's style pop and orchestrated pop songs with the guitars used for layering and simple riffs and hooks that build on each other. though every now and again i pull out the old les paul and tremolux and turn it up.
Q. do you tend to play in one or two styles or are you all over the place doing a bit of this and a bit of that? were there periods of time when for example you played only blues, and then expanded into something else? or are you playing what you've always played and that's what you love best?
A few picks for your listening pleasure:
Crawling From The Wreckage
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G&L - Shapes and Sounds Of Things
What makes a Strat sound like a Strat? Is it the traditional slug pup, or does the body design and layout also play into it? A Tele is basically a slab of wood with a cut out on the lower edge. If you put the same slug pups, rout for the trem and trem setup just like a Strat, would it basically sound like one? Is the shape of a guitar body for design reasons only, or easier access to higher frets, or is there something else to it? I've always liked how Strat's look but never took to them sound-wise, whereas Tele's speak to me shape-wise and playing-wise. I do however like the old G&L S-types with the slightly pinched midwaist and have two S-500's in my stash of keeper G&L's. It's the same basic design, layout and scale as a Strat, so is the only difference the MFD's as compared to the slug pups?
Fred bought up a good point the other day and with G&L putting AlNiCo pups on some of the new guitars, they are pretty much doing what's already been done in the marketplace. Albeit, pretty damn well none the less. We know that G&L sales and field reps back in Leo's day had pushed for making the guitars and basses more "Fender" looking, and later during the 90's to replace the 3-bolt MT with the 4-bolt neck. The majority of buyers are looking for traditional T and S types and it would probably be foolish for G&L to stray too far from this. But what could they possibly do? What would you like to see? I'd personally like to see the "pinched-waist" S500/Skyhawk/Cav body style revived but with rear loaded controls. This isn't a huge departure from a traditional S-type, but just enough to stand apart from every other one on the market. Then again, if the majority of buyers are looking for traditional types, does that put the kabosh on things right from the start?
The all-important copper spring

Can anyone spot the non-original part of this S-500?

One of the most beautiful mahogany guitars I've seen:

The best of both worlds?

A chuckle for the day:
