oldguy
Lefty O'lman
I voted LP, but the Roadhouse strats would be right up there also. I actually prefer the neck on the Strat, but for fat, full humbucker tone I gotta have the Agile to pull it off.
After playing diverses japanes copies (Ibanez, Rokkoman, Aria) I got a Gibson 335 and played it for more than ten years loved it, got then a Strat 57 Reissue and love it even more because of diversity of tone and great playability and then I got a Telecaster Esquire and Bang :thwap:happy:rockya got crazy about the roughness and the amazing "Twang" tone of it. Specially great when playing in a large band with a full horn section :thumbsup
Finally got last month a Thinline 72 Custom Telecaster and love it even more :dude
To resume from humbuckers I went to single coil and back to humbuckers
Am I just dumb :rollover![]()
I chose Les Paul since my Washburn is 90% based on it, only better!
Heck yes. My frequency of screaming solos (and number of guitars and amphs that can produce said screaming solos) has increased exponentially since joining here.but lets face it, we're all about the screaming solo's here most of the time
Sorry, didn't mean to discriminate, NWBasser! Of course any kind of bass is welcome in the poll! :thumbsup
Early 80's Peavey T-60 !!! Love the feel and versatility and the neck is just HOME! The only mods are vintage wound pickups and gibson speed knobs.
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Cool! 3.5 hours? That's a lot of playing. How'd it go?First ever gig is in the books. Took both guitars pictured above. We did 3.5 hours, and I only used the Samick for one song. I just always end up back with the Tele, because it feels right and does eveything I want it to do.
It's funny, that whole thing. The last few weeks, I've been playing with this other electric guitarist who's really awesome at this semi-regular thing I play at for my former church. It's the first time I've ever played with another 'real' electric guitarist (the others always played their electrics like acoustics), and while it opens up tons of things, it takes a lot more time for the band to get in a groove. I can only imagine what it's like with 7 people. That's the thing with more people: it gives you way more options and opportunities, but it takes a lot more time to coordinate and sync up that many moving parts.I realized on Saturday that it also limits the potential places we could gig. We had a TON of equipment. We could never open for another band, or play after another band.