OGG
Master of the Meh
So which Leppard will you be?Def Leppard.
All members are in place, so I hope to be gigging by spring.
So which Leppard will you be?Def Leppard.
All members are in place, so I hope to be gigging by spring.


Start a band.
This is very similar to me. I have spent the last year basically dusting my guitars, moving my pedal board out of the way, and getting frustrated after about 10 minutes of picking up either my electric or acoustic.I need to write down something more specific, but between February and December last year I probably played a grand total of one hour of guitar. So - I just need to start playing again. I have two acoustics and neither are playable nor fixable by myself. #1 need a new nut, a setup, and then it goes up for sale locally. The neck is too wide for me. #2 has a buzzing on the G string at the third fret (I think) I just can't fix - so that goes to the luthier as well. I did play that one a bit on Monday trying to get my fingerpicking skills out of the gutter.
So - hmmm...
1. get acoustics fixed
2. sell one
3. play the other one way more.
4. write a few songs
5. Try to find some outlet for playing ( band, open mic, etc. Church ain't gonna happen where we go now).
Gear acquisition at this point is generally for touring purposes and is mostly done, as far as I can tell. There really isn't much that I need in that realm. However, what I'm focusing on now is this:
In the interest of minimizing undue friction for the purpose of playing as fast as possible, the action on pretty much ALL of my guitars is ridiculously low. The days of shredding are really quite far behind me (although I still have some chops left), so I raised the action on one of my Les Paul's recently, and liked the results. Sure, it slowed me down a bit, but while doing some recording lately, the compression that I occasionally experience on clean sounds has decreased. The interest of having a clearer/cleaner tone is paramount right now.
How often do you have shit wear out or die on you? I know I’ve been really busy this year and deferred maintenance on a bunch of stuff for budgetary reasons but holy shit I’m tired of taking guitars and amps in for repair. I’m not breaking pedals much anymore sine I got the ES-8 but I think my King of Tone has to go back because something is intermittent.
The thing I've found with patch cables is that if you leave everything connected there are almost no problems ever. It's once I start swapping things around that I have issues.Rarely. Touring is the bulk of my gigs these days, so (besides my guitars) I'm "pedals only" in those cases. Some of the pedals need tightening (jacks, switches, knobs) on occasion, but none have broken in any way. I keep expecting my patch cables to wear out, and always travel with a few extra, but they've held up fine. I request long 1/4" cables in my backline rider for connecting to the house and to whatever I have as a stage monitor. I bring 2 just in case, but I never have to use them.
I have a rotation of around 5 or 6 electrics that go on the road with me (always 2 at a time, and at least 1 is a Les Paul). Bringing them on the road is causing MUCH more wear and tear on them. I wait until I have a break in the action of at least a few weeks before I toss a guitar to my tech. He'll give me emergency service when needed, but I don't like to have to do that to him. It's interesting, though, that touring has made certain details in my guitars much more evident to me. For example, I have a P-90 in the neck of one of my LP's, and it sounds great on its own but has got to go. Middle position with a humbucker/P-90 combo is a weird beast.
I'm not doing enough local gigs these days to even use an amp all that much, so they're all fine. My Bogner -- hell, I've had it for probably a dozen years and have yet to have it serviced. I probably should, though. Same goes for my Boogie, and yeah probably my Fender too...
The thing I've found with patch cables is that if you leave everything connected there are almost no problems ever. It's once I start swapping things around that I have issues.
Over the last few years, I've been getting better cases for everything so that has helped but my amps get banged around a bunch and I think some of my amp problems are more about vibration damage to tubes than anything else.
I've been in the habit of playing one guitar to death at a time and then parking it when the frets are done for. My tech told me that I need to start rotating guitars regularly like every other normal musician in the area and then I won't be into him for $1200-$1500 a year.
#1 is four days away from reality. No guarantees though.
- Finish School without murdering anyone.
- play better gigs
- build my repertoire so that I can play solo gigs or lead a band for a variety of settings
- just be better than before.
I've been playing bass in this band for about 6 weeks now. We worked through a few of their songs for the first few weeks and are now writing new material. The challenge has been to write something interesting that works with our sound. I'm writing a lot of cool stuff, but those jams end up sounding more funky or fusiony. The more basic stuff I play tends to get latched onto.
From a technique standpoint, I had some pain in my thumb and forefinger from picking for the first few weeks. I don't deathgrip the pick so I was a bit confused by the problem. Talkbass has a long thread about Carol Kaye's picking techniques and that helped me to be more loose while keeping the rest of my picking technique in tact. Oddly, I'm picking more like I do on guitar than I did before and it's working out better.
Nothing wrong with pick on a bass but any thought to giving fingerstyle a try?
I’ve been working on it, just like I did in The Stand Ins and The Bird Index. I don’t have a lot of practice time. My aim is to write the songs first and then go back and learn the parts fingerstyle.
If one is an adept, skilled guitarist with a strong right-hand technique, like yourself, then you shouldn’t feel any pressing need to go “pickless” if you transition to bass.
Play to your considerable strengths, I think.

