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Kiwi

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Posts posted by Kiwi

  1. No experience playing a Dinky but really, just choose pickups to suit your genre.  My choice would be EMG or Lace Sensors due to the noiseless tech and your preference for high gain.  But Di Marzio do signature pickups for Joe Satriani and Steve Vai, plus the classic super distortion model.  or Seymour Duncan for more classic models like the Pearly Gates, Seth Lover or Antiquity models. 

  2. There are all sorts of reasons behind why a retailer will choose a larger margin. 

    Some of them under their control, some of them not, some of them are about sales tactics and others are about simply charging what they feel they can get away with.  There are a couple of vintage and rare shops around the country who will charge significantly more for an otherwise unremarkable (and not vintage or rare) instrument because people will accept higher margins in return for outstanding customer service.  Sometimes shops will set their asking prices higher and allow themselves to be negotiated down...unless the customer is not that patient or discerning.  Then it's all pure profit.  And even if they are negotiated down, the agreed price may still be a few percent above retail price for other shops but often the negotiation process provides the shop an opportunity to explore the customers needs and background further giving them an opportunity to develop the relationship a bit more. 

    Sometimes retailers (especially on Ebay or Reverb) will ask outrageous prices because people will then go on forums and give them free advertising by complaining how outrageous the prices are (Starbucks get names wrong on cups for the same reasons).

  3.  

    So basically, stop the floating bridge moving by putting a block in of sufficient thickness that it sets the bridge level.  Tune it to pitch, remove the block and adjust the spring attachment plate to bring the guitar back into tune.  That is, screw it in to make the strings go up in pitch, unscrew to make the pitch go down.  When the strings are back in tune it'll be properly set up with balanced tension.

    You probably can't do much about the amount of tension itself unless you put on lighter strings.  I'm not quite sure why as the tension on my MSG is a bugger and I have to wrestle with the trem for any extreme warbling.  I think it might have something to do with how stiff the neck is.  A stiffer neck resists string tension to a lesser degree...or something like that.  I remember trying a PRS and Ibanez Saber/570S and the trems were a breeze.  I didn't have to fight them so much.

  4. Daisy Rock did the same thing maybe ten years ago.  Andertons,  a music store here in the UK, invested in the company with the intention to sell the instruments through their store and distribute them. 

    Major backlash resulted from women guitarists who felt patronised. It seemed like a good idea but...

    Skip to 7:22 for the story. 

    • Like 1
  5.  

    1 hour ago, OldG said:

    Come back to the dark side!  You are denying your true 'mojo'😜😎...  seriously,  swapping to righty might have been ok for bass, but your losing out for delicate,accurate, expressive guitar work.. And, it would bend heads at a gig/jam night if you got a lefty guitar and righty bass out together!

    Actually learning drums right handed was what screwed me up.  Besides which most of the guitars I own and like playing are only available right handed.. with the exception of PRS maybe. 

    I play drums left handed to make things even more complicated.   Can't get my right hand to lead around the toms but I can do everything else ambidextrously. 

  6. Some players choose plectrum gauge to compliment their playing technique e.g. thinner, blunter plec if they strum hard.  Or a harder, pointier plec if they want to play fast with a lot of control.   Everything else kind of fits somewhere between those two extremes. Most common gauge is about 0.6mm but I tend to play with 0.5mm because I'm still a little heavy handed and weak fingered on my right hand.  Heavier plecs tend to move around in my fingers too much.

    I would suggest finding something that works for you and sticking with it.  Being used to a plec, whatever it is, is important for developing your touch.  

    • Thanks 1
  7. Acoustic is a cheap and convenient way into the learning process but unless they're set up properly and well made, they can be cumbersome to get around on.  But I agree with Dad3353 in that passion is the motivation and if the aspiration is electric then it's better to get an electric in the first place.  When many of us were in the 12-14 year age range, good quality was hard to find (if not impossible) but these days there are extremely servicable instruments and amps available to all but the most miserly budgets.   My Ibanez TSA5 amps were less than a hundred quid and are superb, a nice Harley Benton guitar would be a few hundred quid and be great for a few years.

  8. I started learning casually about ten years ago but only started getting serious about it ten years ago - although still learning casually as time and family permit.  I have also dabbled with builds - it's a fun thing but honestly, where I am now I can pick up near identical spec, fully finished guitars for the same price as a kit of parts would cost in the UK.  So almost no point until I get more time to myself.

    My secret to practicing hasn't really changed since I started with drums.  I still choose songs that I like and when I manage to nail the part close enough, I get a huge wave of satisfaction - a 'f*ck yeaaaah' moment.  I'm also left handed but play right handed so my picking hand can be inconsistent at the best of times.  Still can't change string to string very smoothly. 

  9. These two are the most relevant to my tastes in playing style at the moment: 

    Richard Watson (BIM)
    https://www.youtube.com/user/CottonwoodBlossom

    For all those 80's LA session guitarists like Lukather, Huff and Landau.  He's a great explainer of nuance and has consummate taste in gear.

    Dave Price
    https://www.youtube.com/user/fretmelt1

    For all those funk, disco, soul and RnB covers plus he offers a course that focuses on essential elements of Alan Murphy's style.  He makes a lot of guitar parts for my favourite tunes accessible for students.

    • Thanks 2
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