Author Topic: Classic lumber  (Read 1975 times)

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Offline evanphi

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Re: Classic lumber
« Reply #25 on: October 12, 2014, 05:35:55 PM »
Here's the first electric I owned. Bought it in 1965 when I was 16. Its a Teisco. I think it cost me about $60 which was a heap of money in those day but was all I could afford. Anything else was much dearer. The closest I've been able to date it is 1959/60. It has a glued on and thick neck and action is a little high. Replaced the machine heads a long time ago and the bridge. It has suffered a few knocks over the years and the case desintegrated many years ago. Has a lovely mellow tone from those original pick ups. Doesn't get played much these days. Where I live is close to salt water (about 20 metres away) so my strings tend to rust faily quickly, particularly the top E, therefore I have no problem finding something to clear that pesky hole in the brake MC.

Oh man that's pretty.
--Evan

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Offline Killer Canary

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Offline Ravie

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Classic lumber
« Reply #27 on: October 12, 2014, 07:38:49 PM »
Hmm. Lemme see...



Above: Playing with a frankenstrat through a Peavey Valve King 212 a couple years ago.


Same band plus a guitar player and a fill-in drummer. I'm the bearded fellow again. Playing my guitar back when it was stock through a Peavey Bandit 112 (the closest thing to tubes that I've owned and played through.)

I don't have any good videos of me out there singing and playing, but if you hit up this link...  https://soundcloud.com/ryan-verthein/goodbyes-final-demo-mix That's the most recent recording I've done. There's a bunch of random stuff on that soundcloud too...some not so good.

Currently not gigging but I think we created a band last week. :-)
« Last Edit: October 12, 2014, 07:40:35 PM by Ravie »
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Offline Retro Rocket

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Re: Classic lumber
« Reply #28 on: October 12, 2014, 11:44:05 PM »
Ravie, I see why you like the strat mate, nice middle front pickup tone and cool pentatonic solo, i'm completely self taught and started out in pentatonic land, major and minor, I dig playing in D as well, I play in drop D a lot... ;)  How did you manage to record that sound in the open, its extremely hard to get good sound out doors, for recording any way, that sounds great..?
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Offline Ravie

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Re: Classic lumber
« Reply #29 on: October 13, 2014, 06:02:57 AM »
The picture with me and the Strat was taken with someone with a high quality HD video camera with a condenser mic on their camera. I believe same thing on the "music video" they created for the other one as well.

Yeah, I can play the Drop D rock stuff, too...but Pentatonic pulls me home every time. I have a home in the blues for sure. I am also completely self taught.

I started on Buddy Holly at 4-5 years old and at 9 or so I saw Jonny Lang playing at an outdoor concert...at one point he walked out into the crowd in front of us and was soling and it was a goddamned epiphany for me. I was just like "This. I want...THIS." 

A lot of my formative learning came from watching videos over and over and over and over and over and figuring out every lick on them...  At one point I could play SRV live at El Mocombo all the way through. Not so much anymore as I've forced myself to make a stylistic change over the past 7-8 years do I wouldn't be pigeonholed as another Stevie Wanabe.



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Offline faux fiddy

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Re: Classic lumber
« Reply #30 on: October 13, 2014, 10:06:54 AM »
Here's the first electric I owned. Bought it in 1965 when I was 16. Its a Teisco. I think it cost me about $60 which was a heap of money in those day but was all I could afford. Anything else was much dearer. The closest I've been able to date it is 1959/60. It has a glued on and thick neck and action is a little high. Replaced the machine heads a long time ago and the bridge. It has suffered a few knocks over the years and the case desintegrated many years ago. Has a lovely mellow tone from those original pick ups. Doesn't get played much these days. Where I live is close to salt water (about 20 metres away) so my strings tend to rust faily quickly, particularly the top E, therefore I have no problem finding something to clear that pesky hole in the brake MC.
  That reminds me of a speed demon. I have one somewhere but with only two pickups.
^^^^^^^/l^^^^^^^^^^^^^^/l^^^
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Offline seanbarney41

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Re: Classic lumber
« Reply #31 on: October 13, 2014, 01:47:16 PM »
Decided to see what I had on Youtube...I was the bass player, singer of The Menthols from somewheres around 2007-2010.  This is side a of our first 45 rpm single.
lumber used was a not so classic (made in Mexico?) Fender Jazz Bass, some kinda Squier Strat thing with a humbucker in the bridge position, and some kinda Teisco like cheapo 60's jap guitar that I can't remember the name of.  We always had the cheapest but effective gear we could make work and stuff was constantly breaking.  We were mostly always broke.  I am pretty sure I am still paying off our tours on my credit card.
« Last Edit: October 13, 2014, 01:57:26 PM by seanbarney41 »
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Offline Retro Rocket

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Re: Classic lumber
« Reply #32 on: October 13, 2014, 02:20:10 PM »
The picture with me and the Strat was taken with someone with a high quality HD video camera with a condenser mic on their camera. I believe same thing on the "music video" they created for the other one as well.

Yeah, I can play the Drop D rock stuff, too...but Pentatonic pulls me home every time. I have a home in the blues for sure. I am also completely self taught.

I started on Buddy Holly at 4-5 years old and at 9 or so I saw Jonny Lang playing at an outdoor concert...at one point he walked out into the crowd in front of us and was soling and it was a goddamned epiphany for me. I was just like "This. I want...THIS." 

A lot of my formative learning came from watching videos over and over and over and over and over and figuring out every lick on them...  At one point I could play SRV live at El Mocombo all the way through. Not so much anymore as I've forced myself to make a stylistic change over the past 7-8 years do I wouldn't be pigeonholed as another Stevie Wanabe.

Yes, I had that same epiphany at around 10 years of age, took a little while longer to get a guitar though. I went to about 3-4 lessons in my teens and it bored me to death, I could go home, put on a record and work out most of the songs accurately in an evening so lessons didn't interest me, i wish i had learned to read music though, I don't even read tab, I still work things out faster by ear, its just how I've always done things. A lot people think drop D is easy to play in, even cheating but the thing i like is the structures you can play that you simply can't using power chords or 5ths or what ever you want to call them, I also use DADGCD and DADADD and a few other strange tunings in lots of different keys, exploring is half the fun. Wasn't it great when you were trying to emulate all these guitarists you look up to and that moment hits you when you realize that you actually sound like ...........you... ;D You've developed your own style... ;)



Good stuff Sean, I forgot you played... ;)
750 K2 1000cc
750 F1 970cc
750 Bitsa 900cc
If You can't fix it with a hammer, You've got an electrical problem.