I have to agree, I too feel like my parents
"DANG KIDS TODAY!!!!!"
My first guitar was a non working POS, that i got from a buddy for $20. it had 2 strings, and bad tuners, and the output jack was broken. I spent my first summer of guitar playing fixing it.
My second guitar was much nicer, i paid a whopping $65 for that one (while visiting my great uncle in Independance MO.)
My third guitar was my first 2 guitars cobled together (added the extra pickup fromm y first guitar to my second) Since both of my guitars were crap 60's sear guitars from junk shops, they had one pickup each. now i finally had a guitar with 2 pickups!
My FOURTH guitar, was my first real one, a squire strat from Japan. (it was a "contemporary" model) I loaned it to a buddy and he got drunka t a party and smashed it... for payment, he gave me his guitar and amp, some crappy "Series A" Tele clone and a 10 watt practice amp.
If i listed all the guitars i had for my first 6 or 7 years of playing, you'd be reading all night... thing is, I had to LEARN to fix the damn thing. I bought a new pickup and had to LEARN how to wire it. I sneakily got an uncle to add me to his Stew-mac account, just to get the catalogs (and the repair/wiring advice columns)
By the time i was in college, and the internet became a "thing" i had been fixing guitars for a long time. mostly learned through trial and error and endless nights with a soldering iron wondering why something didn't work.
I "busted knuckles" as a "shade tree guitar tech" for a long while, and earned my skills. I was similar to these kids... i wanted more gain, i looked into pickups. but i learned how to wire them, what wiring tricks worked for what i wanted, what pickups did what. and researched all i could. I didn't like my amp and had almost no money, Steve A to the rescue! my classic 30 had a horrible life as my first test bench for ideas.
The newest generation as a whole (i am sure there are some good ones though) just wants instant gratification. When i was "junior tech" at my store, and learning the ropes, we had a kit that spent over $1000 to heavily customize a mediocre american electric to be exactly like his idols... same pickups, custom wiring, aftermarket neck, new hardware.. and he had already started with a good donor guitar and paid for custom paint.
He could have bought a really good guitar for that $2k in total investment. instead he had a custom painted kramer body, a nice neck and all new electronics.
Its just that so much seems to be "I want the same guitar as X " with no research into why that guitar works for him or her.
Of course my grade 13 half year art project/essay" was an examination of guitar designs form the "golden age" to current time, with a heavy bent towards function of design versus appearance.
I guess i am just a nerd.
"DANG KIDS TODAY!!!!!"
My first guitar was a non working POS, that i got from a buddy for $20. it had 2 strings, and bad tuners, and the output jack was broken. I spent my first summer of guitar playing fixing it.
My second guitar was much nicer, i paid a whopping $65 for that one (while visiting my great uncle in Independance MO.)
My third guitar was my first 2 guitars cobled together (added the extra pickup fromm y first guitar to my second) Since both of my guitars were crap 60's sear guitars from junk shops, they had one pickup each. now i finally had a guitar with 2 pickups!
My FOURTH guitar, was my first real one, a squire strat from Japan. (it was a "contemporary" model) I loaned it to a buddy and he got drunka t a party and smashed it... for payment, he gave me his guitar and amp, some crappy "Series A" Tele clone and a 10 watt practice amp.
If i listed all the guitars i had for my first 6 or 7 years of playing, you'd be reading all night... thing is, I had to LEARN to fix the damn thing. I bought a new pickup and had to LEARN how to wire it. I sneakily got an uncle to add me to his Stew-mac account, just to get the catalogs (and the repair/wiring advice columns)
By the time i was in college, and the internet became a "thing" i had been fixing guitars for a long time. mostly learned through trial and error and endless nights with a soldering iron wondering why something didn't work.
I "busted knuckles" as a "shade tree guitar tech" for a long while, and earned my skills. I was similar to these kids... i wanted more gain, i looked into pickups. but i learned how to wire them, what wiring tricks worked for what i wanted, what pickups did what. and researched all i could. I didn't like my amp and had almost no money, Steve A to the rescue! my classic 30 had a horrible life as my first test bench for ideas.
The newest generation as a whole (i am sure there are some good ones though) just wants instant gratification. When i was "junior tech" at my store, and learning the ropes, we had a kit that spent over $1000 to heavily customize a mediocre american electric to be exactly like his idols... same pickups, custom wiring, aftermarket neck, new hardware.. and he had already started with a good donor guitar and paid for custom paint.
He could have bought a really good guitar for that $2k in total investment. instead he had a custom painted kramer body, a nice neck and all new electronics.
Its just that so much seems to be "I want the same guitar as X " with no research into why that guitar works for him or her.
Of course my grade 13 half year art project/essay" was an examination of guitar designs form the "golden age" to current time, with a heavy bent towards function of design versus appearance.
I guess i am just a nerd.
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