|
|
|
|
|
|
#395844 - 11/13/14 03:56 PM
Re: Russ or Nigel (or any other guitar expert)
[Re: cgiles]
|
Senior Member
Registered: 01/02/04
Posts: 7305
Loc: Lexington, Ky, USA
|
Hey, Chas! I would think that, as picky as guitar player are, each would have a preference for their own instrument. From a production standpoint, it's more normal for a studio to own and supply it's own cherry, perfectly adjusted P bass and maybe a house bass amplifier.
You already know that people who play the kind of music we like use either a fully hollow....usually more than three inches thick, or a semi-hollow with humbuckers...usually 2 1/2" thick. Lee Ritenauer plays a 335 Gibson, which is the semi-hollow workhorse of the business. They are in the neighborhood of $3500.0o. Same with an ES 175, the guitar played by many of the traditionalists. It's hollow, has humbuckers, and costs about $3750.00 new. Of course, there is the L-5 and other Gibsons retailing for $10,000.00 up. L-5's and 175's are Herb Ellis, Wes Montgomery kind of instruments. George Benson used to play an L-5 until he started to sing and get into light fusion, when he switched to a semi hollow. He now has his own Ibanez branded GB instrument, which retails for about $2500.00.
Thing is, guitars are so personal that I would not get a "house" guitar. Piano, synths, B-3...even drums if you use the real thing, but not guitars.
If you really want one there, let me loan you a couple...a hollow DeArmond and a Peerless semi-hollow. Test them out. They sound great and will let you decide which way to go.
A DeArmond is an instrument sold as a Guild X 150. It was discontinued when Fender bought Guild, but they're around for the amount you want to pay and will do the job ($500.00).
Studio guys don't expect to use a studio instrument. If it's a convenience thing, it won't really matter what it is, as long as the neck is straight and the tone is OK.
For studio work, I keep an arsenal of two solid Fenders, a 335, a Parker Fly, a Guild 150, a classical, a HiBred (magnetic and acoustic pick-ups)and a traditional acoustic. Over a year's time, I'll use 35 or more different instruments, depending on the work.
Then, there's the issue of pickups...how many, how hot and what kind. Pickups are either "floaters"...attached to the side of the neck like a mic, not mounted into a hole in the body or permanently mounted ones.
A choice must be made whether you want a generalist guitar, capable of being used on fusion, standards and lots of other stuff or a specialty jazz guitar. They range from a single pick-up floater (limited tones, but Oh so sweet)to a Switchmaster (not made recently...three pickups used in combination.
The next decision is whether you want a collectible or not. I have really good expensive guitars that gain in value and much less expensive "beaters" that sound great but don't retain their value.
Peerless is a manufacturer of great sounding guitars that retail for less than $1,000. They are Korean manufacturers that used to make the $1,000 Guild, Gretsch, PRS and other major brand instruments. They were of such high quality that the Peerless line wsintroduced several years ago. They are FABULOUS, as is a similar brand,Eastwood.
I have recently met and purchased a Hendrickson amplifier and Peerless Bird of Prey from Lou at Guitars and Jazz. What an interesting fellow! He is a pharmacist who sell jazz guitars. when your AX bill comes in, it is processed at his pharmacy.
Gibson has intermittent quality problems; particularly recently, since they moved the factory.
Guitar is the one instrument a studio does not normally supply.
Want to try some out, I'll ship some to you and you can ship them back when finished.
No hurry. I only have a few over 200 AFTER getting rid of over 100.
Why don't you start to play? I'd be glad to help!
Russ
Edited by captain Russ (11/13/14 04:02 PM)
|
Top
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
#395857 - 11/13/14 05:24 PM
Re: Russ or Nigel (or any other guitar expert)
[Re: cgiles]
|
Senior Member
Registered: 09/29/05
Posts: 6703
Loc: Roswell,GA/USA
|
Russ, that's the kind of generous offer I've come to expect from you but I wouldn't dream of entrusting one your instruments to a 'third party', no matter whether it's cheap or expensive. You have helped a lot, in that I now understand how impossible it is to give any meaningful PURCHASING advice....,just too many variables (and questions I'm unable to answer). In fact, you've made me rethink the entire concept (all-purpose studio guitar). It came about as a result of unrelated visits by a couple of guys who turned out to be two of Atlanta's hottest jazz guitarist. In the course of showing them my studio, we decided to do a couple of tunes. All I had was a cheap solid body copy of something (Rock, for sure) and a new $500 Acoustic electric that I bought for my Grandson but then decided it was too good for him to bang on for two days and then relegate to his junk closet. Both guys chose the Acoustic Electric and both sounded amazing but I was embarrassed by what I had to offer in the way of an instrument. They were gracious, of course, but it made me want to immediately go out and get a 'decent' instrument for such occasions. However, after reading your post, I've reverted to "to hell with it". I'll spend the money on a cover for the motorhome while I wait for an empty hanger at the airport. Thanks.....I owe you . Russ, in the words of that Lucky Peterson tune, you "truly are a friend". chas
_________________________
"Faith means not wanting to know what is true." [Nietzsche]
|
Top
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
#395890 - 11/14/14 09:39 AM
Re: Russ or Nigel (or any other guitar expert)
[Re: cgiles]
|
Senior Member
Registered: 01/02/04
Posts: 7305
Loc: Lexington, Ky, USA
|
Chas, last night I was thinking what would work in the situation you just described...a player comes by and, on the spur of the moment, you want to record something....me, for instance.
If you want something in an emergency that would be OK in a variety of cases, I'd choose an Epiphone DOT. They're semi-hollow, shaped like a 335 or Lucille, the guitar BB plays.
This would cover blues, fusion jazz, pop...a wide variety of stuff. It's not the best quality, but is an import version of the most popular working man's all purpose guitar. Gibson imports it, and quality for price is great.
They're $399, plus bag or case ($80-100.00). I'd go to a Guitar center with a "picker" and let him make sure it is OK.
If your grandson continues, this would be a fine entry level guitar for him...or for you to beat around on.
Last time I was down, I did not have an instrument, but would have been fine with a DOT to mess around with.
I have a CASINO, which is the same instrument, but hollow. It's the Beatles guitar.
For your purpose this would work fine. Some traditional studios provide the bass, amp and drums pre-miked, because that defines the sound from the studio. Everything else is chosen because of player preference or type of material.
This would work! You'd probably also want a small 5 watt tube guitar amp, too. I just bought a little Kustom for a couple of hundred that I've used on the last 4 guitar studio jobs.
Good luck!
Russ
|
Top
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|