TheFNEffecT
Member
Rip Paco
(((
Rip Paco
I realize no one elected me as anything here in this thread, but I will try to reply to as many thingd as I can as I get time to do.
Remember to play the thing and not let excitement sway you. It's a pitfall I've seen many get into despite being level-headed individuals.
You make look at an $800 acoustic and a $199 acoustic and wonder what the difference is. Now, a poster above me said that great guitars can be had on the cheap and in some cases, he's 100% right. But generally, its higher quality materials and components. These allow for a better setup. See my posts above about playability.
Take a look at the strings on the acoustic. Can you fit your fingers underneath (extreme example, but point still stands). Thats bad, and will have you wondering why you suck so much when, in reality, your having to work so hard to press the damn strings down.
Is it time to move on? Not necessarily.
There could be a nut that needs to be filed down if there's enough material to do so, same with the bridge. Ive seen some nut installations so bad, that the nut was up to high because it sat on too much glue. Beyond materials, this attention to detail goes overlooked in cheaper instruments.
Would say more but coming off lunch pretty soon. Please dont take my posts as condescending. You may know all this. I just eat, breathe, and sleep guitar.
Figure I should post a picture of my favorite guitar:
Got it for about $200 a couple of years ago, and it's been my workhorse ever since. Three humbuckers + a push/pull coil tap on the tone knob + 5-way selector switch = heaven. If I tap the coils and go with neck/middle I get the sweetest jazz tone I've ever owned. Tapped bridge is somewhere in between a tele/strat. The only problem I have with it is a slightly lower volume when the coils are tapped. Nothing that mild compression doesn't fix when recording.
Thanks my man I appreciate the tips for sure!! Yeah I had a guitar where the heel of the fret board cracked and it raised the strings big time and it was tough to play. I fixed the crack and it's better now but I still need to get me a new guitar ASAP
Thanks. Yes approaches to practicing/learning. My end goal is really to be proficient enough to play in a band setting comfortably. Mostly rock music.Approaches to practicing? Different playing styles? What is your end goal? To be proficient in rhythm and leads? Improvisation? Or just to not look and sound like you've just started? What style of music gets you going?
Whats up with the lower volume?
Is it only when you have a particular combination selected? Or the entire pickup?
Check that height.
Who did the the soldering? Did they heat the surface where the wires went? Or just press the solder against the iron and let it drop?
No idea.
Any single pickup (bridge, mid, neck) that is tapped.
Height is at my ideal level already. Didn't make any difference before I setup the guitar earlier this year.
No idea again. Bought the guitar used and it already had all the mods done to it.
EDIT: I should add it's more of a perceived volume drop. When I record, the peaks only vary on average .5-1db when compared to the untapped humbucker.
Coil split or coil tap? Either way, a volume drop is normal.
Great thread.
How much am I screwing my progress...
Been playing for about a year now (closer to 11 months). Been doing what I mostly just enjoy doing... practicing scale, for hours, every day. Been getting really good playing up an down the neck with a few different scales. My main goal I guess has just been getting super comfortable with the guitar and different techniques (slides, bends, hammer-ons, double-stops, etc). Only thing I've been completely neglecting chords and things of that nature. I can do quiet a few rhythm sections, and I can do a lot of chord changes well enough but probably not as good as I should be able to at this point... it's just not something I'm very passionate about working on. Is this a huge mistake? Should I just suck it up and work on em?
Also getting a 24 fret guitar in the next few months. Will this be a big adjustment from a 22?
Great thread.
How much am I screwing my progress...
Been playing for about a year now (closer to 11 months). Been doing what I mostly just enjoy doing... practicing scale, for hours, every day. Been getting really good playing up an down the neck with a few different scales. My main goal I guess has just been getting super comfortable with the guitar and different techniques (slides, bends, hammer-ons, double-stops, etc). Only thing I've been completely neglecting chords and things of that nature. I can do quiet a few rhythm sections, and I can do a lot of chord changes well enough but probably not as good as I should be able to at this point... it's just not something I'm very passionate about working on. Is this a huge mistake? Should I just suck it up and work on em?
Also getting a 24 fret guitar in the next few months. Will this be a big adjustment from a 22?
Nice thread, I've been playing for about 12-13 years now and own 5 electrics.
My latest buy is an LTD MH330 Flamed maple with a Floyd rose. I converted it from active pickups to passive (Dimarzio crunch lab for bridge and liquifire for neck). Excellent but frustrating learning experience doing the convert.
I think my next guitar I'm gonna do a Carvin custom shop. Anybody have any experience with them? I've only heard good things and they sell direct to customer. Beautiful guitars.
It depends on the music you're playing but chord/Scale learning should be touched upon at some point. As for the fret question no it's not a huge adjustment going to 24,going back though feels restrictive. I never buy guitars under 24 frets now because I like the versatility.
If you play slower and more acoustic stuff, definitely start practicing your chords.
I think my next guitar I'm gonna do a Carvin custom shop. Anybody have any experience with them? I've only heard good things and they sell direct to customer. Beautiful guitars.
Any fingerstyle people out there?
*Raises hand*
I grew up learning Chet Atkins and Tommy Emmanuel stuff. But these days, I am venturing into more of that Candyrat modern fingerstyle
Any fingerstyle people out there?
A couple good points, but mostly a cynical douche bag. Get what you wanna get. Do the proper research. Ignore people who tell you that you shouldnt get something unless you meet certain criteria.
So Andy McKee then. Killer player. Had the opportunity to play with him a few times. It was awesome.
Yup! Started because I kept losing my flat pick down the sound hole of an acoustic guitar as a kid. While I now go through phases of using a pick on electric guitar, it's 100% finger picking on acoustic.
Very nice!
Yup. If you can afford it and it would make you happy, go for it.
I'm biased, of course; I have two custom guitars, one I built and one I bought.
Nice! That must have been awesome! That Greenfield guitar he plays sounds amazing, and then I realized that the base price for those guitars are like 15k, lol never mind.
I can play Drifiting and Rylnn so far. They are always a crowd pleaser
Loving that Tele brother. Sexy as hell. And holy hell on that second one. Can you describe the sound?
Mmmmm. Flamed maple :drool:
Carvins are fantastic. Looking at a CT model? You should
Anything you go with from them is fantastic. My only gripe is I'm not a huge fan of the pickups. If you decide to change them, be prepared to route the stock pickup cavity, as they run smaller than a standard sized pickup.
Loud and subtle as a freight train. People who don't know about resonator guitars think it sounds more like a banjo than they were expecting.
Keeping in mind that I'm still quite a hack at playing bottleneck (even with the six years between these), here are some videos: one
two
Second would have been better with a brass slide and better tuning.
EDIT: Oh yeah, plugged in it's really lo-fi and feeds back like a motherfucker.
Any Mark Tremonti fans in here? That guy inspired me to play, along with Petrucci (but lol Petrucci I can't play that stuff). Love his guitar work in Alter Bridge... Every new album that comes out, I try to learn as many songs as I can.
Petrucci is one of my biggest inspirations along with Vai(who I met after a show back in 2008).
I actually live a few minutes away from Petrucci.
Love it man. Good stuff
I enjoy Tremonti. And Petrucci is one of my all time favorite players in the history of ever.
Grab the official tab books. They're done by a few guys from the Petrucci forum. They actually sit down with John to make sure they are transcribing and tabbing correctly.
I managed to get the Images and Words tab book (favorite album btw). I can play a lot more than I thought I'd be able to, but some of his runs and awkward time signatures just screw me up.
For instance, in Surrounded, where the main words start ("Dreams are shaking..."), I can play an easy version of it, but to play it the way Petrucci plays it as tabbed in the book is just beyond me.
Learn Acid Tongue, it's really easy, and pretty.
Hello guitar GAF! I'm a classical player. Here's me doing some DeFalla (early 20th century Spanish composer)
http://youtu.be/kZRxa9zSkw0
I'm having trouble with my fingering on chords. Can't seem to get it right.
In that you:
1. can't find a way to play a chord that doesn't feel awkward
2. can't get the notes to sound cleanly
3. you have trouble switching chords smoothly
?
They're all normal. Make each chord sound fully and properly each time and your fingers will get used to it.
one minute chord drills, dead serious look it ul on justinguitar. Also some chords can be fingered in a lot of different ways, I have chubby fingers and I cant play an open a chord by stacking three fingers, same goes for a major chord with a 5th string root but I have hyper flxble fingertips so i can do it with just one by rolling it over slightly. Don't feel forced to stick with a fingering that doesn't work for you.All three.
All three.