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hahahah on the pbass they put the screw holes for the bridge cover but dont give you a bridge cover!!!!!!!!!!?????
hahahah
Moderated By: mods
Eh no.mage wrote:fender is testing out a younger market as gen-x is getting older though. there is the j mascis jazzy and the upcoming thurston moore and lee renaldo models.
There have been no real Fenders since Leo Fender died. The very last G&L models he presided over were the true Fenders and guitars he was constantly engineering. That is the true Fender spirit.Nick wrote: My point was that for what they are, American fenders cost too much, there's not enough available, and the japanese/mexi models aren't "real" fenders to me. Call that snobbish if you will.
LOL.Mike wrote: Made by cheap Mexican Labour just across the border. It is a non issue.
dots wrote:incesticide
that is still a younger market, even if it is one that's growing older.euan wrote:The J Mascis Jazzy and Sonic Youth models are for people of the 80s and 90s who now have money. These guys aren't so interested in SRV or Clapton Strats but they still have money and their kids are starting to leave home.mage wrote:fender is testing out a younger market as gen-x is getting older though. there is the j mascis jazzy and the upcoming thurston moore and lee renaldo models.
william wrote:there's no frank black tele, kevin shields jazzmaster, tina weymouth mustang bass
yeah, i can't explain the jazzmascis. it is a great guitar though.mage wrote:that is still a younger market, even if it is one that's growing older.euan wrote:The J Mascis Jazzy and Sonic Youth models are for people of the 80s and 90s who now have money. These guys aren't so interested in SRV or Clapton Strats but they still have money and their kids are starting to leave home.mage wrote:fender is testing out a younger market as gen-x is getting older though. there is the j mascis jazzy and the upcoming thurston moore and lee renaldo models.
my post was in response to:
william wrote:there's no frank black tele, kevin shields jazzmaster, tina weymouth mustang bass
Then get your goddamn thumb downDuoSonicBoy wrote:To get in on the Gibson argument a page late: I still have a corn on the side of my left thumb from where the fret ends on my SG Special would give me blood blisters. I sold that guitar before 9th grade, so it's been a solid 8 years that I've been scarred by Gibson's quality.
They've seemed to be back and forth with the colors dilemma lately. Maybe this Road Worn bullshit would have at least been reasonably priced had it been CIJ...Gibson was also just voted the 5th worst company to work for: http://www.gearwire.com/gibson-lowestra ... loyer.html
Besides that, IDK why we are arguing about Fender's merits. Every year they give you less guitars in fewer colors for more money. Add this to rolling back the number of MIJ imports, and you've got an empirically mismanaged company.
Very, very true. The digital stuff out now is an appealing road to take in terms of price, flexibility, and sound quality. It's like buying a computer, though. You need to go in with the knowledge that it will need to be replaced in about 3-4 years.Nick wrote:I would be extremely afraid of owning a guitar like the Dark Fire. If something goes wrong (and no doubt it would), it's back to Gibson with it, not to your workbench or local tech.
I'm sure it's cool as hell, but even by the standards of the most meticulous of luthiers, that much shit in one guitar is destined to have something break in the first year of ownership.
Eh, I'd say the comparison is more along the lines of hybrid cars; having more to go wrong, more to maintain, etc. I honestly don't think digital guitar stuff is going to evolve or crash as rapidly as PCs, if it sounds good to your ears now it'll sound good 20 years down the road, and the components aren't as cumbersome either. The heart and soul of the guitar is still the wood that it's made of, the digital part it's brain, so even if it needs a brain transplant every 5 years or so, I doubt you'll need to buy an all new guitar or be that detatched.DuoSonicBoy wrote: A digital guitar or amp isn't a bad thing inandof itself, musicians in general are just very skeptical of fine instruments being made disposable. Unfortunately, Gibson seems to be taking this route.