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Down In The Flood
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- westtexasred
- Shortscale Cultural Minister
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- Joined: Wed Apr 26, 2006 6:10 pm
- Location: Minneapolis
Man, what a shame. I wonder what that Goldtop looked like before the water damage.
I also didn't realize such a place existed, where millions of dollars of various folks' equipment would be in one place. I suppose it makes sense, I guess it just never occurred to me.
I also didn't realize such a place existed, where millions of dollars of various folks' equipment would be in one place. I suppose it makes sense, I guess it just never occurred to me.
Ouch.Paisley's props and dozens of instruments for his upcoming H2O tour were stored at the facility.
That's not true.Will wrote:Why is this stuff in storage? Why didn't musicians have it with them?
I always assumed you never put anything in storage you aren't comfortable loosing.
A lot of pros in big cities keep their stuff in these types of storage collections because they don't have the space at home and normally these places are very secure and are ran by people who specialize in instruments.
The people mentioned in those articles are some great players and are devastated.
Whilst this sucks am I the only one wondering if anyone checked out the flood history of the river before building a storage place for super expensive guitars near it.. Also 3 foot? I don't know how much I'd want my 10000000 dollar guitar in a case on the floor.
iCEByTes wrote:5 Most Jizz face maker Solo�s , classic Rock music i ever listened.
iCEByTes wrote:Blunt a joint , Take the Touch , Listen this.
Ok, I thought about this while taking my girlfriend to McD's.
I feel bad that some great guitars are gone. I think someone who actually cared about the guitars could have used them to make great music.
But the people - I have no sympathy. If they actually cared about their craft they wouldn't just stick their guitars in some storage facility, only seeing them every now and then. It's bullshit. It's a disgrace to the instrument to leave it in storage.
I feel bad that some great guitars are gone. I think someone who actually cared about the guitars could have used them to make great music.
But the people - I have no sympathy. If they actually cared about their craft they wouldn't just stick their guitars in some storage facility, only seeing them every now and then. It's bullshit. It's a disgrace to the instrument to leave it in storage.
Your talking complete shit.Will wrote:Ok, I thought about this while taking my girlfriend to McD's.
I feel bad that some great guitars are gone. I think someone who actually cared about the guitars could have used them to make great music.
But the people - I have no sympathy. If they actually cared about their craft they wouldn't just stick their guitars in some storage facility, only seeing them every now and then. It's bullshit. It's a disgrace to the instrument to leave it in storage.
LOL, some of the people mentioned in the article have cut hundreds of sides.
WTF are you banging on about? Read the article dummy.
That is not being very realistic though. If you are a big touring act, you may have 10-15 guitars set up for touring and keep a collection at your house for regular playing and recording sessions. That is very common. This is especially true if you are gearing up for touring or recording as this place was not just a storage facility, but a practice studio for big name bands. You sure are not going to lug 10 guitars, 4 amps and a couple racks of stuff every time you want to practice. Shit, when we had a practice space/storage place, I normally had anywhere form 3-4 guitars in there, at least 2 amps, and a full PA at all times and still had gear at my house. I probably played the stuff at the studio more than the stuff at my house except for my main acoustic. It's not like they just stuck these instruments in a local store-all place. Also, these people spend months at a time on the road. Often if they do not have families, they do not keep their home up and running during months on the road (why pay a high utility bill to keep a house consistent temp (important for instruments) if you are going to gone for 2 or 3 months.Will wrote:Ok, I thought about this while taking my girlfriend to McD's.
I feel bad that some great guitars are gone. I think someone who actually cared about the guitars could have used them to make great music.
But the people - I have no sympathy. If they actually cared about their craft they wouldn't just stick their guitars in some storage facility, only seeing them every now and then. It's bullshit. It's a disgrace to the instrument to leave it in storage.
Last, I will make no comment on their music, but alot of these guys earned their stripes. Keith Urban and Brad Paisley for example, (like them or not) were gigging musicians and studio guys for many, many years prior to having any real commercial success and deserve to have some nice guitars for the years they were playing the same bars and clubs that alot of us have played. Any of us on here who say they would not have a huge guitar collection if money was not an issue and they had worked their ass off to earn them is probably full of shit.
They say great minds think alike....Sometimes we do too...
as stated above a lot of this stuff is road gear. take keith urban for example. his ENTIRE touring rig was in that facility - guitars, amps, mics, PA's, props... everything. you think he should store all that in his house? i can all the semi traliers now... pulling up to the gates of some palatial house... "Is Mr Urban there.... we are here to pick up 4 semis worth of gear"...Will wrote:I just don't get it then. I can't imagine putting something I really cared about in storage, least of all a guitar.
I have tons of gear, but the stuff I care about stays with me. I'd never leave something that mattered behind. Never.
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Why does it take so much gear to tour, though? Plus PAs, road amps, etc are by no means irreplaceable. That will almost certainly be covered by the facilities' insurance. I'm thinking more about the vintage, arguably irreplaceable stuff. Why the hell would people who care about it leave it anywhere? That's just silly.
Imma buy an amazing, irreplaceable vintage guitar and just LOCK IT UP IN A STORAGE FACILITY. What's the point if you aren't playing it every day? Why not just rent what you want when you need it?
Imma buy an amazing, irreplaceable vintage guitar and just LOCK IT UP IN A STORAGE FACILITY. What's the point if you aren't playing it every day? Why not just rent what you want when you need it?
- the isaac eaton
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Re: Down In The Flood
If this gold top still works I would totally play it, it looks awesome now.
Mike wrote:Welcome to like 2005, you bleeding idiot.
This May Get Loud had Jimmy Page pulling a guitar out of a vault of some kind. Maybe it wasn't his. It's the first time it occurred to me that those guys would bank their instruments. But any one of his guitars could fetch a high price. Insurance must be murder.
You'd think it would be better to tour with copies, but who knows? They have never had flooding to that degree in Nashville. It could have caught anyone by surprise. The same thing must have happened in NO. That bass I am fixing may have been in water. I opened the pickup and it looked like dry vegetation inside. Expect to see some of that stuff being for sale if they can't fix it properly.
You'd think it would be better to tour with copies, but who knows? They have never had flooding to that degree in Nashville. It could have caught anyone by surprise. The same thing must have happened in NO. That bass I am fixing may have been in water. I opened the pickup and it looked like dry vegetation inside. Expect to see some of that stuff being for sale if they can't fix it properly.
Yell Like Hell
Re: Down In The Flood
Plus-fucking-one to that. You can't get a cooler looking relic, or a more tragic one. The owners could offset their losses by selling the guitars as projects or salvage or whatever. Wonder if there are any duos in there.the isaac eaton wrote:If this gold top still works I would totally play it, it looks awesome now.