It's funny.. I've heard plenty of guitars played in similar environments, and the handmade guitars don't sound 100 times better, as one would expect. However, there's not only a better foundation to support your playing ability, comfort and overall tone, but it goes farther. To me it's like a knight who doesn't want 'just a sword' anymore. The guy who sells his hot rod to get a real race car for Sundays.. They're for people who want to hold an extension of their individuality.
I've owned and parted with a few axes in my day. I take them to heart, and consider them to be something like.. a kid. You communicate with them, learn about yourself, and deal with your days through them. This sounds pretty cheezy, but I think ppl here can relate.
I used to play in a successful metal band. After years of self sacrifice and frustration, I chose to quit. It was a necessary but uncomfortable time in my life. The guitar I used during the majority of our stint was a good one, but after I left all that, I just didn't look forward to playing that guitar anymore. I sold it. Matter of fact, it wasn't a great guitar. It was just a workhorse.
Years later, I live a completely different life now. While I still jam at home on my first and only decent axe, I really want to get a special guitar. A handmade one that amounts to the level I'm at now. I want a beautiful guitar that has extreme tolerances, rare woods and an amazing build quality. I don't want a cookie-cutter guitar. I want one that someone really busted his ass to make, and took their time and pride making it so it could come to life. I know when I aquire something like that, I will feel like a new chapter has opened and I can really shine musically. I don't expect people to understand that, but I believe this is the mindset of someone who lives 'through' their guitar.
I've owned and parted with a few axes in my day. I take them to heart, and consider them to be something like.. a kid. You communicate with them, learn about yourself, and deal with your days through them. This sounds pretty cheezy, but I think ppl here can relate.
I used to play in a successful metal band. After years of self sacrifice and frustration, I chose to quit. It was a necessary but uncomfortable time in my life. The guitar I used during the majority of our stint was a good one, but after I left all that, I just didn't look forward to playing that guitar anymore. I sold it. Matter of fact, it wasn't a great guitar. It was just a workhorse.
Years later, I live a completely different life now. While I still jam at home on my first and only decent axe, I really want to get a special guitar. A handmade one that amounts to the level I'm at now. I want a beautiful guitar that has extreme tolerances, rare woods and an amazing build quality. I don't want a cookie-cutter guitar. I want one that someone really busted his ass to make, and took their time and pride making it so it could come to life. I know when I aquire something like that, I will feel like a new chapter has opened and I can really shine musically. I don't expect people to understand that, but I believe this is the mindset of someone who lives 'through' their guitar.
Success is the application of dreams