
mikemorgan
panned out
ONE?!?!!danny.guitar said:27 guitars?![]()
Personally, I'd trade 27 guitars for one really nice one that would keep me happy for awhile.
.
You sound like my wife, and we all know what a crazy bird she is!!
Guitar hater!!!
ONE?!?!!danny.guitar said:27 guitars?![]()
Personally, I'd trade 27 guitars for one really nice one that would keep me happy for awhile.
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lpdeluxe said:...the music's not in the price tag.
Unsprung said:I have an Epiphone Les Paul Jr. 90 that sounds WAY better than a Gibson Les Paul Melody Maker. Don't know how it'd compare to a Gibson Les Paul Junior (keep forgetting to try one, whenever I make it to GC), but with the Gibson upgrades I have for my Epi, I'm sure it'll sound every bit as good as its Gibson "big brother" model. I'm putting a Bigsby B5 on my Epi, but had I gone the extra bucks for the Gibson, I'd still put a Bigsby on it.
Matt
faderbug said:simple : how many of you play a 200$ or less guitar that they prefer to the 1200$ strat standing in the corner collecting dust.
i play a pacifica that i payed 80$ (!) on all my gigs, even though i have 10 other guitars.
The Melody Maker I tried was their current offering...Les Paul body with a single P90 at the bridge, and a volume and tone knob for it. I'm resisting the temptation to sell the Epi (before I put a Bigsby B5 on it), and buy a Gibson Les Paul Junior, and mostly 'cause I'm trying to avoid the "that's what Billie Joe Armstrong plays" thing.ofajen said:Matt:
I'm not sure if you're talking about new guitars or not, but there were a lot of versions of Gibson Melody Makers. Mine is the two single-coil pickup variety from roughly 1962. I got it from Mitch Easter along with a Gibson GA-79-RVT in a trade for a 3M M-23 2-track. Those old, single coil pickups are fantastic sounding. Your Epiphone will sound different, but "better" is subjective.
Cheers,
Otto