20
by Mason_Archive
I'm missing a few pieces of crucial gear (f'rinstance, a tube guitar amp), especially on the recording end of things, but I more or less know what I'm looking for. Just a matter of realizing it financially.I've had a revolving door policy the last few years with my music gear. It's not caprice exactly ”in fact I'd say it's because I actually dislike letting gear pile up around me. At several points I've been down to one guitar, and the second I pick up another one, my brain says, Wellllll, welllll, look at Mr. One Percenter and his double guitars. Not automatically a problem. But limiting myself to one or two options per category has led to a lot of this guitar is the only one I'll ever need, no this one, etc. Especially since I've been broke, historically (I've only worked full-time in this last year of posting here), and have bought lots of mediocre things that either fantastically broke the fuck down or ultimately disappointed me.Where I'd like to be, as far as the stuff I actually play on, is to have a fairly minimal and fixed set up, with room for curiosities that make their way in and out. I have my Tele and now my Wilshire, and perhaps I find a cheap Norma guitar that I keep around a few years, then an SG, etc. Just to keep things from getting stale.Working in a music store is can be rough in terms of gear temptation, but it also reminds you constantly how there are entire politically unsavoury industries based on Tone Chasing.I have miles to go as far as my recording gear, but I consider that different from music gear. I can run my Jazz Bass/Peavey Musician/TL606 setup for the rest of my life and not feel limited, but recording entails problem solving and I feel that requires a better range of tools.