10 UNPOPULAR Things Guitarists Believe...That are Actually True!
Vložit
- čas přidán 14. 07. 2024
- Here are 10 of my favourite Conventional vs Unconventional things guitarists believe!
If you enjoyed this video, be sure to like and subscribe :)
DARRELL'S GUITARS & GEAR LIST!
imp.i114863.net/vM09j
T-SHIRT STORE:
teespring.com/stores/darrell-...
TAB STORE:
Songs, Lesson Worksheets, and Guitar Techniques!
www.etsy.com/ca/shop/DarrellB...
MY AMPS:
Mesa Boogie - imp.i114863.net/xdVB1
MARSHALL DS100HR: imp.i114863.net/ZdQNJ1
Orange Rockerverb 50 - imp.i114863.net/94MWE
Mezzabarba Trinity - www.overdrivedistribution.com/
PATREON:
Become a Patron to be eligible for exclusive Gear Give-Aways and Lesson TABs!
/ darrellbraunguitar
ALBUM:
iTunes:
itunes.apple.com/ca/album/cel...
*Links to gear in the video description may contain affiliate links
OTHER FAVOURITE GEAR:
*Obsidian Wire Solderless Kits - obsidianwire.com?aff=5
*Guitar Build Kits - www.solomusicgear.com?ref=1931
*Favourite Fret File - www.solomusicgear.com/product...
SOLI DEO GLORIA! - Hudba
Did you guys find your self agreeing with more of the conventional takes or more of the unconventional ones?
Enjoy! 😊🎸
So right on the Tele Position 2. Can't get that on a thin Strat.
I still don’t know what amp to buy :(
I think I agree with most of these that you mentioned! Glad to know tonewood and 4×12s don't matter!
What would your starting point for a great amp be for a bedroom player ?
@@NateBrotzman try a 50 watt boss katana. Not a tube amp, but super versatile.
Compared to when I started playing some 60 years ago, we are living in a golden age of guitar gear! Great stuff can be had in every price strata.
I remember in the early 70's paying 20 bucks for Martin Marquis strings; buy a great body and neck and the best player can be birthed for less than a 1000 $'s in amazing parts. Slash, in an interview last year, reiterated that the difference between a 500 $ guitar and a 5000 $ guitar is EGO... My first guitar, my dad built, using a mahogany table and a walnut table. I stupidly thought it had to be inferior.
Compared to 20 years ago too. What a time to be alive
True that. I love all the options I have now! Like a little kid at the candy store.
Even within my 20 years of playing gear has evolved so much.
Like others above me I have been playing for 20 years and the difference I have seen between then and now is astounding. I've recently been lucky enough to be able to afford some higher end guitars than the $300-$400 range I played growing up but I have still bought a few guitars in that price range because they felt damn good and better than anything in the range when I was young. Also I've come to see that overseas made guitars can be amazing, I have a Schecter, LTD and Wylde Audio that all came from Korea and am convinced the only difference between say my LTD EC1000 and a ESP Eclipse is the logo on the headstock.
A lot of opinions in this video that may, to a certain extent, be considered unpopular but what it all comes down to, for me, at least, is play what you like. Find a guitar you love to play - one that inspires you. Find an amp or a sound you like be it tube, solid state or digital, and rock out. Don't let the naysayers take away your fun. Just play.
100% i use a 75 watt peavy vyper amp because of the built in effects.
Juat got a schecter c-1+ custom and been jamming alot lately.
Oui t'as exactement raison
Darrell couldn't have said it better. Oh...wait... Darrell did say that... (:
100% true. My main amp is a digital Yamaha DG 130 for years and I am loving the sound and flexibility. Had 2 tube amps in between, but endet up selling them again. Now I gave it a 3rd shot for a tube amp (Laney IRT Studio) and seems I have found what I was searching for. However I will still keep the Yamaha. So it really can go in both directions.
Ah and one advice: Don't rely too much on the CZcams reviews or peoples opinions. There are always so many variables that it can look totally different for you
Joe Walsh used fender champs. Satch used Rockman. Dime used a solid state Randall. Use what you like. If you're good, the different sound will set you apart even more... look at Brian may for example?
"Get a good amp" "don't be afraid of digital" this is a sign, I need a Jazz Chorus
Same here lol
But then you'd be criticized because that's not a tube amp.
You won't be sorry! I played through one in the late 80's and I STILL wish to God I would have bought it!
The amp tech will tell you it can't be fixed, that's okay since they don't break!
Darrell SAID BUY GOOD AMP. So I think this is a good excuse to get a upgrade
Go for it!
I thought he meant to get a room full of them.
Your parter is going to kill you! Don’t worry, getting killed by your significant other, doesn’t hurt much, nor does it last… BUT, a good amp will be with you forever.
And then he said digital is just as good. I so wanted that to be true when I went amp shopping recently. Problem was, the sound just isn't the same. It's its own thing, but if you want valve sound, you just can't get that. I'm guessing people who like "modern rock" are more ok with digital than blues and indie folks. To me, just sounded gross.
@@alittlebitoflight I thought I had good modeling amp tone until I jammed with someone playing through a tube amp. That was a long time ago, and there is new gear now. I still can hear the difference. I won't be turning back, but to each their own.
Every guitar I've regretted buying was due to the "feel." If it's uncomfortable, I simply won't play it.
Agreed. Buy a guitar over 7lbs and I just won’t pick it up, reach for my guitars that are less than 7.
100% Agree - Every guitar I’ve ever had that didn’t feel good to play did not stick around in my collection.
Vintage guitars are lame. Except for the first brand new electric guitar I got which was an SG when I started playing as a kid.
@@Lowtech14 You just described what my Gibson SG-X is not. And it has a hot single humbucker and mahogany neck. First electric guitar. Best electric guitar.
I’ve got guitars I’ve had since the 70’s and I’ll keep them until I die, because of the necks.
Years back, everybody was raging about prs and their wide fat carve neck…I bought a custom and had it for about 6 months, gigged it and hated it!!
My actual go to is an Epi LP my kids bought me for Father’s Day in ‘94…. It has the best neck I’ve ever played.
The only good thing about relics is that you don’t have a heart attack when you damage your guitar
I think I will get even a bigger heart attack, because then it doesn't have the exact same scratches as Rory's or SRV's guitar anymore. How am I going to copy my heroes now??
And looks good, without the aggravation of screwing up a new guitar.
People!e pay extra for a reissue that is reliced, but will also pay extra for a vintage one In mint condition.
Contradictory?
people who ha ve bought relics have returned them because they has scratches and dents that were not part of the relic process
Unless it's worth 20k
I think relics are cool, but for me it’s cooler if you actually play a guitar so much you make it a relic
That's the whole point, the relic fans want to look like they've been playing for decades rather than the two years they've actually played.
@@akallio9000 And those who have played for decades have guitars that look brand new because they respect their tools 😂
Or just because they maintain them well... 😆
That's true, I despise relics, but I have a Seagull S6 where the finish is wearing off the neck, and I think that looks cool.
Relics are cool? I've got some ocean front property in Kansas to sell you.
I really didn't get why many think that buying a guitar for its "feel" is quite an unpopular opinion when it actually matters so much. It doesn't matter how expensive or great your guitar is, if it's uncomfortable to play it still won't be a great experience. Thank you for pointing it out, Darrell!
Like walking with a small rock in your shoe.
I can adapt to most guitars, but sometimes one will feel a bit off. Usually something about the set up.
Feel is so much a part of it. My gretsch is gorgeous but it just fights me when I play it. My fender strat player, my hand just works with it so well. More so than any other guitar I own. And I wasnt really a strat guy. But its the one thats so comfortable to play. I can express myself with the least amount of effort on it.
@@Mr1bigbaddaddy Sometimes I like a guitar that is challenging to play. It's like an exercise. I have a classical that I cannot stand though. The neck is way to wide.
@@qua7771 I definitely agree with that. Thats why my gretsch is still on my wall. I love the sound. Love it. And even though it fights me, I still play it. Eventually I'll find its happy spot. Seems to make the strat a little easier every time I switch though at least lol.
Why I love my Ibanez 652 so much. It's a joy to play.
I love how straight forward u are on tonewoods "they don't matter" noice
Paging Will Gelvin.
Yeah, agreed, every part of the guitar *can* affect tone, including the different types of woods, but not more than the pickups, tone control, tone stack on the amp or the speaker. On an acoustic the woods would make more of a difference, but on electric, not enough to worry about.
Ask someone with better hearing than you, and better sensitivity.
@@morleychallenged Demonstrate reliable significant results in a proper double-blind test and I'll believe you. Until then, you're a cork-sniffer.
@@theharvardyard2356 I think we're all kinda busy right now. I'll do my science. You do you.
Number 8 was nice, when I was 16 I was set on finally getting a Gibson Les Paul, tried every Les Paul at Guitar Center and ended up with a SG Standard because of the weight and feel.
Lol! I just went through the same experience in the last month. Returned two Les Pauls because I just wasn't feeling them, and ended up with an SG Standard that I just love to play.
Good choice! :)
lol you didn't exactly stray that far, it's not like you bought an ESP or something.
I'm with you on that. I loved the look and sound of a Gibson Les Paul, but when I actually played one was so disappointed. Ended up with an Ibanez RG - personally I would move the volume knob a little further down out the way but other than that it's so comfortable with faultless ergonomics.
Same experience. Wanted that shorter Gibson scale length, but the LP body just felt like a big bulky block of wood. The SG was perfect.
I used to be a tube amp snob, but not anymore. My pockets aren’t deep enough to afford good tube amps these days. After using the Roland cubes and now the Boss Katana, I’m really satisfied with them.
Would I like a room full of Mesa amps? Heck yes! If I hit the lottery I’ll fill my house with them. Until then , the Katana and Cube are very satisfying. (Nothing at all like the early solid state crap that first emerged. )You really can’t tell the difference when you make a decent recording ,and you don’t have to play so loud that you attract the attention of every police force in the county.
P.S. I used to play with a fellow that had an old Telecaster. It was pretty sweet and we used natural overdrive without peddles. He would carry a compass with him to align his guitar in a North South line to keep the hum down. We almost got arrested one night because a local officer on patrol ,a quarter mile away, didn’t like Bo Diddly. That was 44 years ago.
P.P.S My guitars turn into to “relics “ after six months of my ownership. I don’t need to pay extra. I seem to provide my own abuse for free.
P.P.P.S. I almost forgot, great topic Darrell .👍 Thanks.
"... local officer on patrol ,a quarter mile away, didn’t like Bo Diddly" 🤣
When I was right on cash I learned to do amp repairs and purchased broken gear.
Now there are good affordable tube amps, especially in the 15W power range.
The CUBES have a "bassy" lead tone that is like no other. Built in effects are good enough or all I need with a compressor. I love em. I have 5. 🤘
@@johnsee7269
Same here. They have a growl that’s unique. Add a compressor and you can do about anything. I couldn’t do without a compressor that has attack and decay controls anymore.
I try to buy US made more to support US workers than a feeling that overseas built instruments are inferior. I bought (and loved) 2 PDP kits before I could afford DW, and have a PRS SE acoustic which plays and sounds great. I just can't bring myself to buy relic. I definitely understand the worn-in feel argument, though, but my personal preference is for non-relic aesthetics
The only way a relic could possible be good, is if you did it yourself, genuinely over time of course. Who wants to buy someone else's fake relic? And besides it's not a lie, so call it what it is, it is fake relic at best faux relic.
I just don’t buy Chinese because China
@@Dobermanator Agree. Its fake,a worn in "look" not "feel" like dude said. Its still a new guitar.
And you try to buy Usa because is a great product. If the product is bad sure that you don't buy USA guitars.
@@macauley70 that's a fact
I’m beyond happy with my Harley Benton Sg custom and my Boss Katana 100 watt amp. I can get killer tone and it has great effects and reverb
I spent just under $800 for both
I’ve got a Katana 50 I keep at work for practice. I much prefer my expensive amps at home but the Katana sounds great, and I wish I had it as a starting amp back in the late 90s when I started playing.
@@dannythemedic what’s up?
I missed watching your videos Darrel. I've been watching a lot of other guitar youtubers lately because I'm planning to buy a new guitar. Now I saw you in real time upload a new video. You're still the best after all. Thanks for this! Learned a lot like always!
New studio setup or look, I like the new shot angle and dark look!
Im also reminded of a comment John Mayer made that when playing a guitar, you are essentially playing a neck, which is your main touch point. Obviously I’d add overall weight of the guitar and feel of the action on the bridge also, but it’s a good insight.
John Mayer only plays super high end guitars.... he basically said he left Fender because the new management refused to cater to his every whim but PRS was happy to build whatever he wanted. Point is, he cares A LOT about having a guitar exactly how he wants it.
There are also beliefs:
- That you need a "metal" guitar to play metal. I believe you can play metal on anything you want. If you have low output pickups - increase gain on your distortion pedal.
- That you need tons of gear to sound great. You don't, really - save your money! One guitar and a good amp (and no pedals) are usually enough.
I've found that you can get almost any sound you need out of a Tele and a good amp. You'll need a pedal to drive the amp harder for really heavy stuff though.
Good luck with the noise on single coils. Also metal guitars exist for a reason, sure you can play metal on a telecaster (and I've done it) but the sound and playability won't be the same.
@@the_hippykiller22 yes, I agree
I agree with a good amp can really make pedals seem pretty superfluous. Since buying my first (cheap, no-name, Chinese) 15W tube amp I find myself looking less and less at my pedal board. But I also have a few small digital practice amps too and they have a wide variety of decent effects/cabs pre-loaded.
It depends on the "metal" sound that you're looking for. I like classic metal (Iron Maiden for example) and any guitar that does not introduce hum or any other noise will do. If you want a heavy "squared" sound like in modern metal there might be a greater need for high output pickups.
Fitting how when Number 6 came around, an ad appeared for blood pressure awareness
Darrell, i just want to say yours is one of, if not the, best guitar channel on youtube. Ive been playing for 30 years and i always learn something from your videos. Greetings from a fellow Canadian, here in Newfoundland!
Met a sound guru from Franconia, Germany. Influence and friend with diezel and Thomann family. He gave me an opinion and choice of speakers which I tried in my combo amp and it changed my tone so much, I skipped on buying new amps. Only thing I do is taking care of my tubes and choose cables and speakers, selling most of my drive and distortion pedals. I would add uncommon pickup wiring to the mix of what makes most equalizing equipment redundant: Series and parallel wiring, out of phase, killswitches, tone control bypass, treble bleed, pot resistance, lalala
Big BUT hand positions and speakers are more effective like mentioned in the video.
Good video.
I love this background setting Darrell. The colors are nice and sharp, and desk in back looks good for this type of video format, i.e. non guitar playing.
I Could be wrong, but I feel like that's a green screened background.
@@NyneForte Yeah it does seem like a green screen but I think it's just the angle maybe?
#2. Agreed.
#11. Lessons and Practice are better than more gear. if you want to play AND sound better.
Yeah but sometimes pedals inspire us to pick up the guitar. I agree with your point though. It's easy to get caught up in thinking if you had this sound or that sound it will make us better.
Fun video, Darrell. In the tube v digital section, I appreciate that you mentioned the heat coming off an amp. I’m not a good enough player to claim to be able to tell the difference among most amps, but I definitely notice a difference in my little AC10 between the first 10 or 15 minutes after I turn it on and after it has been on for an hour or so. Given it’s size, I’m usually running at a pretty high volume setting and after an hour or so it’s truly warmed up in a way that I don’t get with my Boss Katana, nice as that amp is. And you’re right; I’m sure the difference is more emotional than actual.
My favorite DBG video yet. Between this and the falling faceplant into the snow intro- Darrell is a God
1
THANK YOU on the Noiseless Pickups. My practice chair is right next to a ton of RFI, so I just got noiseless pickups for my Strat because I'd like to play it without being annoyed. I have some awesome guitars made in Germany, Korea, Mexico. I agree with someone who said that pretty much every maker has their sweet spots for guitar pricing. I loved that Warmoth video! I love the sound of maple fretboards, but don't like the ratty look they get. Sigh. On the look/feel of guitars, when I got my Johnny Marr Jaguar with that satin nitro neck, yeah, that. I love the feel of the guitar. On relics: the fact that guitars I'd otherwise love are already beat up sure saves me money.
Sweetest guitar I've ever owned and played - '78 Ibanez Artist Custom - the poor man's Les Paul. Warmer tone, unbelievable feel, gigged with it for about 20 years till I switched to a Strat just for the music I was playing. I played probably 50 or more guitars before I bought it and still play it from time to time. Feel is truly important.
Great video as always! Ever since I found your channel when I was buying my first guitar, I've learned so much about common myths and mistakes. Thank you so much!
I have a Sheckter Diamond Series C6 plus guitar and Spark amp. I haven't giged since about 1985. I had a Les Paul and a Strat back in the day, but I had to sell most of my gear except 1 acoustic. I got back into electric guitars when covid started. What I have now works for me just to play in my basement. The Spark works good enough for me. It is loud enough to get me in trouble with my wife. I'm just playing for me now so my setup works for me.
Literally thinking of buying a C6. Any downsides to it?
@@thatsphreshish I love it. The model has been around for quite awhile. It has a slim fast neck with good fret work. The pick ups are Sheckter branded and sound good to me. No locking tuners but it has great tuning stability. I have never had a guitar with locking tuners anyway, so I don't miss them. For the price I payed for it, it is a great guitar.
@@ricandes thanks for the reply!
Number 2: The Edge from U2 can tour with over a dozen guitars (some for alternate tunings, others because they are THE one guitar for a song or two, but keeps using the same old (many times rebuilt) Vox combo amp (goes with Number 5 too) he’s had forever because that’s THE amp for him and for the tone of U2. (Of course in between is a giant effects rig)
Brian May is the same, Vox combo amps cranked to 11.🤘
Both those guys use vintage amps that are not similar to the current Asian models.
@@mechmat12345 Edge and his tech admit the only original part of the amp left is probably the logo. 😂
Tonewoods mean everything in acoustic guitars...oops...wrong saloon.
So true about the speaker! Same thing for the mic and positioning. Makes such a crazy difference, its almost unbelievable.
Totally agree with feel. The second I tried my Baja Tele I fell in love with the soft v neck. Only went in the shop to look at acoustics! 😂
considering myself as a guitarnerd and after 36 years of playing: everything you said is so true... i agree with you completely!
🍀🍀🍀
Thanks for this! Now I have a strong argument to talk my wife into letting me buy a $1000 amp to go with my $400 guitar
Hey Darrell! Aloha from Arizona! Been watching 👀You for close to 3 years. You have been a positive influence on both playing and gear choices, and . . . Hot Rodding and truly making an instrument PLAYABLE! SO THANK YOU 😊
Great video! Very eye opening!
7:06 EXACTLY! That's the best way to explain tone wood; It can affect tone, but not much.
I feel it's a more significant matter with acoustic guitars, most of the time with electrics it's not enough to matter.
@@Bagledog5000 yea, that's true
They are fantastic. They sound great every time I hear Warren Haynes play his EC Strat with Lace sensors, I believe. David Gilmour played a Strat with noiseless/Lace pickups for a while, too. And he also sounded fantastic. 🤷👍
I own 3 different guitars with Fishman Fluence Pups and they are all great. Sure I would love to own a 59' Gibson Les Paul, I just won't drop $500k to get the wholy Grail sound lol.
Great fun, Darrell! Great vid! Thx! 😁😎🎸😁
Informative and fun video. Thanks, Darrell. BTW I want that shirt.
I thought you were going to mention your own video where you sawed a guitar into about 8 pieces and put most of it back together and there was basically no discernible difference in sound and tone.
Or does he plan to bend it to say the amount of wood is not the thing, it's the type of wood 😉
Speakers are the most important. You can totally change a whole rig with a speaker swap.
I might try that to "brighten" up a Marshall
@@TheDoug625 Celestion Vintage 30's...you cannot go wrong there
To the point where you wonder - where is actually the guitar and tube amp tone in all that. Cause the difference is massive.
PS V30 for life
So I traded my Fender Custom for a Celestion speaker... Wish I could hear the difference but I traded my only guitar. But hey.. Speakers are the most important :P
Great video. Fun and informative. I'm old school so it's tube and analog and no "relic guitars !!!
Thank you great information ! I was always a Diehard Tube Fan for Tone and Warmth. I really the Fender '68 Reverb. Sounds great but out of my price range for now. Right now practicing and playing my acoustic for physical therapy to get back. I Totally agree about how Far Digital has come. Being an electronic technician for 40 years way back when I didn't think or see digital getting this good. When I get back in Shape and switch to my new electrics. I already picked out for then buying a Boss Katana Mk. II 50 to start. Before always just played acoustic on the Worship Teams.
The best way to get relic guitar is to play the hell out of it.
that's what everyone thinks 😌
I play the hell out of all my guitars, they're all pristine. All relic says is "I can't take care of my gear".
Show me a guitar with a nitrocellulose lacquer that's not a custom shop job.
Everything has a poly finish that just chips off so no, you actually can't. I still think buying relic'd guitars is stupid lmao but I wish I could wear my guitar out
@@HeadbangoO roger that! or don't want to - hey! now I don't need a case! (guitar is gently weeping...)
@@fredstevens799 Sure, whatever suits you best... I just don't go near guys with damaged guitars 😏
Totally agree with most things, especially digital. Us guitarists can be so conservative when it comes to gear! The economics of touring, especially for smaller or for fun bands has meant it's not possible to ship massive amps everywhere they play. Thankfully we now have software solutions. It's pretty much possible to be a guitarist and not even own an amplifier these days. I know we are obsessive about gear, and we can be very snobbish, but computers are pretty much the way forward for guitarists. Imagine a teenager who wants a guitar. His parents say yes, but they don't want the noise of his practice. Now he can just plug into a computer, select a Marshall 800, throw on whatever pedals he likes, and the parents don't get disturbed. I've only ever owned combos so I've not had the 'full stack' experience, but I'd say that's probably true for the majority of guitarists. I know amps look cool, but they are becoming increasingly obsolete. There, I've said it!
9:39 - Anyone that ever heard my solid state Crate Mini Stack were always blown away at the sound and tone. I did run a Korg Tone Works pedal station, but still, people were blown away by it. It was an amazing piece of equipment I got at a pawn shop of all places.
Usually I want to be in a shop trying a guitar out before I buy one. However, I bought an Epiphone Les Paul without doing that (but had played Les Pauls and LP copies before so I knew what it would be like). I also just bought an EART 335 without trying one out because your review of it was so good, including the minor faults with finish. Thanks for that. I only play as a hobby so I don't want to pay upwards of £2.3K for a genuine Gibson but the EART plays so well. I am so glad I bought it and I have your review to thank for letting me know that the guitar was worth taking a punt on. BTW, one of the best amps I had was a 10W practice amp (once I got rid of buzzing by properly earthing the chassis) which I got in a package with a crap LP copy.
Tonewood: My issue is not about differences in tone. My issue is when someone claims X is better than Y and puts a $15,000 price tag on a guitar because of that. Especially when everything else that comes after the guitar influences the sound way more than the guitar itself (hence the point where DB says amps are more important for tone than the guitar). Great video (except, Strat FTW! lol)
I’m left handed so I don’t necessarily have the luxury of trying out every guitar but when I played my future Gretsch G5622LH i was blow away at how comfortable it was compared to my Les Paul
I love my Synchromatic and am planning on getting a G5622. They take such a light touch to get perfect tone!
Wow I got to say,
Ive been loving the Video Quality lately.
Great work as always!
Keep up the great work. :)
#8 - This is why I prefer BOLT -ON necks. You can swap necks until you get exactly what you want feel-wise. Warmoth has so many profile and fret options, you can dial in exactly what you're after.
I still can’t get on board with the whole reliced thing. If I’m buying a new guitar then I want it to look new. You wouldn’t buy a new car with dents, a sandblasted paint job and broken windows:
I think that’s false equivalence. One of the reasons people buy reliced guitars is the broken-in feel, especially with the neck.
A relic guitar is about as similar to a busted car as an apple is to an airplane. Relic means giving a broken in feel and look. Yes it's largely for an aesthetic, and if you don't like it then you don't like it but you don't have to criticize someone else because they like the look
But they also feel and play differently, and some people want that. Out of the box
@@the_armada5579 I didn't take the comment as critical to anyone. He simply doesn't like them and I get his point. Having said that I actually like guitars that have been played to that condition. I love the look and the history of every mark but you have the trade off of actual ware too.
To each there own.
Legitimate question here, how does the neck on a relic’d guitar have a broken in feel? Isn’t the relic process just about aesthetics? What do they do to the neck to give it a “ broken in feel “? I tend to agree with Chord TheSeeker but I’m willing to be convinced otherwise.
@@steverossi7949 both the body and necks of fender guitars are almost always gloss, and maple fingerboard gloss as well. When they relic a guitar, they sand down the wood so it's a bit smoother and also the neck so it's no longer a sticky gloss but more of a worm in natural wood feel which is softer and smoother. Same with the body, it gets softer and smoother. Same with the fingerboard as well. I prefer it that way, I don't like gloss necks or fingerboards.
Fun Episode Darrell, of course I disagree on a couple of things... but who cares... this is music and guitar and at the end of the day it should be FUN! Cheers Man!!
Your view on guitar selection is spot-on, at least in my opinion. The last few axes I bought were chosen for neck feel and body shape and contour. I'm a hobbyist player and tend to buy in the low and mid ranges then modify the hardware and electronics to satisfy my superstitions and needs. Resale value? Meh. That really doesn't appeal to me but I do love tearing into a budget instrument to change pickups, etc. and I think it's worked well in just about every case. So, if a guitar's overall quality of construction and finish pass muster and its appearance gives me wood (VERY important), then it's a sale. I'll find a way to make it sound how I like. Great video, BTW.
Great topic, Darrell, thanks for the vid!!
And yeah, overseas (Asia) products can be bad. But if the brand states the quality required, overseas companies can do the deal in most cases...
I buy beat up used guitars instead of relic... same feel for 1/5th of the relic price. My favorite Gibson Les Paul was played so much that the nitro was worn off the neck and you can feel the wood.
As a tone-chaser, I think my reaction to most of your points was "yes, but no"... correct from a certain point of view but simplified for a 12 minute video (which I enjoyed) Everything, within reason, matters even if it's only 1% of the sound. The only one that I would 100% agree on is that the amp colors more than your guitar.
Natural relic is the best relic. Play and ware, play it all the time. A relic is strange to me. It's not a vintage instrument why pretend that it is lol. The ones that dig the relics I understand it, I would just never pay for it.
The tonewood thing drives me NUTS. On acoustic absolutely there's a huge difference. On electric it affects NOTHING! Great video.
Well, semi-hollows and jazz hollows are electric too. Wood works in those instuments giving own feedback.
@@dmitria6847 true. I was referring more to solid body's. I should've been clear.
I'd say it does make a difference on electric guitars, but that difference is WAAAAAY overrated. You can basically only hear it in a direct comparison. In a mix or a band, especially live, it doesn't really matter.
@@JohnDoe9764 I think maybe only with a little bit of the sustain, because of varying densities & weights. I would choose woods based on different factors, such as the look weight & comfort..ect.. and I like dark fretboards..
@@JohnDoe9764 yeah it may make a difference but not enough that it matters
Sole Deo Gloria! Keep up the great work darrell. Love your content.
Thought this was going to be another crazy town video, like the last belief video. Nice Video and yes Tele's!!
Also tonewood is more in the "feel" when you play than when you actually hear the final result. I've recorded many comparison between similar guitars with different woods, and it drove me crazy how similar they ended up sounding whereas they felt quite different when playing them.
I'm personally on the opinion that wood does affect tone, but to a miniscule level compared to string, pickup and other electronics quality.
Your position is one I never even thought to consider. And it makes sense, that vibration you feel while playing is a big tactile part that I've never even put a second thought to. Weird that I've never heard anyone mention it until now.
I get what you are saying, but wasn‘t the tone wood the main argument
for the fact that the now unaffordably expensive original 58 Les Pauls are so great … ?
Even boomers who were in their mid 20 or 30s during the 1980s metal craze know that Japanese guitars are highly regarded
One of the best guitars I ever played was my mate's 80s Squier Strat made in Japan, and my most expensive is a made in Japan. Their culture is quality above everything.
It really depends, just like guitars made in America. For example, B.C. Rich made some of the best guitars available at the time in Japan. Then, Bernie sold the company and his successors made seriously crappy guitars out of the same plant in Japan.
I have a S. Korean Hamer that rivals PRS, or any USA comany out there!
@@1RobHunter1 That's not really Japan and America. Honda, Toyota and Nissan have (or had) higher standards than Ford, GM, AMC and Chrysler but they also had much higher standards than Subaru, Mitsubishi, Isuzu, etc. so... It wasn't a Japanese thing so much as a Honda, Toyota and Nissan thing.
Yup my Fender Heartfield Talon nearly 30 years later has never made me regret the purchase and the MIJ Squier Tele well is still one of the first I grab 👍
Hi Darrel, thanks for the great videos
No. 8... A bunch of years ago I fell in love with Carvin Basses based only on their advertising and several profesional musician endorsments. I researched them to death and was totally sold. I almost ordered one sight unseen via their web site bass builder. I lived 1,600 miles away from their shop and couldn't find one locally. Anyway, I finally had a business trip to LA and drove my rental car to their show room to buy one. And, after about 90 seconds of holding that fence-post-sized neck in my hand I realized I'd dodged a bullet.
I agree with a lot of your "unpopular" points, all of them for the most part. I never had a problem with digital gear, I choose a guitar for how it feels as much as how it sounds. I have been through many amps, and the big daddy of them all was a Fender Twin that broke my back, and I was always being asked to turn it down, which neutered the sound. I have guitars made of alder, mahogany and basswood, all of which sound great with the right amp settings. The only point I disagree with on your list, is I still think Relics are cheesey. We are lucky to have the number of options we have at all price points these days, I started playing in the mid 80's and things were different then. Thanks for the video.
Just drop your guitar a couple times and it's a relic for free lol. I was never in that camp either. I understand it, but I want my guitar to look as shiny and new for as long as I can.
Got a Chinese tele. It's perfect. Modern guitars are top quality. Even "budget" guitars are better than they used to be.
The Chinese made Cordoba nylon string guitars are awesome . The Japanese electrics are superb. So are the Cheap Indonesian .The South Korean guitars are so good that they equate with the original, parent American models. The only difference is collector’s value . I’m a player. I’m not interested in “collecting.”
@@chopsddy3 preach
@@chopsddy3 I have an 89 Korean squier that's made out of plywood lol. It sounds and plays just as good as a Mexican or USA strat
Yep agreed,I have a 2020 squire 70's classic Vibe Strat and it's solid and fun,better than a 2018 Mexican Strat I sold.
@@heavybrett-al4082 I want a classic vibe
Agreed on the tone woods for electrics. But it makes a huge difference for acoustics.
You didn't beat around the bush. Well done! I was hooked from word one.
imagine someone snobs against digital over analog , only to defend a relic.
BB King used a solid state amp. In fact, he didn't carry an amp on tour, he simply rented the same model wherever he performed. So much is myth, perhaps created and promoted by the sellers of gear. Neil Young built a bunch of gadgets for performing.
Having a good amp is definitely more important than having a really expensive high-end guitar. I have cheap budget guitars, pre-owned guitars and one rare expensive guitar and they all sound great with a decent amp. A really good and well balanced guitar will make a difference and will be more fun to play but it can not make a garbage amp sound like a good amp.
Great video!
Digital vs analog... It would be stellar if you could make a comparison between one or two amps and amp simulations. My impression is that you can use a good amp-sim like S-Gear and run in through some very good monitors and get all sounds you want. That's exactly what I use. In my case DIY speakers with full-range drivers, which have been calibrated to a linear output beginning from 40Hz. This gives monitor-sound quality, but still one point source. Playing through good monitors (like the KH you have) will not cut it (that's my experience), because many (smaller) monitors will not have enough bass output _and_ you'll lack the coherent sound field you get when you just have a single amp or single full-range driver (or 2 in case of stereo, which is fine, because many effects will output stereo signals from a mono guitar signal).
Someone had to make this video eventually and I actually think it took long haha. Spot on, my man. I agree with most things you said on this one. The amp vs guitar one is huge for me because it's so annoying that people don't understand it
For guitar buying, to me, how it FEELS (playability) and looks to me, is most important. As far as tone, I consider tone and sound COMPLETELY different things. It doesn’t matter what kind of tone anything has, you can manipulate the tone to get the sound you want. 🤷🏻♂️
I'm close to this. How it feels in my hands is definitely number one.
As far as number 2, I would say that maybe tone isn't as important as playability to the beginner? While I agree that a nice amp and cheap guitar sound better than vice versa, I would argue that it's easier to progress when your guitar plays well. So maybe get a midrange guitar that has a good neck or something...
Get a good setup to make the action and intonation right.
It's super hard to tell what feels good as a beginner though. I've actually come to the conclusion that satin necks are the way to go, but only after playing for a few years. Until I'd played guitar for a while I had no clue one way or the other which I liked best. I also prefer the Telecaster body shape, it just fits me better. Other folks might have a totally different opinion, and they'd be absolutely right, for them.
I'd say try a ton of guitars before you buy one, or buy one cheap at first because what you like will probably change as you get more experience playing.
Yamaha Pacificas are good starter guitars IMO, Squier strats and Teles are probably a good option as well. Like Ben says, get a setup as well. See if you can get the shop to throw it in as part of your deal.
Thing is this day and age even budget guitars are pretty damn decent. I have Mitchell MS400 that I think is the best feeling guitar I've ever picked up, and I've picked up and owned a LOT of guitars over the past 40 years. I only have $250 in the Mitchell and I play it FAR MORE than my other guitars.
@@Bagledog5000 Yeah I agree, although I will say my first guitar was so bad that it was physically nearly impossible to play an F chord. Up until that point I just thought I wasn't good enough of a player to pull off the dreaded F chord and having a better guitar would have saved me the trouble. I guess what I would refer to as a "good guitar" in this case isn't so much an ergonomic guitar as much as a playable guitar, with a straight neck, good action, and a good nut and bridge
I love it, love it, love it and totally agree with most of what you said! Especially #2, the amp is much more important than the guitar, i.e. the pick ups and if you add the speaker to the equation that drives it home.
Digital vs tube, digital has come a long, long way since I started which was long before you did. Well, to be honest, there was NO digital when I started. Digital, however, has evolved quite a bit but tube amps have a place still, a very important place because tubes react to a signal in a way that cannot be replicated and probably never will. Take that from a very experienced MSEE!
Thank you for always spreading good vibes, Darrell! Greetings from NZ! 😀
Boss Katana is an amazing amp! Especially with the Katana Librarian app on your phone or tablet.
Modelling amps are all crappy miserables. The best/classical way is a tube head with no colour/neutral on its clean channel for pedals/effects. Then, another great pain is to find at least a 2x12" cab or better 4x12" with speakers pleasing your ear. This is what Darrel does use in his videos - playing through his MB or Orange. Cab is a King. More modern way is a tube preamp into a fractal or a camper into PA.
@@dmitria6847 yeah but not everyone has the money to spent on a tube amp and tube amps are too loud for people who lives in an apartment
@@whoskelly1382 you can find f.i. a 15W laney ironheart studio on eBay for as low as 200€ or new for 600€ or so. I bought mine for 270€ and the amp looked like a new one. It is compact, has a good clean channel and two inputs
@@dmitria6847 Tube amps are great and nothing compares to standing in a room with a cranked tube amp jamming some cool riffs. However, they're not the be all and end all.
As someone who plays Master o Puppets at one moment and wants to play Shine on you Crazy Diamond the next, I can't bring myself to buy a tube amp. I don't want to have to switch a bunch of switches and pedals and fiddle with 9 different knobs between each song I play. I get a modelling amp, set some presets and have most of my sounds at the flick of a single switch.
Get a decent modelling amp and there's no tube amp setup that can match its flexibility for the same price. Yes, you get a worse sound, but I'll settle for more worse sounds than a couple of great sounds any day of the week.
@@zorkan111 I do understand that, that is why I described also a more modern way above - a tube preamp into fractal or camper into PA. Not for street busking but for home, studios, gigs and concerts most would prefer this way. Exactly for that reason of switching presets.
I'm a relic myself, so I prefer to have a guitar that looks better than me.
Number 8 is spot on. I saved for years to get a Gretch White Falcon, it was my dream guitar since I was a teenager. One problem though, I had never played one. Realized real quick that I loved looking at it far more than playing it. Just didn’t feel right. I’d never sell it but it became a case queen within months of it arriving and it still hurts.
Number 12: You don’t need more that a 20 watt amp. The amount of guitarists I’ve seen and played with that rolled up with a 50 watt amp with the volume on 2 is ridiculous.
Agreed, on the amp! I run an Orange Dual Terror thru a Marshall 2x12 with my band, and it's PLENTY.
been watching for 5 years now love this channel awesome content.ty darrell from canuck to another cheers.
Guitar enthusiasts are a dichotomy. Want the latest and greatest yet still belive the old stuff was better. Weird.
Price isn't a good refection of sound or quality anymore.
Klon anyone?
I've got a Wampler Tumnus amd absolutely love it.
I only own one newer guitar…all of my others I’ve had since the 70’s….If I find one I love, I keep it.
I want nothing new except recording stuff
@@ferox965 Sounds like a hearing disorder 😜
@@CathodeRayNipplez Hardly.
As for picking a guitar, I love pawn shops... Most used guitars just need a good setup, mild fret work and fresh strings.
I have found some guitars with great MOJO... My Peavey JF1, not an expensive or highly rated guitar at all but I swear that thing has a soul.
It just plays itself, cries, wails, plays blues all damn night and keeps tune.
There's no tone wood, no name pick ups, no hot spec's... But after work, every Saturday, I beat on that thing like it owes me money. Just mojo.
...one of your videos I enjoyed most - ever.
It looked like you had a lot of fun as well.
Maybe keep riding this train a little longer and do similar style for guitar, pickups, playing styles, overdrives etc with a few tone examples to prove your statements.
I liked it a lot.
Completely agree with the feel uber alles point. The way the neck/frets/strings feel in my left hand matters more than anything else to me when selecting a guitar.
I would rather have noiseless pickups than 60hz blaring through :P
It's not just the pickups, shield the cavities, and keep the pickups away from amp heads and anything with a transformer.
@@TranscendentBen
Even with a shielded cavity and distance, the hiss form single coils can still be pretty bad. I've been waffling on getting some Gen 4s for a while now, maybe it's time to pull the trigger. :)
If you gig yes, but there are noise gates as well, because P90s even with shielding and hum, sound so good.
@@activese
Touche!
@@GCKelloch
I'll check it out, thanks!
The year is 2021, China perfectly landed a robot in Mars and people still think they cannot replicate a extreme simple technology from 50's.
Nice video, as always!
There's lots of other reasons not to give the CCP your money, an ongoing genocide for one. I remember when the world boycotted S. Africa over apartheid. Times certainly have changed when people are blase enough about human rights that they'll happily to fund a genocide as long as they get something cheap in return.
@@Bagledog5000 Do you care to list the US brands that not have any production line in China? I would be happy to not buy from then to help your cause.
BRAVE! Man, you are BRAVE!
🤘😆🤘
Every one of these points has generated entire websites worth of debate.
Entire INDUSTRIES of debate.
You just threw 10 BOMBS and slipped away with a smile! 😄
…but I think you’re RIGHT on all accounts.
👍😎👍
Man, on point #8...I totally relate. I have a 2006 Gibson Vegas Standard...it sounds BRILLIANT...but man, it's not my favourite guitar to play. I want that sound, but in my Guild Polara S-100.
So, yeah, trying to unload that Gibson so I can hopefully find something with that sound, but feels better to play.
I have a guitar made in Canada. It is not electric but diesel, makes it easy to play in cold weather and has great low end.
Clever... :P
I have a wood burning guitar but every time I play it I have to get a new one.
Hope you have plenty of starting fluid!
I've played for more than half a century, and find myself agreeing with the unconventional on all but #10. A winter project will be to change the speaker on one of my amps, I've never purchased a guitar because of its "tone woods," and so on, except for #10. I don't care if "relics" have taken over the guitar world, paying extra for a guitar because it's been "pre-beaten-up" seems, well, stupid.
Takes five minutes dude.
It is stupid, extremely so. That’s why it’s so popular….fits the modern world mentality perfectly.👉🤪👈
Heck if relic gets anymore popular I figure I'm going to open me up a car sales lot with relic cars. Offer a free bottle of Relic Snake Oil with each car purchase. Tell them the extended warranty purchase comes with a plot of swamp land in Florida.
We've seen it with jeans and we've seen it with furniture. I don't need it on my guitars.
As a retiree who's just taking up the guitar there's so much to learn and info overload. It's difficult to know what to buy. You've convinced me that I need to get a good amp instead of a better guitar. Thanks so much for putting out this video.
A comfortable guitar is more important than an expensive one. Especially if you're learning, you want something to look forward to playing.
Have fun with your new hobby! It's definitely one of those where you get as much as you put into it.
@@pyratoothNL Thank you so much!
Don't get caught up with all the bs around guitar tone and such. This video gives good insight into what's what. Thanks @darrellbraunguitar
Changing the speaker was a game changer for me. I got a Blackstar HT-5R MKII and there was just something about it I didn't like. I put an eminence speaker in it and absolutely love it now!
I was with you all the from 1 to 9. Especially on tone woods, combos and digital. But relics are stupid. Yep, stupid.
Yep
I like them:)
What are relics?
With Relics you don’t have worry to much if it gets a ding. I don’t get why some people take such an issue with some else’s choice.
@@kadourimdou43 I don't take issue with your choice. I'm talking about my choice.
I didn't even own an electric guitar... Still watching......👍
I'm a bass player and must say that Topic Number 8 is the most importante to me. Totally agreed. Know a lot of other players that are looking for 'The Brand' and not for the feel. I can adjust the sound, but adjust the instrument for a better feel can 'damage the image or the structure of The Brand' if I do it so.
My relics got that way through years of live gigs spilled libations, knocked over by drunk patrons etc. still love em still played always keep them set up I wouldn’t change a thing.
Relics are like buying pre-torn jeans. There's no story, no skin.
Just like jumping on your hat so it looks rugged. Where is the story?
While I can agree that many guitars made overseas sound just fine, I made it a point to buy and play Canadian made guitars (Godin, Seagull) to support Canadian business and workers. Besides, they sound incredible and dollar for dollar they can’t be beat. 🇨🇦😎🎸
Totally agree! Love seeing the 'Made in Canada" on the headstock of my 5th Ave!
I have the A12. Built like a tank and sounds great.
My 2011 Seagull Coastline is hands down my favorite acoustic.
Definitely feeling number 8. My first two guitars were a Squier SE Special Strat and an Epiphone Les Paul Special-II, the former because it came with my very first guitar kit and the second because, well, all my favourite musicians played LPs, so I had the best of both worlds.
Or so I thought. The LP's heft made it really uncomfortable to play standing up and the Special-II's plastic neck coating gave it a sticky feel when sliding the webbing of my palm up and down. The Strat was lighter, but I found the 25.5" scale length difficult to make that long stretch to the fourth fret, plus with the single coils, it was a little too jangly when I needed some hard rock grit.
I think that's what contributed to my hiatus from playing until about November of 2019, when I picked up the LP again and gave it another try. It was fine for basement practice (and of course COVID kept us all cooped up), but I did do a little online shopping for a mid-price upgrade. Lo and behold, at that exact time, I found a 2019 SG Tribute on sale at my local guitar shop. It had the 24.4" scale, all the Gibson humbucker crunch, none of the extra LP weight and a nice smooth satin finish, all under $1000. Been playing it for a year now and I've not only improved by leaps and bounds since then, but I rediscovered that joy of playing that's kept me in daily practice.
If there's a lesson for any beginners, it's don't stick with a guitar that feels off to you if you have the means to upgrade, because practice is challenging enough without having to fight your instrument. Figure out what aspect of your guitar or amp setup isn't working for you, look into the alternatives, put together a list and find one that comes the closest. With so many manufacturers out there, you'll more than likely find one that satisfies most if not all of your needs.
Great video man!