Well back on the original subject, yesterday my retirement check hit the bank. Yea, and the minstrels were happy.. After doing all my payday activities, I meandered over to the pawn shop that had my LP and .50 Hawken in pawn. The nice lads inside were glad to see my get my babies back. One whistled when he saw the LP with it's super flamed top and all that gold.... But, when I got home I wiped the .50cal down and put it back into the rifle cabinet. Then I got the LP out of the case and plugged into my Crate RFX30 amp. After sitting in pawn for well over 5 months it was just slightly flat when I went to tune up.
My right hand acted OK for once. Didn't drop a pick at all. The left wrist behind the thumb started it's crap with that feeling like it was being jabbed with a soldering iron, but I remembered my training with the Cheetos Cheetah and pressed on. Got about 25 minutes in before my wrist was killing me and even my Cheetos Cheetah training failed me. But my goodness I'd forgotten just how good that LP sounds and how easy it plays! OK, so I sold the Dot last week. And will likely sell the little Peavey Raptor, but I gotta keep my LP..... and my Strat, and my SG. Will still sell the other amps as I need the real estate that three take up in my tiny place though. Since I hate digital stuff I'll likely sell the modeling amps and just keep my humble, and hated by others, Fender Frontman 25RII since it's simple and not digital. Besides, it's in
Texas Red!! Ya gotta love that!
So I guess I'm not
totally done. I'll likely play once a week or so just to keep the left fingertips tough and such. Meanwhile, I'm still teaching Bill across the road all my trade secrets of luthier stuff and amp design..... not to mention intervals, modes, off the wall tunings, and remotely used scales. I may even have him reading music soon I hope. And he's already got my old Fender Strat, Epi Dot, three amps from me and "
The Book" (a massive ring binder filled with 55 years of accumulated knowledge, schematics, personal building methods, and such).
So the old saying is true;
Those that can, do. Those that can't, teach!