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You are here: Home / Archives for Guitars

My 1959 Fender Duo Sonic

January 28, 2007 by Chris

This is a picture of a Fender Guitar, not my 1959 Fender Duo Sonic (pre-CBS) but one that I found on-line. Unfortunately, I have lost the tail piece cover and the volume and tone knobs on my Fender. The 1964 Duo Sonic Manual is a blast to look at, check out those beatnik guys dancing around on the front page!

This guitar is like a “Student” model but it plays great if you are a speed freak! The guitar player in Steely Dan, (Walter Becker) and Scott Merrit from my home town of Brantford, Ont., use one!

The guitar is a Student model which is great if your a speed freak. The pick ups are single coiled that has a rich warm sound. The neck on it is fast and smooth flowing and very small. It’s well worn to the point where it practically plays itself.

I remember the day I first saw it. I was in my parents living room doing something when my mom walked into the house with this dusty old guitar case. I asked her what it was and she said that this was an old guitar that sat up in a friends of hers attic for many years. Her son was said to have had it forever and that he had just died and she wanted to get rid of it. Here we go, my mother was always looking for great deals in anything. She had brought some guitars home that would be great to break on stage but that was it.

So she plopped it down on the couch and she let me open it. My jaw just dropped and I proceeded to play this blast from the past and then asked her how much. She replied ” $130.00 (Can.)”, I said “YES!!!!”. I said yes just because it just felt so right! I didn’t even plug the thing into my “Hiwatt, 50 watt bulldog, 1/2 stack”( I will talk about that later).

I also remember vividly the day that i went to look at guitars from Steve’s Music in Toronto and took this with us to see what the price of it might be for curiosity sake. When we opened it up, some older guy came up to us and offered $2000.00 (Can.) right on the spot. We looked at each other and said ” No thank-you sir ” and acted like good country bumpkins that we were, that had just fell off the turnip truck.

In todays market it’s not worth that much but it sure as hell made my mom feel like one of those people on the Antiques Road that used a violin called something like “Stradivarius” to hold open the barn door only to find out that it’s worth just a few more bucks! I just loved that look on my mothers face that day!

Keep on Jammin’




Filed Under: Guitar Equipment, Guitars, My Equipment Tagged With: Brantford, deals, duo sonic, fender, guitar, guitar player, guitars, Home, house, Music, Scott Merritt, Steve s Music, student model, Toronto, Vintage 1959 Fender Duo Sonic, Walter Becker

My 1980 Fender Lead II

January 27, 2007 by Chris

This is the guitar that I have is to play more Rock and Roll tunes on. It’s a lot lighter then the RD Artist but heavier then the Fender Duo Sonic. The width of the neck is right in between both of the other ones. The intonation is perfect for the Ozzie stuff but it’s not as wide for the Jazz approach. I find is fabulous for playing the electric version of Neon that allows me to use my thumb on the upper E string.

The 1980 Lead II and the 1982 Lead II are both fine guitars. The Lead II Manual, which I wish I had the original, went missing somewhere in my parents house in the 80’s.

Not many scratches (I think that they’re character markings like the colour of the neck being worn down) on the body. The pick guard on the other hand has lotz of character, because of my aggressive NOT THRASHING style of attack in my playing. I use the D’Aaddario True Blue medium strings on this puppy.

My Serial # is E0009736 which makes it made in 1980. The guitar came with a brown shoulder strap bag and that was it, bare bones. I purchased in Hong Kong by a foreign exchange student but, his name eludes me right now. He live at Mr. Zryrini’s house down the street from my parents home in Brantford. I remember him being a great guy who could play the guitar not that bad but, he sure looked like he was having a hell of a lot of fun playing it!

He was a bit strapped for money at the time so I bought it off him. He was always at our house that summer and i showed him tons of stuff. I really felt bad for the guy because he no did not have an axe to jam with at home so I lent him the one he sold, weird eh? I had to because there is nothing worse then stunting the growth of a guitar player!

Filed Under: Guitar Equipment, Guitars, My Equipment Tagged With: Brantford, duo sonic, fender, guitar, guitar player, guitars, house, jazz, Ozzie, playing, RD Artist, rock, strings

Tone Port by Line 6

January 20, 2007 by Chris

Last night I went over to saw Rick and Steve at G-Force Media Productions and was re-acquainted with this little toy that Rick picked up at a Long and Mcquade year end sale.

Rick, the man with his eyes always open to new innovative electronic support equipment, had heard of this device called a Tone Port by line 6. He had done his research on line about this product and had heard from other people in the industry that had used this product with great results. With the event of last years “year end blow out sale on all in-store products” fast approaching, he went on their website to see if it was on the list of items on sale. He found that this product, along with other equipment that he had his eye on, was on sale and knew that he just had to have this in his arsenal, so he went and stood in line for 12 hrs before the doors had opened and was 3rd in line. And thank God he did!

He had came to work at the Hospital, where we work, the next day I think and, told me that he had snagged this for a steal at $130.00 (Can.) Weeks later after completing their reno on the studio, he finally installed this beast. I went over one day and he showed me just how it worked. I was totally amazed at the diversity that this thing had. I had so many sound tabs to chose from, that I didn’t know which one to target on first.

Rick then told me to just start jammin’ and that he was going to record whatever I was playing, just so he could get use his board again after a short hiatus from it. I know that ‘m far removed from my RUSH days but, I started off with Working Man(1st album called RUSH,1975). The sound was very fat as well as raw, with sustain that went on forever with this effect peddle! I was using this electric guitar that he had bought, can’t remember the name, that had a wammie bar on it and said that no one liked it because it’s too hard to play. Those guys must have been joking, the thing soared like a dragon, really. I’ve never owned a guitar that had a wammie bar so I just went nutz. I had the honour of breaking in his studio by being that first guitar player to play in his studio as well as the Tone Port, thanx Rick!

I truly hope that you jump to their(Line 6’s) site and check out for yourself the versatility that this item has. The site has a video of how it works and it’s an eye opener. Rick just has the 1st version but, still it’s nothing to sneeze at, trust me. If anyone picks this thing up, can you write to me about the pro’s and con’s of it? I want to see if there are any improvements to the first that would make it worth my will to pick it up, besides the price. But I’m really lucky cause, I’ve got Mr. Jones and his Tone Port on my side!

Keep on Jammin’

Filed Under: Guitar Equipment Tagged With: G Force Media Productions, guitar effects peddle, Guitar Equipment, guitar wammie bars, Line 6 Tone Port, Long and McQuade Toronto, RUSH, tone port

Humidity issues

January 14, 2007 by Chris

This is the most important part of guitar maintenance that you always forget. I know that this is a problem that I have from time to time.

I just can’t resist the look of my Larrivee in the morning when I wake up and walk on down the stairs! When the sun bounces off it’s beautiful finish and refracts the light into our living room. We do use a cold mist humidifier and have the furnace humidifier around 35%. I also use a “Damp it, Super” with my guitars as well.

The Humidity Levels on acoustic guitars should monitored more closely now that you are aware of it, there are NO EXCUSES! I wish that I payed attention to this when I first got my Sitar. Now, the damage to this fragile instrument is irreversible. Don’t let this happen to you!

Filed Under: Guitar Maintenance Tagged With: fixing guitar intonation, guitar action, guitar bridge, guitar damp it super, Guitar Maintenance, guitar sound board, warping guitar body

The hardest tune I can’t play … yet

January 8, 2007 by Chris

Well, the song that I would die to play live is ” The Clap” by Steve Howe from YES, (search you tube under, “YES, the clap” or “Steve Howe plays Clap”) is the one to go for,for me! I’ve played mood for a day and other standards to good response but this song is in a league of it’s own.

This next one is something that you can get a better view of how to play this one the way he plays it.


Filed Under: Songs to play, Video Tagged With: Classical Rock, Difficult songs to play, finger picking, Progressive Rock, Songs to play, Steve Howe, The Clap YES, Video, YES

Fingernail fill in’s?

December 27, 2006 by Chris

Well, today I woke up and decided to do something about my guitar finger nails on my right picking hand. I know, that after a while, they look quite weird to those who do not understand why we use them. To the un-initiated, they do look weird but, for the most part people that notice them do know that we are guitar players. If someone gives a weird look at my nails, I try to expose my left hand, which has regular short ones and then people tend to understand the reason why the long ones are present.

After a month or so, the fake nails grow away from the bottom of the nail, where it meets the skin going towards your knuckle, (look for that 1/2 moon looking thing that is present there). Your original nail, that have that pinkish appearance, will now be exposed. This is normally when I go and take off the old extensions and get brand new fake nails applied. Basic finger nail care is something that we guitar players should be a little aware of.

So off I go to “Julies Nails” on Coxwell Ave., close to our home, to get this resolved. I walk and the owner brings me to her cubicle. I told her that I wanted to watch her take my old fake nails off because the last time I tried this at home, I accidentally ripped of the top layer of nail that held the fake ones on, off. Yes, it did hurt a bit. She then told me that she will just do a ” fill in ” instead of taking off the old ones. I never thought of doing this, even though I saw the price on their price board. I thought about it for a second and then asked her if people just apply the hardener right on the nail itself and she said sure you do.

Now this is even uncharted area’s that I have not explored yet! I know that you should have a break from the fake nails in order keep them strong and healthy. Boy I just wish that I was blessed with REALLY HARD finger nails!

Has anyone just used the hardener on their nails and what was the outcome.

Keep on jammin’

Filed Under: Guitar Equipment, Home and Lifestyle Tagged With: Bruce Cockburn, finger nail hardener, General, guitar, guitar finger nail maintenance, John Mayer

My 1979 Gibson RD-Artist

December 22, 2006 by Chris

Wow, is all that I have to say about this baby! It has a rounded like Gibson Explorer or Firebird body that is as heavy as a tank, seriously, come over and lift the thing! It has the wide neck with 22 frets that I love and has a great straight forward sound. It was one of the original guitars that had built in compression in it, oooooooohhh! When I got the balls as a high school kid, I took off the plastic cover that exposed it’s internal workings. It looked to me as the internal workings of a space ship. Opps, better not touch anything in there!

So my parents bought this guitar at Steve’s Music in Toronto. With me in tow, I tried out many guitars after getting over how many axes there was in this place. It was a toss up really between the RD and a Gibson ES-335, which is comparable to to RD if you read the WHOLE article below. I think that the main reason that I bought the RD was because it looked REALLY COOL! It still does.

Now for some boring technical reading, everyone comfortable yet?

Some time ago when the Gibson M-III was introduced to much fanfare, a lot of people could be overheard expressing awe at the possibilities of the switching system. But, as we’ve seen, this is only the latest example of Gibson’s long infatuation with complex switches. While the Les Paul Recording remains my personal favorite, it’s followed quickly by the often insulted RD Artist, occasionally referred to as the “Research & Development” Artist.

The RD line was originally conceived in 1975, officially introduced in 1977 and ultimately discontinued in 1982. The RD series was essentially Gibson’s response to the emerging success of companies like Alembic and B.C. Rich, which specialized in lots of switches with fancy electronic options. It’s curious to note that a Norlin subsidiary, the distributor L.D. Heater, of Portland, OR, handled B.C. Rich as well as Gibson guitars in the early ’70s. Early B.C. Riches used Gibson humbuckers obtained through L.D. Heater until Gibson found out. B.C. Rich switched to Guild and then DiMarzio pickups and took over its own distribution shortly thereafter. Maybe the RD was Gibson’s revenge?…

To execute this design, Gibson employed Robert Moog, of Moog synthesizer fame, and the man behind the last mach of the Gibson Maestro effects of that very same era.

The RD series was, admittedly, a little demented. First of all, its shape is sort of a retread Reverse Firebird, maybe the offspring of mating with a Guild Thunderbird (one which unfortunately didn’t inherit the built-in stand!). The maple body is comfortably contoured, though, and the neck solidly glued on for an overall pretty nice feeling guitar, sort of like an SG. Put a pillowcase over the body and you can get down with this baby.

The RD Artist was the top-of-the-line, with an unbound ebony fingerboard (the catalog said bound ‘board, but most if not all were not bound), block inlays, gold hardware, fancy bound pearl inlaid headstock and more comprehensive active features activated by a second large toggle switch. Pickups were two Gibson Series VI humbuckers with a threeway select, two volume controls, individual treble and bass tone controls, and a built-in preamp circuit with compression/expansion and bright/lead functions.

Unfortunately, Moog and Gibson didn’t just settle for a simple preamp switch like the B.C. Rich. Instead, we get another complex switching system on the Artist models. Here’s the skinny; bear with me.

The threeway pickup select and individual treble and bass tone controls are pretty clear and a very nice feature on any guitar. In the center position, the second threeway toggle switch is in neutral, making the guitar active but without the special circuits. In the forward position, the switch activates a bright/lead function which accentuates the treble frequencies. This works for both pickups.

In the back position, the active switch turns on a compression/expansion circuit. The compression function operates on the neck pickup only and reduces the fundamental attack time and “compresses” each note into a longer sustaining signal. In this mode, the output remains stable no matter how hard you play.

The expansion function (we haven’t moved the second toggle yet) operates on the bridge pickup only and “permits the player to play harder and louder without the note collapsing. Expansion offers a very fast, explosive response with a rapid decay,” says the Gibson literature.

Of course, either function works in the middle pickup selector position, too.

To read the full article go to Vintage Guitar Magazine and, look 1/2 way down the page. I too have just learned something as well!

Filed Under: Guitar Equipment, Guitars, My Equipment Tagged With: cool, fingerboard, fret, functions, guitar, guitars, heavy, learn, Music, pickups, RD Artist, sound, vintage

My poor old Sitar

December 17, 2006 by Chris

The bottom of a Sitar is made of a gourd (a pumpkin) and the old one that I own now has a split down the middle.

Years ago when there was no gap, I could tune it and goof around with it and had a blast. This exotic instrument did not come with a case (very unfortunate) and this is where I made the fatal error. Honestly, I was afraid of the price that might come along with getting one, what a fool or tool I was back then!

Does anyone out there in the Toronto area (GTA) know of any places where I could have them take a look at it to determine if it is really worth restoring? I and it would really appreciate it, companies that you have had direct and favorable results with only, please.

I was in college when I got it from a family friend in Brantford. He told me that he bought it that way. When I get do some extra money, I think that I might try picking one up again because it brings such a unique colour to any song.

Keep on Jammin’

Filed Under: Guitars Tagged With: east Indian sitars, guitars, instrument, Sitar, Sitar maintenance, Sitar repairs, Sitar retailer, Toronto

The toughest song I can play, and sing

December 15, 2006 by Chris

Well as you already know, I enjoy the challenge that comes with playing some of John Mayer’s tunes. I love the chord progressions that he exposes us to. He also brings the high difficulty of playing guitar while making “Pop Music”. I honestly hope that other musicians, who make pop music, notice that the bar is raised VERY HIGH because of this man!

Anyways, Neon is the song that I find that is the toughest song to sing and play at the same time while USING FINGERS ONLY. I actually am still in the process of fine tuning this song, if truth be told. I can play and sing the song to the level of any hack can but if it ain’t perfect … well, I refuse to play it live. Nothing worst then people listening to you live at a venue and knowing by the look in their eyes that you are just another guy playing guitar. I must admit that I am very hard on myself but that’s the way I’ve always been. When I do master and play it live, this will be such a natural high that I will find it hard to contain myself.

The song that I’m trying to reproduce is a collage of many of his versions of this tune. I am working on the acoustic one first then playing the electric one will come easier, I hope! There are many little and subtle things that he does version to version that I want to incorporate into one version. In all honesty, I think that I am not that great at improvising solo’s at all. I fuck around but I am nowhere near the level that I really should be!

So below is a great version of Neon done live by JM and I want you to play this over and over again and please give me your input on the difficulty of both playing and singing this song live.

Filed Under: John Mayer, Songs to play Tagged With: Acoustic finger picking, finger picking, from John Mayer, How to play neon, John Mayer, Neon the song, Songs to play

The ergonomic Guitar Pick?

December 5, 2006 by Chris

The F-1 guitar pick is something that seems very non-traditional to me but hey, nothing better than expanding the approach to guitar playing, I’m all for that!

In the little town of Brantford where I grew up, anything that was different was looked upon with one eye brow up.

When I was trying to play the guitar with a pick and my fingers at the same time, people thought that I was nutz. I wonder back then what we, as kidz, would have thought of this invention.

I plan on getting one of these cool picks soon but I’m stuck on which one to try out.

Has anyone ever bought this type of pick before? if so, can you let us know which one you picked (I know bad one) up and what you thought about it?

Keep on Jammin’

Filed Under: Guitar Equipment Tagged With: acoustic electric guitar picks, ergonomic guitar picks, Guitar Equipment, guitar picks

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