Home Forums Chat Forum Guitarists of Singletrack…

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  • Guitarists of Singletrack…
  • 2
    Ro5ey
    Free Member

    Every guitarist path is different but a universal truth must be to actually have a guitar in your house and then to have it in your hands every time you sit on the sofa.

    Have fun …. it can be as frustrating as hell, but stick at it, you’ll see improvement, and it beats watching rubbish on TV.

    When learning, after your first purchase, stay away from GEAR … it can be a massive distraction.

    So don’t read the below 🙂

    How good are wireless/Bluetooth transmitters !!!

    I picked up that Spark deal last week and the chap threw in a couple of seeming cheapo (about £30 on amazon) transmitters….. Love not having a lead, just seems less faff.

    Not really had a chance to use the rest much, quick go on the 40 and a few attempts with the ulooper.

    Looping is a skill, aye? Have got better each time, so looking forward to trying it some more and in conjunction with the airstep. Hoping to be able to put down a dirty rhythm hit the Airstep and put something clean over the top or vice verse… any tips?

    1
    IdleJon
    Free Member

    Just buy a cheap 2nd hand electric guitar and amp and explore your interests from there.

    And then you can spend hours trying to get a decent tone from the thing while being distracted from actually learning how to play. 😀

    1
    leffeboy
    Full Member

    If you are buying cheap it is also worth taking a friend along who knows how to play, especially if it’s an acoustic.  The action doesn’t even need to be close to perfect but if it is bad you will be put right off.  It’s all a lot more fun if the action is good and even someone who has only played a little will spot it quickly. If you are buying from a shop don’t be afraid to get them to play it for you so you can hear it.  They don’t mind.  Guitars are ace

    jimster01
    Full Member

    As others have said,go to your local guitar shop, with a mate and see what’s on offer.

    Personally I’d avoid electric,  even when I was fairly accomplished at playing I would baulk playing through a dirty amplifier, the guitar would sound wrong with a humbucker.

    Basically you just want to enjoy yourself.

    1
    BoardinBob
    Full Member

    Personally I’d avoid electric, even when I was fairly accomplished at playing I would baulk playing through a dirty amplifier, the guitar would sound wrong with a humbucker.

    What?

    jimster01
    Full Member

    Personally I’d avoid electric, even when I was fairly accomplished at playing I would baulk playing through a dirty amplifier, the guitar would sound wrong with a humbucker.

    What

    Sorry, came out wrong, what I meant to say was, I’d spend more time worrying about tone than playing.

    Superficial
    Free Member

    I’d say it 100% depends on what music you’re into. Pop/folk/singer-songwriter stuff – sure, get an acoustic. It’s pretty hard to replicate rock/metal/indie sounds with an acoustic.

    Gotta play what inspires you!

    metalheart
    Free Member

    The beauty of an acoustic is that it’s self contained and you don’t need to plug it into anything so no pfaff, just pick it up and strum. One less impediment to just Picking it up…

    It also has, as others Point out, less distraction as the sound that comes out of it is just (and always) that. Not time distracting/draining of playing about with settings, selectors, etc. (if you are trying to get that sound from a song that inspires you… good luck (which Pedals do you get and what Pickup/combination/guitar type do you need to replicate it?)).

    Acoustics also need better finger technique, so will help instigate good/better habits from the get go.

    What ever you get, make sure you get a (half decent) tuner. £15 that will save hours of pain and frustration from trying to tune your guitar (esP. As a beginner).

    Yamaha is a decent brand that should give a decent acoustic intro for a beginner at whatever price point is desired (my advice would be start a ‘modest’ sub £350-400 as hell you might just not go the distance/hate it/nnot have the talent (not that that has stopped me mind!)

    kerley
    Free Member

    Electric guitars tend to be more fun and are easier to play, especially fast. I also use a headphone amp so nobody has to hear me practising which is not possible on an acoustic.

    IdleJon
    Free Member

    I also use a headphone amp so nobody has to hear me practising which is not possible on an acoustic.

    Yeah, these get mentioned regularly, and I’ve posted a few times about the one I use. (Still haven’t got around to buying the Mustang Micro…) but it’s more faff than just grabbing an acoustic. I can pick up my Faith and be strumming immediately, so will do that when my kids are getting their shoes on for school or whatever, whereas I’d need to plug in my headphones, plug in the amp, turn everything on, get the settings right, strum…and we’re out of the house. 😀

    Also, acoustic can be rather more relaxing. As an example, I spent about 90 minutes playing Misirlou on the electric late one night, a few weeks ago, getting it to sound right, getting ME to sound right, and then adding embellishments and generally playing loud and quickly. I went to bed completely hyped, and needing to calm down. 😀

    2
    ajantom
    Full Member

    New band time 🙂

    Having just joined a heavy rock/metal band I’m having a blast playing heavier stuff then I normally do – pulled out my Rat Turbo clone and Russian Big Muff for some chunky sounds.

    We’re working on a bunch of covers at the mo to lock in our sound and then will have a go at writing some original stuff.

    So far we’ve had a go at Audioslave – Cochise, PotUSA – Lump, Velvet Revolver – Illegal I song, Skunk Anansie – Twisted, SoaD – Toxicity, Probot – Shake your Blood, Wolf Mother – The joker and the Thief, and Bad Religion – 21st century digital boy.

    Might do some Rage next, or I fancy some Machinehead

    Fun times ?

    edhornby
    Full Member

    Anyone get any good christmas guitar related presents ??? I got a guitar slide – either I’m doing something wrong (probable) or it’s harder than it looks

    However I got a HX stomp (thanks Chipps ! ) and it’s impressive, it’s got all the sounds you’d ever need and a slightly bewildering range of functionality to set up presets, snapshots etc – sounds great just through headphones and will get it hooked into the amp at some point.

    Anyone in north manchester need a bassist or guitarist ?

    1
    BoardinBob
    Full Member

    Anyone get any good christmas guitar related presents

    Mrs BoardinBob got me a cool wee customised pick holder. Mainly because she’s fed up picking them up off the floor

    IMG_20241231_113251510

    chipps
    Full Member

    Ooh, what’s the amp, @boardinbob ?
    I’ve got picks in a tin, but all the ones I actually use are spread among the coin pockets of several pairs of jeans… and the floor. Bring back Van Halen-style double sided sticky tape on your guitar, I say!

    Didn’t get (or buy myself) any guitar-related pressies, apart from some cheap replacement tuners for my old Aria Pro II.

    By contrast, I’ve actually been doing a reckoning of all of my guitars and pedals ahead of trying to sell many of them. I’ve got to 50 pedals(!) so far, plus a dozen guitars and a few amps… Anyone interested in the list? 🙂

    1
    eddiebaby
    Free Member

    Get Thee behind me Satan!

    I’ve just done the same and am down to 3 guitars and a tiny pedalboard. (Tuner, compressor and Kemper Player.).

    1
    simondbarnes
    Full Member

    Anyone interested in the list?

    Let me know which pedals you’re parting with @chipps – my pedalboard is bare!

    chipps
    Full Member

    LOLs at @eddiebaby 🙂  I managed the same once – just a The Dude drive, a cheap tape delay pedal and a Strymon Flint. But then I made a new, monster pedalboard with all of the leftovers… Currently flitting between four different boards.


    @simondbarnes
    – I’ll send it over. Only issue now is that they’re all in France and I’m not planning on heading back until September. Someone like Daz is bound to be driving over this spring though.

    1
    simondbarnes
    Full Member

    There’s no rush @chipps, I haven’t used any pedals since I gave you back the board you loaned me 🙂

    3
    joshvegas
    Free Member

    Anyone else had a play with one of these badboys?

    Made them for my nephews and now i am building byself one.

    mattyfez
    Full Member

     I got a guitar slide – either I’m doing something wrong (probable) or it’s harder than it looks

    Try it with an open tuning like double drop D:  ‘DADGBD’

    Quite a few tunes on Neil Youngs harvest moon album that are super easy to play like that, if you are into that sort of tning.

    2
    lambchop
    Full Member

    I bought a telecaster neck off of eBay and finally got a partscaster put together from various bits and bobs that have been gathering dust for a while. It’s actually turned out really well. Surf green nitro finished ash tele body, dark roasted maple neck with rosewood board. 3 saddle Fender ash tray bridge, some Squier Mustang tuners with white buttons. Cream Esquire pickguard. I did also buy a wiring kit from eBay comprising of quality pots, switch, cloth wire etc. Really enjoyed the soldering process. YouTube sorted me right out with soldering tutorials. The surf green nitro finish body had nicely checked as it was stored in our unheated outhouse for a year through heat and cold. I’ll get some pictures of it at some point. I think I enjoy fettling guitars as much if not more than playing them.

    4
    milko9000
    Free Member

    @joshvegas I made a CBG in 2023, it was a fun project and amusing to mess around with. I used a Chickenbone John kit so I could get all the materials and a pre-slotted fretboard but still had to carve neck, cut frets and so forth.

    I just last weekend finished my 2024 project actually! I cheated a little bit on this with a second-hand neck but joke’s on me as I’ll probably have to do a refret sooner than later. Carved with hand tools (inc belly cut and whatnot) but borrowed a palm router for the cavities. No kit this time so I’m quite pleased I managed to turn two planks of wood into this thing.

    My plan for 2025 is to learn to play the damn things as I really don’t know how at all. But also I might build a through-neck Firebirdesque one, we shall see.

    1
    Daffy
    Full Member

    I’ve decided to pick this up again after selling my last guitar 10y ago to add more funds to the house deposit.

    Just bought a cheap second hand PRS Hollowbody II SE and a little Fender Mini Twin amp.  I’ll be headphones playing via the amp so as not to piss anyone off.

    Can anyone recommend some YouTube tutorials for beginners?

    IMG_8325

    1
    kerley
    Free Member

    If you are only playing through headphones it would be easier to just use something like a Mustang Micro as just the one cable for headphones and then bluetooth for any backing tracks.

    clubby
    Full Member

    @Daffy , YouTube is a blessing and curse for beginners. Loads of information out there, lots of it conflicting. Also very easy to get lost in stuff you are not ready for. There are also a lot of subscription sites with structured beginner courses. When I started bass, I signed up for one 14 day free trial after another, trying 3-4 and picked the one I liked best. Had a break in between to practice what I had covered. For me, a years subscription was well worth it. A proper structure really helped me. Also try to set aside regular time each week to play. My wife runs a guide pack and I used that night each week to get an uninterrupted hour each week, as well as squeezing in other practice when I could.

    chipps
    Full Member

    @daffy – nice guitar! Really light and resonant (I have one, too). To be honest, as they’re fully hollow, they’re loud enough without an amp if you’re just practising.

    2
    joshvegas
    Free Member

    Nice @milko9000 i made everything oit of scrap wood. I thought the fretting would be a nightmare but actually it was quite faff free.

    Playing those was a welcome break from bashing out the same stuff on the guitar.

    Might have to restart the 23 yearold electric project after i repair an acoustic headstock that had an run in with a hoover.

    TheFlyingOx
    Full Member

    I’ve got a question that maybe the tinkerers/fettlers could help me with.

    I’m getting quite a loud buzz when I select either the neck or bridge pickup on my PRS, and it doesn’t reduce much when I’m touching the strings. Selector in the middle is almost silent, and the buzz reduces significantly if i pull the tone pot out to single coil mode.

    I know almost nothing about electronics, but does this sound like a total amateur could fix or am I better just handing it over to a guitar shop?

    BoardinBob
    Full Member

    Any pedals between the guitar and amp? My cheap Donner tuner causes a hell of a lot of buzz on my Les Paul. Doesn’t buzz on my single coil guitars.

    TheFlyingOx
    Full Member

    Nope, just a Fender Mustang Micro and some wired headphones

    BigJohn
    Full Member

    I guess the pickups are single coil so when you select the two together you’re making a humbucker. You’ll be picking up some 50hz interference from somewhere.
    But thinking about it, it’s worth seeing if you can take a look at the wiring and there might be an earthing wire that’s come unsoldered.

    With my P90 guitar sometimes if I just turned 90 degrees it stopped.
    But in the end I went for replacement noiseless pickups which cost nearly as much as the Harley Benton.
    And then I added locking tuners, graphite nut and had the trem properly balanced and it’s now beautiful to play, sounding fantastic and worth about 20% of what I paid for it.

    There’s nothing wrong with cheap guitars that sound and play great. I often get asked about my Norman acoustic at jam nights. Best £200 I ever spent!

    TheFlyingOx
    Full Member

    They’re both humbucker pickups, which I thought were supposed to stop the interference noise

    BoardinBob
    Full Member

    Check the earth wire on the guitar

    TheFlyingOx
    Full Member

    Cheers, I’ll give that a shot

    ajantom
    Full Member

    Cab advice needed…

    I’ve got a very nice late 70s/early 80s vintage 2×12 cab with celestions in. Very solid, sounds great (especially at louder volumes), but my god it’s heavy!

    I’m getting a bad back lugging it to practice every week or so. I did try taking along a 1×12 but it just doesn’t have the oomph needed in a heavyish band.

    So….suggestions for lighter 2×12 cabinets please 🙂

    2
    chipps
    Full Member

    @ajantom – I can highly recommend Barefaced cabs. Super, super light cabs that are massively loud for the weight. As represented by Alex of this very parish…
    https://barefacedaudio.com/collections/avd-guitar-cabs – I’ve used their 1×10 cab with an EVH lunchbox amp and it’s more than kept up with a heavy drummer. I’m trying to justify a 2×10 vertical, just so I don’t have to bend down as much to tweak the amp 🙂

    TheFlyingOx
    Full Member

    Another question for the fettlers:

    I work away a lot, to the point that I’m out of the UK more than I’m in the UK, and that’s not conducive to building up good practice habits. There are guitar players and guitars here at work but none of them are left-handed. I’m not keen on travelling with my actiual guitar so I’m thinking about something inexpensive to take with me and leave at work. Wondering if I’m better off with a £60 B-stock Harley Benton Tele copy or a £75 build-it-yourself Harley Benton strat copy or something else. It’ll be purely for keeping up my practice, don’t need it to be anything outstanding. Electric preferred cos I can be quiet if I want but there’s a little mini-amp available as well if needed.

    Interested in the DIY one as a fan of tinkering, but if they’re too much messing about to be usable I’ll dismiss that thought.

    robertajobb
    Full Member

    +1 on the Fender Mustang Micro for practice / headphone playing.  I picked one up 2md hand on Fleabay, along with some nice Yamaha headphones.

    Whilst the tone isn’t nuanced or infinitely adjustable, it’s plenty good enough for what I’m doing, getting back onto playing after a 20-30  year gap.

    mattcartlidge
    Full Member

    Check local Facebook marketplace, I got a squier strat for £30 since flipped to upgrade but if your quick there are some great bargains.

    1
    tall_martin
    Full Member

    I have a Harley Benton Tele.

    It’s nice, I leveled and dressed the frets, gave the nut a tidy up then sanded the neck with some 000 wire wool and furniture wax.

    It’s a lovely guitar

    All the above took about 3h.

    imageIMG_20230306_203042676

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