It looks like you're new here. If you want to get involved, click one of these buttons!
Subscribe to our Patreon, and get image uploads with no ads on the site!
Base theme by DesignModo & ported to Powered by Vanilla by Chris Ireland, modified by the "theFB" team.
Comments
"This guitar is nice" what, did it ask you if you wanted help with your shopping?! GAWD!!
Also, I'm quite sure I've read people relentlessly whinge about the description "plays like butter", 500 times more than I've seen it written in earnest.
"Player's guitar": This once-valuable guitar has been butchered by an amateur electrician, refinished by a blind man and transported in a bin bag attached to the rear axle of my car - but I have to think up some kind of way to pretend that somehow makes it better than a guitar in pristine condition, so there you are.
The other one is just listing what is clearly an EPIPHONE as "by Gibson" or just putting the word Gibson in front of Epiphone or in some cases not even bothering to include the word Epiphone. I still can't figure out what anyone hopes to achieve by doing that. They're two companies owned by the same people, and that make similar products. When you sell your VW do you advertise it as a Porsche?
Beyond that, frankly, and as evidenced by our friend Mark D Phillips (Guitar Ruiner/Destroyer, Phillips Craptone Conversions), what grates for me is when people use the incorrect jargon for guitars in an attempt to sound knowledgeable. Point to it, describe it in normal language or use the accepted terminology. Telling me that your "Fender Esquier Strato" has "tonal dials" fitted to its "scratchguard" near the "cable insert" just makes you sound like a try-hard dumbass.
[There’s very little comeback to that...]
It's an American thing.
I don't know where it comes from - I always thought it was accent making "couldn't" sound like "could" but they type it the same way online so I'm not sure.
Maybe they really care and they want us to know!
Well, I could care less (but I probably won’t)
Supportact said: [my style is] probably more an accumulation of limitations and bad habits than a 'style'.
Nowhere to hide with a Telecaster
Through-body stringing improves sustain
Old Korean and Japanese Squiers are the dog’s danglies