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northcntryblues

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Posts posted by northcntryblues

  1. 1 hour ago, GabrielLDN said:

    I hadn't considered a J45 as I would prefer a small body being primarily a fingerstyle player. No chance to play the LG1 as it's around a 4 hour drive from me. This is why I'm in two minds. I did play a 1948 LG1 a few months ago which I really liked but there's nothing to say the tone of the 1952 will match .

    Having said that, for fingerstyle blues I think the ladder braced sound works well. 

    I do prefer 1&3/4 nut width which the modern L-00 reissues all have but they also seem to all have V necks and I prefer a C profile. 

    I guess the search for my first Gibson acoustic goes on. 

    There are lots of L00's without V necks.  I have a 2011 Blues King L00.  It doesn't have a V neck.  I would call it a modern C and it's absolutely fantastic.  I don't think L00 Standards of recent years have V necks either.  

  2. 1 hour ago, Larsongs said:

    Why are you considering that particular Guitar? Why aren’t you starting out with a J-45 which is the most recorded Guitar of all time & arguably Gibson’s Flagship Guitar? Just curious..

    As a one acoustic guitar L00 owner who also plays a lot of blues, I can understand why he's not considering a J45.   I like their tone but it was not at all a guitar I even considered for my first and only Gibson.  I have yet to pick up a guitar in 12 years that I would rather own than my guitar.

    I do second the advice of buying something you can look at in person before buying.  For me, the neck is critical.  I'm looking at  Fender telecasters these days to add an electric to the mix.  I thought I wanted something with vintage specs until I held 50's reissue tele and the neck was like a baseball bat and very narrow.  I realized very quickly that I get along much more with Telecasters with modern neck specs in terms of neck shape, nut width, and board radius.  You gotta hold it in your hands.

  3. I had one when I was using thumbpicks.  It was ok for fingerpicking, but it didn't matter what thumbpick I used (and I tried a lot of them!), I never could get comfortable flatpicking with the thumbpick.  You can't adjust the angle of the pick at all, and I found it difficult to control and create dynamics.   During the pandemic I forced myself to learn how to hybrid pick - flatpick, middle, ring fingers.  It took a lot of practice but it was worth it.  

    • Thanks 2
  4. I'm doing a perfectly good job of aging my own guitar - accumulating scratches,  nicks, dings, and nitro fading where my arm sits over the body.  I figure wth - I can't take it with me!   It helps that I'm perfectly happy with just my L-00 and stopped looking at other acoustics years ago. 

  5. On 4/8/2023 at 1:20 PM, Remmuts said:

    I play every morning when I get up while drinking my coffee.

    This way, whatever comes up, I have gotten some playing time.

     

    Me too.   Then I play again most evenings.    Constantly working on new things.   

  6. 5 hours ago, Lars68 said:

    I think that settles it. Thanks BK. I wouldn't mind having one of those guitars to play my very limited finger style on.

    Lars

    Very good for fingerpicking for sure.  But don't underestimate the smaller guitars with a thumbpick or a flatpick either.   For full out strumming a la Pinball Wizard or something like that, maybe not, but these little guitars sound great with a pick too when approached with a nuanced attack.

    • Like 1
  7. 6 hours ago, Lars68 said:

    Ah, a Kalamazoo KG 12 could make good sense. I remember reading a few years back that she bought it at Retrofret in New York.

    I love that dry, crisp tone.

    Lars

    That was a nice track.  Thanks for the link - I'm going to give her a listen!👍

  8. I've had my 2011 BK L00 since 2015.  It's my only guitar, and I don't see myself ever playing another acoustic.  I decided that I'm not taking it with me so I play it everywhere and not worried about accumulating the 'mojo' that goes with it.   I feel pretty lucky to own a guitar I have such a strong bond with.
     

    I do, however, find myself thinking about an electric counterpart, most likely a strat or possibly a tele.  The thought usually passes because in my heart of hearts, I'm an acoustic guitar guy.  

  9. On 5/5/2022 at 9:56 AM, zombywoof said:

    Cool photos.  3.4 pounds would be featherweight compared to  most of the Bozeman-made L00s I have run into.  I remember when Sweetwater used to list weights every L00 I looked at clocked in at around 4 pounds.  At that weight they not going to come off like a drum skin when you tap the back.

    My '32  L1 weighs just a shade over 2 pounds 13 ounces.  The biggest concern with the guitar is that the amount of belly it already has gets no worse so it has been recommended I go with nothing heavier than 11-52 strings.  

    On the side supports, I have been told they were not there to add stiffness to the rim but to try and prevent the sides from cracking under the pressure of having the top or back installed.  What lends credence to this is that the only two Gibsons I can think of which retained that feature after the early-1950s were the J200 and CF100 which were the two most expensive guitars in the catalog.

    I use Elixer custom lights (11's) on my 2011 L00 not because of bellying, but preference.  They sound great on these guitars.

  10. 1 hour ago, zombywoof said:

    My wife is the only person I know who for around two decades has owned a six string guitar she loves to the point she just shrugs her shoulders and utters a "nice but meh" at every other one she has ever gotten her hands on.  And that includes mine.

    I guess am too fickle to have found a guitar which is "The One."  For me it is a moving target which depends on my mood that particular day.  But it is when I get in the pocket where there is no thinking going on that I am aware of that guitar can sound like a heavenly choir.  On other days though that same guitar can sound like it is stuffed with armadillos.   Ain't life grand.

    I'm the same as your wife, except it's only been one decade so far for me and my L00.   I'm a one guitar guy, happily.  I made a decision after I put the first ding on it that I'm not taking this guitar with me when I go, and I really love playing it, so why not play it and not worry about it getting dinged around a campfire, etc?  It's worked out well and it feels like *my* guitar.

    Now, I will admit to jonseing a little bit for a companion Strat or Tele....😁

  11. It's been discussed here before but I continue to be amazed at how significant a role the choice of pick can have in a guitar's tone.  

    After many years of primarily fingerpicking, the flatpicks I'd been using were Dunlop standard nylon .73, which I found very comfortable, but I didn't dig the tone from the soft nylon.  Kind of muted, muffled almost.

    There is a tone I associate  with Gibson flattops that I don't really know how to describe  other than its what I hear from the strummed chords at the beginning of The Beatles 'A Day in the Life' - just a certain chiming quality that is like no other.  It's on a bunch of early Dylan too.

    I picked up some thicker gauge , harder Herco 'Holy Grail' nylon picks after reading some reviews...and...there it was, from my L-00  - that unmistakable Gibson chime.  Needless to say I'm thrilled to hear it from my guitar 10 years after purchasing it!

     

     

     

  12. On 10/26/2022 at 5:25 AM, Salfromchatham said:

    I think it is pricey, and it is easy to use. You can’t slide the entire board though. It’s nice for lead work. To be honest I played with it for two weeks, and now my son has it; it was challenging and I didn’t stick with it.

    For me slide is very hard. It’s both hands, and it take work. Derek Trucks makes it look easy, but it’s anything but that. For me harmonica is like that too.

     

    my advice? Maybe get a $8 slide at first and crush you tube looking for lessons. If you stick with it and make progress, get the BMS.

    I have played slide fairly successfully using a pinky slide , leaves three fretting fingers.  I was thinking this might be even more comfortable/versatile. .  I don't  often slide more than two or three strings at a time.   Maybe Ill give it a shot. Thanks!

  13. On 10/6/2022 at 1:04 PM, RBSinTo said:

    zombywoof,

    Must be contagious, because I have it too.

    I've got all the guitars I need and although I love to visit the two serious music stores here in Toronto, and noodle on the high-end instruments, I never for a second contemplate buying any of them.

    RBSinTo

    I'm nearish to Toronto.  The one shop I know you must be talking about is The Twelfth Fret.  It's fantastic.  Curious - what's the other one?

    I'm the same as you - I pick up guitars in shops and play them occasionally, but I never find anything better than my L-00 - my only guitar.  I do think about eventually picking up a well used Telecaster.  I had one years ago that I miss.
     

    Also, imo, that sidehole is absolutely awful!

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