If you have ever tried to play an acoustic bass in a room full of loud acoustic guitars or, heaven forbid, a drum kit, you know the struggle. You are
If you have ever tried to play an acoustic bass in a room full of loud acoustic guitars or, heaven forbid, a drum kit, you know the struggle. You are
I remember the first time I ever played a live gig. I was eighteen, sweating under cheap stage lights, and halfway through a power chord, my heart stopped. My strap
Have you ever sat down with your favorite guitar, strummed a G-major chord, and felt like something was just… missing? Maybe the sustain died out too quickly, or the high
Believe it or not, I’ve spent more time looking for a dropped pick on a dark stage than I have practicing my actual scales. It is a universal guitarist struggle.
I’ve been playing guitar for over fifteen years, and if there’s one thing I’ve learned, it’s that the guitar itself is only half the battle. You can have a vintage
If you are like me, you probably spent weeks researching the perfect tonewood for your latest acoustic or agonizing over the pickup magnets in your new electric. However, I have
I’ve been there—standing on a dimly lit stage, the energy is peaking, the crowd is moving, and suddenly, I feel that sickening sensation of my instrument becoming weightless. For a
I remember the first time I held a genuine 1964 Stratocaster. It wasn’t just the smell of the nitrocellulose finish or the way the pickups hummed like a beehive in
I’ve been there. It’s the third hour of a grueling rehearsal, your 11-pound Gibson Les Paul is digging into your trapezius muscle like a dull saw, and you’re wondering if
I’ve been playing guitar for over fifteen years, and if there is one thing I’ve learned, it’s that a heavy Gibson Les Paul or a solid swamp ash bass will