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phil b
Well-known member
I started my journey working with Mesa, doing 2 albums and touring coast to coast. I had Mark Snyder build a lot of my first rig. That was a million years ago starting in 1992 and was short lived, but that had ZERO effect on a good enough rig. If you tour seriously... you most likely have a road crew..etc.. The rest are just excuses about the audience doesnt care and the sound guy will mess it all up..... I remember back then all it took was a $20 to whoever was running sound to make sure the levels were at least "audible". Besides, all your gigs are recorded today thanks to everyone taking vids at the gigs.Nah, ‘good enough’ is all that’s needed. You won’t see it the same way if you don’t tour, but carrying and hauling the shit, on top of potential theft, loss, damage to gear that is an investment are major hurdles. The sound guy is absolutely going to fuck up your preciously crafted tone anyway, and these days the barrier of entry to having decent tone is much lower than it used to be. There’s no reason to lug a 6k+ rig around the country when you can get reasonably close for 2k. Your audience doesn’t know shit about tone, and aren’t actually going to hear you anyway. You have the filter of mics, room acoustics, PA, soundboard processing, etc, which each piece of that puzzle has a larger impact on the final tone than your amp, pickups, even your speakers.
The hunt for tone and gear is an endeavor of personal satisfaction, the vast majority of music listeners will not think twice about it. If you want to show off the gear we all love, the most meaningful place to do that is going to be on recording. If it’s not being recorded, tone doesn’t mean a damn thing outside of the moment a sound enters a players ears in the moment, in a room. That satisfaction and inspiration is important, but it’s a singular moment in time and place that cannot be captured without the process of capturing changing the sound.
So, play the gear that inspires you, but “good enough” is totally a viable excuse for why actual working musicians are not utilizing the most top of the line or complicated rigs.
Not to mention, many of our favorite tones were crafted due to inherent limitations, musicians making due with what was accessible to them, and being creative with it.
There are players that bring real 57's and play them religiously. Doesnt have to be a real 57, but with the good enough attitude then why bother gigging at all? Soundman sucks, you won hear yer sound...audience doesnt care, shit getting stolen, different acoustics for each room...etc..
I have never said you need tons of equipment or expensive or .?? to have a killer rig. Just use something that to you, the player, is better than "Good Enough". I completely agree about making due with what guys have, but they took those things and made them much better than good enough.