
DanTravis62
Well-known member
Sometimes BadBrad annoys me, but I think he's 10000% correct about this
This is the real problem with the Giacomo/Instagram guitar theft scandal
Young players are great at curating their playing for fake social media, and as soon as they "get passed the ball" as Brad and Bissonette say, they fail and fall all over themselves. They never got "put on the spot" for improvising a guitar solo, especially in front of a crowd - because their entire guitar life has been meticulously curating an image of something that doesn't reflect reality for social media. Since i irritated @SpiderWars about the superlead clip, I think it's only fair that I direct fire at the young kids for something. (Fair and balanced
Dan News
)
The ball will eventually find you
I actually think this is a real, tangible problem with younger guitar players that I see all the time playing live. We will play a show with a band, and their videos will have absolutely MONSTER "snapped to the grid" type solos. Then they play live, and it's all exposed, and they're absolutely choking through it.
This always existed with guitar players, but they never got traction without putting in the sweat equity like they do now. Back in the day, someone would just "talk smack" about how they could play this, and they could play that... and then you would jam with them, or see them on stage, and they would be exposed. Now, the "smack talker" guy is Instagram famous and has signature guitars and millions of dollars.
I don't know how many of you guys have noticed, but I think social media has created a real problem with this. We, as the general "guitar community" used to "police" the smack-talker types, and now the smack-talker is the Instagram Famous guy who steals licks for clicks.
This is the real problem with the Giacomo/Instagram guitar theft scandal
Young players are great at curating their playing for fake social media, and as soon as they "get passed the ball" as Brad and Bissonette say, they fail and fall all over themselves. They never got "put on the spot" for improvising a guitar solo, especially in front of a crowd - because their entire guitar life has been meticulously curating an image of something that doesn't reflect reality for social media. Since i irritated @SpiderWars about the superlead clip, I think it's only fair that I direct fire at the young kids for something. (Fair and balanced


The ball will eventually find you

I actually think this is a real, tangible problem with younger guitar players that I see all the time playing live. We will play a show with a band, and their videos will have absolutely MONSTER "snapped to the grid" type solos. Then they play live, and it's all exposed, and they're absolutely choking through it.
This always existed with guitar players, but they never got traction without putting in the sweat equity like they do now. Back in the day, someone would just "talk smack" about how they could play this, and they could play that... and then you would jam with them, or see them on stage, and they would be exposed. Now, the "smack talker" guy is Instagram famous and has signature guitars and millions of dollars.
I don't know how many of you guys have noticed, but I think social media has created a real problem with this. We, as the general "guitar community" used to "police" the smack-talker types, and now the smack-talker is the Instagram Famous guy who steals licks for clicks.