dracomalfoy85


























  1. Does being sloppy honestly make it bad, though? Art is art. I’d rather listen to someone make sloppy music that’s honest than listen to overproduced “perfect” instrumentation that feels empty, the byproduct of a think tank.

  2. Consistency. Be productive during the daytime, go to bed about the same time nightly, put on some noise that puts me out (I like podcasts or some kind of am radio), and then it’s morning. 

  3. I know I'm supposed to eat a minimum amount of steaks per month to qualify for citizenship, but can I substitute cheeseburgers to make quota?

  4. Charvel, Reverend, Sire, Schecter, Ibanez, G&L, Sterling. All great bang for the buck. 

  5. Charvel and G&L are comparable price wise to Fender. Great guitars, but certainly not budget either.

  6. Right on- it’s just more high quality options under $1000. 

  7. Maybe your mom can teach you. Heard she’s a virtuoso! 

  8. bro you managed to get a compliment coming from her on you playing, that’s a big achievement, i can’t imagine my family complimenting my playing one day XD Thanks for your comment, thats awesome🙌

  9. In addition to playing softer, you can learn to palm mute strings in time. Then you'll be able to strum etc but deaden the volume. I'll play at night underneath my 2 year old son's room and it's not an issue.

  10. Is neither an option? Feel like there are so many great options now from Charvel (Fender owned brand, but still different from Fender products), Schecter, Ibanez, G&L and others and smaller players like Reverend, Rivolta, Sire, etc. I love teles and Les Pauls are classic, but I think there's more bang for the buck available elsewhere.

  11. Tele is THE original electric guitar, nothing more classic. Everything else wishes it was a Tele. There’s tons of good guitars and tons of terrible ones, but you’ll never go wrong with a fender Tele.

  12. Teles are great, no doubt, but they're not the original electric guitar- the telecaster started in 51 and Gibson released the EH-150 in 1935. Fender wasn't around for another 10 years and their first guitar was the Esquire.

  13. They are locking, yes. The lock is in the top of the post, which is why it has a slot in it.

  14. this is a really valid point. i'm not gigging to be honest, i mean i have a band but we probably do a couple shows a year, I play mostly by myself.

  15. Ever since marriage I’ve mostly been playing solo too. 

  16. My strategy, if ever I get married, is to buy a bunch of guitars that I specifically don’t like beforehand, so that I have a built in buffer. 

  17. Just scour for good deals and then you can dump for the same price or more. After I had done this a dozen times or so my wife stopped caring about new gear.  Also, but a few high priced ones early on, now when I show my wife anything under 1500 she just assumes I’m gonna buy it. 

  18. Everyone says that until some kook in the lineup bails on a drop and you get penetrated! 

  19. Love the people giving you real advice. Nice shit post. 

  20. Might be the angle, but it looks like your fretting hand is way too angled- it should be more parallel with the fretboard. This will take a lot of strain off your wrist.

  21. Ahhh okay that’s some good advice for my playing overall! Appreciate that! Never realised about my hand needing to be more parallel, will work and that and do some more spider exercises (as much as it kills me to do them!).

  22. Mine's Ain't Waitin'. Hadn't heard They Killed John Henry before- it slaps. Now just gotta learn it.

  23. You want us to read the manual like a bunch of nerds? I don't shred on my axe to be a dweeb, bro.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Author: admin