Your favorite piece of gear and the story of how found it
Posted: Mon Apr 12, 2010 6:05 pm
Most every musician has a favorite guitar, bass, drum kit, a singer's mic, a banjo etc. Tell us about YOUR "instrument" that is your go-to gear.
I have a lot of guitars, but my favorite axe was found hanging on a rack, looking like a junk pile.
This guitar was a Kramer Focus 1000 with a Floyd Rose trem and locking nutt. It had a "hockey stick" style of headstock. The headstock was completely snapped in hald between the D and G tuning keys, and only attached to (or hanging from) the guitar by way of the gutar strings. It had a large cardboard price sign on it that said $189 (crossed out), $129 (crossed out) and $99 (not crossed out). Being a fan of Eddie Van Halen, I had a love for Kramer guitars. The pawn store manager happened to be a super-cool lady who also professed to be a drummer. So I led her to this battered Kramer and basically said:
Me: This guitar had been here for a while, right?
Her: Yes.
Me: And you'd like to move this guitar, right?
Her: Yes.
Me: I am going to make you an offer on this guitar, buyt it need a LOT of work!
Her: Okayeee......
Me: $35
Her: Make it an even $40.
Me: Done deal!
So I pulled this miserable-looking Kramer from the rack. As I prepared to pay for it, she said "Wait a moment". She them went into a storage room and came back out with a hardshell Kramer case that was plush inside and stocked with accessories! SCORE!!!!!!
I took the guitar home and cleaned it up, glued the headstock back together and installed a fresh set of strings. During the next few months, the guitar happened to fall over a few times and the headstock broker off both time. On the 3rd glue job, it has since stayed on. Plus I now have a luthier who put in a new Seymour Duncan pickup and set it up real nice. My Kramer has since been "reborn". Whether it be live stage or studio, my $40 pawnshop Kramer is still my ipso defacto "gun of choice".
I have a lot of guitars, but my favorite axe was found hanging on a rack, looking like a junk pile.
This guitar was a Kramer Focus 1000 with a Floyd Rose trem and locking nutt. It had a "hockey stick" style of headstock. The headstock was completely snapped in hald between the D and G tuning keys, and only attached to (or hanging from) the guitar by way of the gutar strings. It had a large cardboard price sign on it that said $189 (crossed out), $129 (crossed out) and $99 (not crossed out). Being a fan of Eddie Van Halen, I had a love for Kramer guitars. The pawn store manager happened to be a super-cool lady who also professed to be a drummer. So I led her to this battered Kramer and basically said:
Me: This guitar had been here for a while, right?
Her: Yes.
Me: And you'd like to move this guitar, right?
Her: Yes.
Me: I am going to make you an offer on this guitar, buyt it need a LOT of work!
Her: Okayeee......
Me: $35
Her: Make it an even $40.
Me: Done deal!
So I pulled this miserable-looking Kramer from the rack. As I prepared to pay for it, she said "Wait a moment". She them went into a storage room and came back out with a hardshell Kramer case that was plush inside and stocked with accessories! SCORE!!!!!!
I took the guitar home and cleaned it up, glued the headstock back together and installed a fresh set of strings. During the next few months, the guitar happened to fall over a few times and the headstock broker off both time. On the 3rd glue job, it has since stayed on. Plus I now have a luthier who put in a new Seymour Duncan pickup and set it up real nice. My Kramer has since been "reborn". Whether it be live stage or studio, my $40 pawnshop Kramer is still my ipso defacto "gun of choice".