Hi all
Excuse the whinging title, but I have a beautiful Fender 2 by 10 tube amp and a gorgeous G & L Tele but since focusing more on GJazz I have just lost interest! Does anyone have recommendation for how I can still maintain interest in the electric side of things without Gypsy Jazz taking over my life? I just find that GJ is a style that requires devotion and dedication, and being a PhD/Doctoral student, I am a pretty focused person who likes to try and master one thing (I focus on Yang Taichi, Japanese language {as I lived there and have been married to a Japanese for nearly 20 years} and Gypsy Jazz!
What do you others do? Are you monogamous and only play GJ or what other styles (in particular Jazz?) do you play? I guess if I get rid of it (tube amps that are a bit older are hard to sell also) I am worried about regret but I pick up the tele, and I am like,,"What do I play...what's the point", but I pick up a SelMac guitar and I have heaps of stuff to do, so many songs to learn, right hand technique, appeggios and the beautiful list goes on...
Did I mention I think too much!! Gypsy Jazz has spoiled me! Are there great GJ type of songs for electric! Thanks for helping, I was gettting a bit down (in a quiet manly Scottish way..lol)
OR CONVERSELY SELL UP AND GET A D HOLE TO MATCH MY OVAL HOLE DELL'ARTE...YEAH!! ..sigh there I go again
Andy!
Comments
I went 45 years before I got back to electric and find myself playing it mostly fingerstyle. Even figured out how to get an OK pompe with the back of the fingernails. Still play lots of acoustic but the sustain of electric allows me to say things differently.
Thanks for getting back to me, and I will think less and just enjoy playing.
This after playing Rockabilly exclusively for 35+ years.
Cites irreconcilable differences. Wants half of my Selmac just to spite me but my lawyer will try to negotiate with the other to settle and take the Parker Fly.
I bet they'd make a fine couple and I have no use for either.
Funny thing is, even with all that stuff, for many years I never played with any real practice routine or any real regularity. After my teen years when I spent too much time working on shredder chops, I stopped practicing regularly. I stopped learning new things. I would go weeks, if not months at a time when it seemed that the only times I would pick up a guitar was during band rehearsals and shows. Buying a new piece of gear would get my interest going again and I would play often again, but after a few weeks the novelty would wear off.
Then a couple of years ago, the Django bug bit me. Now I can't wait to get home, pick up my cheap Gitane, and hack my way through GJ. Rarely a day goes by when I don't get some good practice time in. I feel like a kid again, when the guitar was fresh and exciting. It was exactly what I needed.
Plus a Selmer style guitar is so much easier on my poor damaged hearing than several hundred pounds of Marshall cranked up to that special place of excess where they sound best. That's worth a lot to me these days.