metropolis_4
Rock Star
- Messages
- 4,825
As a guitarist I love the look of old worn guitars.
As a player, I only like it if it’s real wear and tear that I’ve done myself naturally.
I had a Tele that was heavily “relic’d” from many years as my main gigging guitar. When I lost that guitar I tried replacing it with relics and I liked them at first because they felt more familiar, more like that Tele had felt.
But over time I found I didn’t bond with them because I knew the wear wasn’t my own.
These days I like to look at them, but when I play them they just feel wrong. Like they’re trying to pretend to be something they’re not and it’s only skin deep. As soon as I play it the illusion is gone and it’s just another new guitar it just looks old.
I also HATE the ones that are overdone and don’t look anything like real wear!
I think what I love is the story. Real authentic aged guitars have stories behind them. Relics don’t
As a player, I only like it if it’s real wear and tear that I’ve done myself naturally.
I had a Tele that was heavily “relic’d” from many years as my main gigging guitar. When I lost that guitar I tried replacing it with relics and I liked them at first because they felt more familiar, more like that Tele had felt.
But over time I found I didn’t bond with them because I knew the wear wasn’t my own.
These days I like to look at them, but when I play them they just feel wrong. Like they’re trying to pretend to be something they’re not and it’s only skin deep. As soon as I play it the illusion is gone and it’s just another new guitar it just looks old.
I also HATE the ones that are overdone and don’t look anything like real wear!
I think what I love is the story. Real authentic aged guitars have stories behind them. Relics don’t